Sunday 15 October 2023

HALLELUIAH, BYE-BYE EVIL GOVERNMENT

 

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Nanaia Mahuta, NZ's ex-Foreign Minister, apologising - no longer an embarrassment 



Christopher Luxon, New Zealand's new Prime Minister, says he's a Christian but he doesn't attend any church. He says he's pro-life but he won't repeal the Abortion Law Act. He worries about greenhouse gas emissions. He tried to learn Te Reo. His favourite current reading is W Timothy Gallwey’s The Inner Game of Tennis, exploring “the mental side of peak performance.”

For weeks, every time she passed a Labour hoarding, a reader of this blog prayed for deliverance from our evil government. Thank God for "Some kind of deliverance" - as Michael Bassett says below, indeed. After Hipkins Who-Didn't-Know-What-A-Woman-Is, Luxon can't possibly be a case of better the devil you know - could he?

What's certain is that ACT's win in this election translates as loss for New Zealand's smallest citizens: the unborn -  who have lost their main champion in Parliament, National's Simon O'Connor, in what's said to be a put-up job. Both National and ACT (the latter being implacably pro-death) wanted O'Connor gone. Chalk that one up to Satan.

Parliamentary seats still too close to call

Te Tai Tokerau - 

Labour deputy leader Kelvin Davis is fewer than 500 votes ahead of Te Pāti Māori candidate Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. 

Tāmaki Makaurau -

Another Māori electorate, Tāmaki Makaurau on the brink of flipping to Te Pāti Māori. Labour’s Peeni Henare leading by below 500 votes, ahead of Te Pāti Māori candidate Takutai Tarsh Kemp.

Mt Albert -

One of Labour’s safest seats, home to former prime ministers Ardern and Clark and former Labour leader David Shearer, Mt Albert was almost lost to National on Saturday night.

With 98.8% of the ordinary vote counted, Labour candidate Helen White had a lead of just 103 votes over National’s Melissa Lee with 9884 votes.

Te Atatū -

National candidate Angee Nicholas holds a 30-vote lead over incumbent Phil Twyford.

Nelson -

Last night National’s Blair Cameron had a 54-vote lead over Labour’s Rachel Boyack.

Banks Peninsula -

National’s Vanessa Weenink 83 votes ahead of Labour’s Tracey McLellan.

https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/300989388/election-2023-the-electorates-that-are-still-too-close-to-call?cx_testId=12&cx_testVariant=cx_1&cx_artPos=2&cx_experienceId=EXE6G6ISTGR0#cxrecs_s

And so, with Labour done and dusted, over to former Labour cabinet minister Michael Bassett:  


Some kind of deliverance is at hand. The worst government of my long life is off to the knackers’ yard, along with several MPs who played a key role in its demise.

National and Act look like they can cobble together a working arrangement before the final count tells them whether New Zealand First will be needed in more than a support-party role.

David Seymour should emerge as Deputy Prime Minister and Brooke Van Velden who starred amongst the results should also become a key minister.

With new attention to detail, we should get a new education policy and an end to racial division within the Health structure. There will be modest tax cuts, and some reduction of the bloated numbers in the public service.

It’s worth brooding over the results. One striking feature was Labour’s extraordinarily poor results in Auckland. Losses in Takanini, Maungakiekie, Roskill, New Lynn and possibly Mt Albert and my old seat of Te Atatu suggest that immigrants who were once supportive of Labour have turned against that party. It hasn’t suddenly happened. The Chinese community started losing faith several elections back. This time it was the Indian community as well. Overwhelmingly, both groups have younger workers who want to get ahead in their new country.

They resent the way Carmel Sepuloni has tolerated easy welfare and are inclined to laugh at those described as “job seekers”. The new immigrants know that the mushrooming numbers of people on such benefits have no intention of seriously seeking a job and are there for the ride. Moreover, new immigrants have worked out that those on benefits are disproportionately Maori who under Labour kept receiving additional privileges that they, the newcomers, were expected to pay for through their taxes.

 

In: Dr Carlos Cheong, new Nat member for Mt Roskill (PhD in biological science)

This was something Chris Hipkins never even started to explain in any credible way. Arrogant utterances from Nanaia Mahuta, Willie Jackson and Kieran McAnulty, especially the last, reinforced the impression amongst the new immigrants that Labour was turning the country into a privileged place for Maori where Chinese, Indians and non-Maori New Zealanders would never have more than second class status.

 

Out: Nanaia Mahuta

The better-educated knew that Labour’s greatest Prime Minister, Peter Fraser, in 1948, had signed up to the United Nation’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights to the effect that “all human beings are born free and are equal in dignity and rights” – something Alex Holland recently reminded us of on this blog.

New Zealanders may be "born free and equal in dignity and rights" but unborn, they are not. Unborn New Zealanders have no freedom, dignity or rights. At all. 

Labour’s Maorification policy this last three years, which wasn’t mentioned on the campaign trail in 2020, cost the party dearly on Saturday.

But there were other factors in Labour’s defeat. Silly Michael Wood who was the minister, slowed immigration numbers and family reunification for so long during the pandemic that resentment built among many immigrant groups even in his own electorate. He did so for inappropriate ideological reasons. He reasoned that if the supply of workers was kept down, then employers would be obliged to pay existing employees more.

Ignorant on matters of economics, Wood and the Labour cabinet that let him play his games, seemed blissfully unaware for ages of the inflationary impact his policy would have.

Moreover, the gross exploitation of seasonal workers allowed into the country shocked every decent Kiwi while Wood largely turned a blind eye. There is some justice in this world: Wood has gone from Parliament.

The clincher for many Indian immigrants in particular has been the ram raids, knife attacks and several murders of dairy proprietors around Auckland. Most immigrants everywhere have always possessed intelligence as well as a willingness to work. They could see that Labour’s educational policies were failing their children.

Chris Hipkins told us all that his cabinet had no intention of holding parents to account for their failure to ensure children went to school, enabling more than 50% of Maori children, many as young as 12, to skip classes, join gangs, shop lift, and engage in outrageous ram raiding of immigrant-owned businesses.

Immigrants could see, too, that our court system had degenerated to the point where there was little or no accountability for youth crime. Labour deserved its defeat on Saturday for its social policy failures.

We would be most unwise, however, to conclude that life is automatically going to improve now that this truly awful Labour government is about to disappear. Remember that ministers in the new government need cooperation from our ever-so-costly public service. Of recent years it has been very poorly led by Peter Hughes, the Public Service Commissioner, while some heads of department, like Iona Holsted at Education, should offer their resignations on Monday for their departments’ manifold disasters of recent years.

 

Peter Hughes - gone anyway

But who takes over? Where are the new ministers going to find adequately trained leaders of the public service who will follow instructions and implement the policy changes their ministers have been elected to deliver?

 

Iona Halsted (with friend) - should go too

Wellington has a dysfunctional Green Mayor, and a disastrous council. On Saturday two city seats were taken by Greens, several of whose policies would have been welcomed in Soviet Russia. New Zealand has a huge Wellington problem, I’m afraid.

 

Wellington's Mayor Tory Whanau - dysfunctional

Does Christopher Luxon realise how difficult he will find it to deliver his policies? He needs a really tough Minister of State Services.

"Yes, Minister." 

Remember how woeful Labour found it, shaking any progress out of the public service? And this is just the beginning of unwinding the horrors in so many sectors during the Jacinda Ardern-Chris Hipkins era.

MICHAEL BASSETT - HALLELUJAH: FIRST STEPS OF PROGRESS AT LAST (bassettbrashandhide.com)


 

St Teresa of Avila (October 15) 

  

"Let nothing disturb thee,
Nothing affright thee
All things are passing;
God never changeth;
Patient endurance
Attaineth to all things;
Who God possesseth
In nothing is wanting;
God alone sufficeth."

 

10 comments:

  1. A huge relief to see the end of Chippy Hipkins, shadow of Jacinda. And we beat Ireland, and the 'Voice' referendum was lost in Australia, which is a good lead for the co-governance debate in NZ.

    However, look at what happened to Simon OConner, Tamaki electorate (trained as a Catholic priest), one of the very few socially conservative voices in NZ parliament. He was dumped on by National and wasted in the voting by ultra liberal ACT candidate Brooke Van Velden 14,947 votes to 10,372. Yet the party vote in Tamaki was 17,435 National to 4,124 ACT.

    God's divine revelation is now mostly despised. No wonder our bishops hide from the Truth like frightened mice, and Pope Francis twists the Truth like a pretzel to try to make it fit in the modern world.

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  2. O'Connor was not "dumped on by National". Both Roll-on and the National Party president visited Tamaki in an effort to support the incumbent wimp. It was abundantly clear to anyone who had eyes and ears that the "pro-life" wimp was gonna lose to the tough pro-abortion activist. It's all he deserved.

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  3. Leo, O'Connor was very brave defending live even if he did redact a comment on Twitter. Your comments are disgraceful in this instance.

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  4. Come on Leo, justify your comments.

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  5. I don't know what wrong with you lot, but maybe you're why we had such a rotten Government voted into absolute power. If you think Simon O'Connor was ever gonna be firm in the protection of in-utero lives, you've got your eyes and ears closed. There's more chance of Brooke what'shername becoming a firm defender of children in the womb than there ever is of Simon O'Connor doing so.

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  6. Come on Leo. Check the Hansard and the voting lists. I think you're back on the turps. Check into a 'meeting'.

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  7. Your insulting rhetoric betrays you, anonymous Aucklander, as the type I have identified earlier - part of why such a rotten Government got voted into power. As for the rest of your Comment - indecipherable.

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  8. Much better vibes around the country since this heinous Labour government was voted out. Thank you, Aucklanders!

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