The Northern Advocate

COMMENT Are advocacy ministries past their use by date?

- Richard Prebble Richard Prebble is a former leader of the Act Party and a former member of the Labour Party.

My status as minister enabled me to persuade corporate New Zealand not to ignore this talent pool and to provide scholarshi­ps and cadetships to New Zealand Pasifika students.

The Public Service Associatio­n claims the staff of the Ministry for Pacific Peoples is to be cut by 40 per cent. The union says: “The Government is after these savings to finance $3 billion worth of tax cuts”.

The Finance Minister is determined to deliver tax cuts. Using the National Party’s election tax calculator a Pacific Island couple earning the medium wage with three children will receive a tax cut worth around $42 a week.

Carmel Sepuloni, Labour’s deputy leader, has slammed the proposed staff cuts but few of her Pasifika constituen­ts value the ministry enough to pay higher taxes.

This is more than tax versus services or even as Christophe­r Luxon says “right-sizing the civil service”. It is whether the ministry is Government overreach.

The only effective way of reducing Government spending is for the state to stop doing things. Is the Ministry for Pacific Peoples something the Government should stop doing?

Sepuloni is the former associate minister. Such a tiny ministry having two ministers indicates that under Labour the ministry’s primary purpose was propaganda. In election year the ministry spent $53,000 on several breakfasts to promote the budget. The ministry also spent $42,000 in taxpayer dollars farewellin­g its chief executive.

I am a former and first Minister for Pacific Peoples. We had a staff of 10 in a surplus ministeria­l house. Now the ministry is in a high rise, 101-103 The Terrace, with a staff of 156.

The union says the ministry promotes housing, employment, and culture. There are already government department­s promoting housing, employment, and culture.

A new report by Max Salmon for the New Zealand Initiative “Cabinet Congestion: The growth of a Ministeria­l Maze” says that there are 41 government department­s and 27 Crown agencies reporting to 78 ministeria­l portfolios and 22 associate portfolios, held by 28 ministers. The result is duplicatio­n, waste and confusion.

Advocacy ministries have contribute­d to this duplicatio­n and confusion.

Forty years ago, there were no Pasifika members of Parliament and no senior Pasifika civil servants. Creating the portfolio gave me the status to ask how a policy would affect the growing Pasifika community. Department­s had never given it any thought.

The department­s then asked my ministry to develop policy. I would say “That is your job. We will help you consult”. Today the ministry has fallen into the trap of doing the work of other department­s.

Consultati­on is vital to ensure government services are meeting real needs.

When I consulted the Pacific Island community, they told me that they had come to this country to give their children a better education. I called a meeting of all New Zealand Pacific Island students at Auckland University. They told me they were all there. It might have been as few as 30. I realised there were more Pacific Island students from the Pacific at Auckland University, often on New Zealand government scholarshi­ps, than there were New Zealand-born Pasifika students.

My status as minister enabled me to persuade corporate New Zealand not to ignore this talent pool and to provide scholarshi­ps and cadetships to New Zealand Pasifika students. We employed the Pasifika university students, including a young All Black student called Michael Jones, armed them with a magazine containing the scholarshi­ps and cadetships. They visited schools to encourage other New Zealand Pasifika students to go to university. They were very successful.

There are now many New Zealand Pasifika university students, but it is likely that a secondary school pupil in the Islands is getting a better education than a Pasifika pupil in Otara. The New Zealand schools have better equipment and teachers but in New Zealand today around half of all Pasifika secondary school pupils will be absent. It is hard to get an education if you do not go to school.

A search of the Ministry for Pacific People’s website, reports and briefing to the new minister did not reveal any concerns over this educationa­l disaster.

The ministry is promoting victimhood with multiple references to the Dawn Raids of half a century ago. Police did make mistakes such as falsely arresting Māori. Police knocked on my door. But it is wrong to exaggerate what happened. Overstayin­g is illegal. As minister, no one asked me for an apology.

Have these advocacy ministries passed their use-by date? We now have Pasifika, ethnic and women MPs.

Advocacy ministries are one reason the civil service grew by 14,000.

In a Westminste­r democracy advocacy is the role of an MP. Parliament is not called the House of Representa­tives for no reason. It is also an MP’s job to represent all their constituen­ts. With 120 MPs there are many MPs keen to advocate and represent.

It is going to require a huge effort from the Ministry of Education, schools, parents, and the community to get pupils back to school. It is never going to be achieved by an advocacy ministry in Wellington. It requires leadership. Carmel Sepuloni, instead of championin­g jobs for civil servants, why not champion getting our children back to school?

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