Over the years and in addition to the speeches he gave in various roles, Don wrote various articles and letters to the editor, some of which are recorded below.
A summary of a speech to Grey Power on 24 June 2016
Oliver Hartwich, executive director of the New Zealand Initiative, has described Bill English’s latest Budget as “boring”, but rightly points out that “boring” is in many ways a compliment. We shouldn’t expect Budgets to be chock full of surprises in a well-functioning democracy.
In the Wanganui Chronicle of 20 May, Chester Borrows made a number of assertions, including about me, which require a reply.
In last Saturday’s Weekend Herald, Lizzie Marvelly used her weekly column to deplore what she called the “racist sentiment… from a disaffected group of extreme right-wing former politicians” who had been responsible for running a series of advertisements highlighting the Government’s intention to involve iwi in decisions about the allocation...
When the KiwiSaver scheme was first established by Government in 2007, any permanent resident of New Zealand under the age of 65 who didn’t enroll for it simply didn’t understand it. The Government (which of course means “other taxpayers”) gave you a tax-free lump sum of $1,000 simply for signing up.
It’s astonishing how rapidly attitudes towards marijuana are changing. Less than five years ago, most politicians thought I had lost my mind (indeed, perhaps had been smoking pot myself) when, in a speech as Leader of the ACT Party, I suggested that decriminalizing, and even legalizing, marijuana should be seriously considered.
On 22 March, I attended the single public meeting which the Government held to brief the people of Auckland on its proposals with regard to fresh water management. There were fewer than one hundred people present, no doubt in part because there had been little publicity about the meeting.
The outrageous price of housing in Auckland – and to a lesser extent in other New Zealand cities – is arguably the most serious issue facing the country as we enter 2016. At the moment, the median price of a house in Auckland is some nine times median household income...
Many months ago, the Indian Government announced its intention to introduce a Goods and Services Tax (GST). Recently, I was asked whether such a complicated tax makes sense for India. My answer: it certainly does, provided that the Government ensures that it is as simple as possible for small businesses...
The surrender is almost complete. When Governor Hobson invited Maori chiefs to sign the Treaty of Waitangi, he clearly thought that he was inviting those chiefs to accept the sovereignty of the Queen and to live in New Zealand, with the gradually increasing number of British settlers, as one people.
Well of course they do – all New Zealanders have an interest in freshwater. But do Maori have an interest in water which is in some way different from the interest which all other New Zealanders have? That is the issue which is now being discussed, for the most part...
A few weeks ago, I saw a document which scared the hell out of me. It was a PowerPoint presentation entitled simply “Freshwater Iwi Leaders Group”, and on the very first slide it was stated “The information contained in this presentation is confidential and is intended only for the Iwi...
It would be churlish to be entirely negative about Bill English’s seventh Budget. There is merit in increasing the basic benefit level – the first increase in real terms since 1972 – and on the other hand increasing the expectation that those on a benefit will get into at least...
As we look into the future from the middle of the second decade of the 21st century, what do we see for the future of the relationship between those New Zealanders who have at least one Maori ancestor and those who have none?
I was appalled to read the article in the March edition of The Orchardist deploring the loss of high quality rural land to “urban creep” and applauding the “Smart Growth” planning rules of the Bay of Plenty local governments.
In recent weeks, Gareth Morgan has written several articles for the “New Zealand Herald” promoting his book on the implications of the Treaty of Waitangi for modern New Zealand. Then a couple of days before Waitangi Day I had a call from David Fisher of the “Herald” telling me that...
Edited by Sharleen Forbes & Antong Victorio. Victoria University Press, 2014, 288 pages.
One of the most disturbing comments made by any politician in the election campaign so far was the comment by John Key when he said that, though abolition of separate Maori electorates is National Party policy, he had no plan to abolish them because such a move would provoke “hikois...
Watching an election campaign in a democracy can be depressing. It’s not the Nicky Hager book which makes me depressed – as one of Hager’s past targets, I know about the extent to which he is prone to exaggerate and distort the truth, even to the extent of asserting things...
Judged in conventional terms, the National-led Government’s sixth Budget looks pretty good. As promised, the Minister of Finance can point to a small surplus in the Underlying Operating Balance (before gain and losses) in the financial year starting on 1 July and increasing surpluses in future financial years.
Copyright © 2024 Don Brash.