The Post

Brush with cancer spurs Andrew Little

- VERNON SMALL

Labour leader Andrew Little says his own cancer scare has coloured his views on health funding.

Little made the remarks yesterday in a joint State of the Nation event with the Greens in Auckland.

The event was designed to stress the two parties’ ability and willingnes­s to work together for a change of government.

Little was diagnosed with earlystage prostate cancer in 2009, at the age of 43, but has since received treatment and been given a clean bill of health. He said the experience gave him ‘‘a stronger determinat­ion to strive for a system that is genuinely fair for everyone’’.

That included a push for the latest medicines for those with treatable cancer.

If voted into power, Labour would reverse the $1.7 billion in health cuts made by National, he said.

‘‘You know, Labour built the public health system in this country. We fixed it after National tried to tear it down in the 1990s. And we’ll fix it again.’’

Little also touched on the major election issues Labour has identified: Housing, health, and education. He also reiterated his pledge to get justice for the Pike River families.

On the housing issue, Little said the party’s Kiwibuild policy would see 100,000 affordable houses built and every rental home would be warm, dry, and healthy. Speculator­s who used homes as ‘‘gambling chips’’ would be reined in.

Little used the opportunit­y to attack Prime Minister Bill English for not attending Waitangi on Waitangi Day and for not standing a candidate in the Mt Albert byelection so he could make a case for his government.

‘‘Bill English is a competent bean counter, but he’s showing he’s not a leader.’’

Little said he was proud the Greens were at the meeting, too.

‘‘Both Labour and the Greens believe that politics is about building a better future for everyone. We’re ready to win. We’re ready to govern.’’

Green co-leader Metiria Turei, who spoke before Little, praised mana wahine - strong women who had inspired her, including union leader Helen Kelly, who died last year, and former Green co-leader Jeanette Fitzsimons.

She also stressed housing and the need for better homes, as well as other mainstream Green themes including jobs, clean rivers and beaches.

The two parties would work together ‘‘to see Andrew Little become our new prime minister’’ and ‘‘do what’s right, not just what’s easy’’.

She also shied away from announcing any new policy on a day that was more about the theatre of the two parties working together and appearing on the same stage.

Speaking after their speeches, Turei said there would be time for policy before the election.

Little said there would be policies in common, but they would each be competing for the party vote.

There would be a shared commitment to some guidelines on economic management.

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