The New Zealand Herald

Ross goes to Trump-type extremes to win back Botany

- Jason Walls comment

In front of a packed, Trumpesque rally in an Auckland event centre yesterday afternoon, ex-National MP Jami-Lee Ross hitched his wagon to New Zealand’s radical political fringe.

He joined forces with a man named Billy Te Kahika — the leader of the new New Zealand Public Party.

It’s against 5G, 1080 and electromag­nets but its most extreme policy platform boils down to conspiracy theories about Covid-19 and the Government’s pandemic response.

In a near 40-minute speech, Te

Kahika — who founded the party 11 weeks ago — suggested Covid-19 was a bioweapon designed to be used on civilians around the world.

Often prefacing his opinions as “not conspiracy theories” before launching into them, the blues musician-turned wannabe-politician took aim at the World Health Organisati­on, the United Nations and New Zealand’s Government.

He called Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern a communist.

Much of what he said had little basis in fact or reality. Despite this, Te Kahika has now been catapulted into the mainstream by Ross, his new co-leader.

The ex-National, but still sitting, MP — who exited the party in dramatic fashion in late 2018 and is still facing SFO charges related to National’s donations — announced his party (Advance NZ) and Te Kahika’s party would be merging to form a “new Alliance Party of the 2020s”.

It’s an arrangemen­t of mutual advantage to both men and means they can stand in electorate­s on their party tickets, but their party vote is combined under one banner.

Borrowing heavily from US President Donald Trump, the new merged party would “take back New Zealand”, according to Ross, while Te Kahika said it would help “make New Zealand great again”.

During his speech, Ross did not distance himself from Te Kahika’s extreme fringe views. Rather, he appeared to embrace the Public Party’s deep scepticism of the establishm­ent and announce his own new policies.

Ross wants to freeze New Zealand’s free-trade agreement with China until a “full investigat­ion” into Chinese influence in New Zealand politics takes place.

He also wants a full review of every UN agreement New Zealand has signed — this drew rapturous applause from the more than 1000 Public Party members.

Ross faces a colossal uphill battle to win back his Botany seat against his National Party rival, Chris Luxon. Without that seat, Ross’ days in Parliament are likely over.

With election day less than eight weeks away, Ross appears to have pinned his last hopes of getting back into Parliament on an extremist party with an eccentric leader. His uphill battle just got steeper.

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