The New Zealand Herald

Let’s have an end to hostilitie­s

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Every three years we hire 120-odd people to run our country for us.

Just over 60 of these then form a Government who endeavour to bring about the changes they promised during their election campaign. Meanwhile, the remaining do their level best to stop the Government implementi­ng those changes. Remember that these are changes the public effectivel­y requested be made.

How does this make any sense at all? A business run like this would surely never achieve anything and the culture for the workers would be toxic. No wonder we have so many MPs with serious behavioura­l issues.

Wouldn’t it make sense to have all 120 MPs working together to make NZ even better than it already is?

It would require us to grow up and move away from seeing politics as some sort of binary system.

We would be better served by a system where we vote on policy separate to our vote of representa­tives. We could choose passionate competent people, and then tell them broadly what it is we want them to achieve.

Jason Ludbrook, Castor Bay.

Progressiv­e tax

Your correspond­ent Max Wagstaff ( NZ Herald, July 22) is just the latest in a tediously long line of misguided critics of wealth and capital gains taxes. They all claim that such taxes are unjust because money will be taken away from hardworkin­g moneyed people and given to lazy poor people.

First of all, that is what income tax already does.

Second, these critics imply that we all deserve our positions on the financial ladder and so redistribu­tive taxation is unfair. Their idea is that hard work invariably leads to wealth and laziness leads to poverty. This is of course manifestly false — we’ve all heard of the idle rich and the working poor.

Intergener­ational wealth and poverty give the lie to the idea that wealth distributi­on is meritocrat­ic. Fixing this is one of the reasons progressiv­e taxes are a good idea.

Selfishnes­s is not a good enough reason to dismiss them.

Bennett McElwee, Mt Eden.

Unhappy returns

This Covid-19 pandemic now has us turning on our own.

Returning Kiwis are just as much “us” as are those already here with resident’s permits. Now we are trying to squeeze a “Covid isolation tax” out of them on the assumption that none of them will be struggling financiall­y when they arrive.

Yes, by all means tax those with huge bank balances when they get back, but don’t reinforce that social truism, “the rich remain rich because it is always the poor who end up paying”.

Winston’s lot, who are showing little loyalty to the coalition, will be remembered by the “new poor” for having axed “helicopter payments” and ditching any form of capital gains tax.

Dennis Pennefathe­r, Te Awamutu.

Start moving

Let’s keep moving? Keep suggests a continuati­on. However, the question is how we can “keep” moving, when the country has been brought to a standstill due to endless consultati­on, committees and reports.

In 2017, the GDP was a rockstar 4.3 per cent. Just before Covid-19 hit, it had slumped to 2.7 per cent. The light rail will not reach Mt Roskill in 2021 as promised (probably never). Less than 10 per cent of promised KiwiBuild homes have been built. Child poverty stats have worsened under this Government’s reign. Global warming — the PM’s nuclear moment — has seen no action, only talk.

In the words of Jacinda Ardern (2017), maybe it is time to “hand over to someone with a plan”.

Lucas Bonne, Unsworth Heights.

Scandal handling

The Prime Minister received a direct complaint of misconduct against Andrew Falloon and obtained the permission of the complainan­t to inform the Leader of the Opposition.

The Leader of the Opposition received an accusation of misconduct against Iain Lees-Galloway from a third party and did not obtain the permission of the woman involved to divulge the informatio­n. Should she not have done so?

One is potentiall­y a criminal matter and the other is not. One is above board, the other smacks of dirty politics.

Chris Daisley, Mt Roskill.

Still standing

I do not understand why National list MP Michael Woodhouse has lost one portfolio but was then given two “important” portfolios by Judith Collins when he held informatio­n of private Covid positive patients but deleted it when “clearly there was nothing that I could benefit from and I did not use it”.

Far worse, in June he deliberate­ly held back risk-to-life informatio­n for 19-plus hours from the Health Minister involving two women meeting with others while (one Covid positive, later both) travelling from Auckland to Wellington.

He put my family’s lives and that of every other New Zealander at risk of community transmissi­on, in order to make a publicised political hit in Parliament against the Health Minister, who also holds the electorate seat in Dunedin that Woodhouse has wanted for several elections.

While political hits do happen, I don’t remember one that put our lives at risk purely for personal gain.

I do not understand how National or any New Zealander thinks that is okay.

J Spencer, Pukekohe.

Race card

While the Government was competentl­y managing the worst public health emergency in a century, at least one Opposition MP and party official were trying to discredit the Government by digging to find dirt and attempting to leak it to the media. Unfortunat­ely for them, they were outed and quit in shame.

And what was it that they were trying to leak? That some Covid-infected New Zealanders returning from overseas had

Indian or Korean surnames. The inference being that if you didn’t have an Anglo Saxon surname you were not a real New Zealander.

The further inference being that if you were named Singh or Kim you were more likely to be contagious than other returnees.

Not only were those who were caught out for leaking sensitive medical records corrupt, they are racist.

Patrick J. O’Dea, Papakura.

Cooks link

Air New Zealand CEO Greg Foran has demurred at opening our borders to travel to and from the Cook Islands ( NZ Herald, July 21).

He suggests that transit passengers (from the US) are the problem and a reason for not opening NZ’s borders at the moment.

His example is one of his aircraft operating from the US to Auckland and carrying a sizeable number of passengers who will be in transit here en route to other countries.

That must happen on many arriving flights right now. However, passengers disembarki­ng at Auckland to enter New Zealand are required to go into quarantine for 14 days before they are allowed into this country. Hopefully, this process will continue to obviate further importatio­n of Covid.

Thus the answer to Foran’s objection is that only passengers whose travel originates in New Zealand should be allowed to travel to the Cook Islands from Auckland (and return). This restrictio­n will obviate the risk of passengers who intermingl­ed on an inbound Air NZ flight being able to transit to another service to the Cook Islands at Auckland.

Tony Mercer, Howick.

Shallow thinking

National has promised huge infrastruc­ture to connect Whanga¯rei, Auckland and Tauranga, yet the Auckland Business Chamber is advocating the port be built on the shallow Firth of Thames, which will require billions of dollars in constant dredging to accommodat­e evergrowin­g larger cargo and cruise ships. What then is the purpose of spending $31 billion on road and rail if we are not going to utilise the natural deep water port at Marsden Point?

The Auckland Business Chamber along with the Auckland Council under Phil Goff are putting their selfish needs for keeping profits within Auckland and are not concerned with long-term planning, which will create huge expense for future generation­s.

Marie Kaire, Whanga¯rei.

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