Otago Daily Times

Curran pulled up over booklets

- MIKE HOULAHAN Political reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

TWENTY booklets advising over60s of their entitlemen­ts have landed Dunedin South MP Clare Curran in more hot water.

The booklets, which had Labour Party branding, were given to local Ministry of Social Developmen­t staff — ‘‘to be used as appropriat­e, is what my staff member has told me, and that’s as far as it went’’, Ms Curran said.

Ten went on display in Dunedin South and 10 in Mosgiel — but none should have been on display at all, as Government department­s and agencies were apolitical, National social developmen­t spokeswoma­n Louise Upston said.

Ms Upston raised the issue at question time in Parliament yesterday, and asked Social Developmen­t Minister Carmel Sepuloni how the booklet came to be distribute­d.

Ms Sepuloni said her office had been advised of the booklets on November 20 and they were removed the next day.

‘‘It is great we’re having this conversati­on in the House,’’ she said. ‘‘Everyone now knows that even if it is parliament­ary-crested informatio­n, if it has a political logo on it, it is not appropriat­e to leave it in a government agency.’’

Ms Curran, Labour MP for Dunedin South for 10 years, was made a cabinet minister when Labour took office. However, she resigned in September after controvers­ies surroundin­g undiaried meetings and the use of her personal email address for parliament­ary business.

Ms Upston said that as a former cabinet minister, Ms Curran should have known the Labourbran­ded booklets should not have been put in an MSD office.

Ms Curran said the booklets had a huge amount of useful informatio­n in them, and anyone who wanted one was welcome to ask for one.

‘‘I think it’s really useful and it’s doing the job of a good MP and a good MP’s office, to let the community know what they are entitled to and keep them well and healthy.’’

Ms Upston said Ms Sepuloni had made excuses and blamed staff for the slip.

‘‘MPs shouldn’t be putting government agency staff members in the position of having to deal with political propaganda,’’ she said.

‘‘I’d like to thank the Minister of State Services Chris Hipkins for today clarifying that this was not appropriat­e and that material that promotes a political party must not be displayed on government agency premises, vehicles or websites.’’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand