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6
May 2007
The
Tail is Wagging the Dog
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The ramming through Parliament of the
deeply unpopular anti-smacking bill is the clearest sign yet
that under MMP the ‘tail is wagging the dog’. As Iain
Gillies wrote in an editorial in the Gisborne Herald last
month: “Widespread
antipathy to Sue Bradford’s bill on parental smacking could
unwittingly provoke renewed calls for a review of the MMP
voting system. The motion does not figure much - yet - in
either public discussion or the parliamentary debate, but may
well get traction when voters consider to whom their MPs are
beholden; their party hierarchy or the electorate." (To
read the article click
here>>>).
MMP was sold to New Zealanders as a system
that would improve representative democracy in this country so
that the views of the voters would hold more weight. Surely,
no-one could have envisioned the situation we now find
ourselves in whereby, in spite of overwhelming public
opposition, a list-only minority party is being allowed to
foist onto New Zealanders the sort of anti-family legislation
that would make Karl Marx proud.
The
anti-smacking bill is the brainchild of Green Party MP Sue
Bradford. In a 2005 article entitled Vote Labour Now to Smash Capitalism Later, the Communist Workers’
Group states: “A Labour government may need the backing of
the Greens. Commentator Chris Trotter
said that the New Zealand Greens are probably the most
left-wing Green party in the world that has made it into
political office. On the face of it there seems to be some
truth in this with people like ex-Socialist Action League
member Keith Locke and ex-Workers Communist League member Sue
Bradford”. (See Aotearoa
Independent Media Centre >>>)
So
unbelievably, because of the support of the Prime Minister, a
former Workers Communist League member is now set to impose
her ideology onto New Zealand. British journalist Lynette
Burrows in an article How
to control adults by means of ‘children’s rights’
explains what’s behind the ideology in this way:
“The
question was always, why are the children’s rights people so
concerned to make the parental right to smack their children
illegal? Most of their organisations have been more or less
devoted to the subject despite the fact that 90% of good and
caring parents say that it is necessary at times. Now the
answer is clear.
“It
is a device which places most parents in the power of social
workers. They are by training and tradition, Marxist, feminist
and anti-religious. They don’t much care for the family and
lend their weight on every possible occasion to arguments and
devices that show it in a bad light… The traditional family
is still the safest place for any child to be – but you
wouldn’t know it from official literature on the subject.
“Thus,
anybody who wanted to further a Marxist, feminist agenda could
not do better than to have most families in thrall to social
workers. It is not about the elevation of children’s rights
at all. It is all about the crushing of adult ones”. (To
read the article click
here >>>)
Complicit in this attack on parents is
Helen Clark who, badly needing Green Party support after the
abdication of Philip Field, has done everything in her power
to get this anti-smacking law passed. She has prevented her
MPs from exercising a conscience vote, she attempted to get
the bill passed under urgency, she tried to adopt it as a
government bill, and now, in what must be one of the greatest
political coups in New Zealand’s history, she has duped the
National Party, United and New Zealand First into supporting a
Claytons amendment.
The new amendment provided by the Law
Commission - under instruction from the Prime Minister - and
tabled in Parliament by the Leader of the United Party,
changes nothing. As the law now stands if a complaint is laid
about a parent smacking a child, the police are required to
investigate and to notify the Department of Child Youth and
Family. As a result of such an investigation the Police
already have the discretion over whether or not to prosecute:
if the matter is minor and of no public interest then there
will be no prosecution. The much-heralded new clause – which
astonishingly gained the support of even those MPs who were
vehemently opposed to Bradford’s bill – simply re-states
the law as it stands.
What this whole exercise has shown, is
that under MMP calculated cunning is the name of the game. As
long as the ruling party can cobble together sufficient
support in the House - using whatever trickery it can dream up
- any sort of radical new law can now be imposed in New
Zealand without public mandate. Nothing is sacred, not even
our right to run our own families as we see fit.
Democracy is meant to be government for
the people, by the people and of the people. It is meant to
respect the rights and freedoms of each and every citizen.
What we have under MMP is government by political unions –
the political parties - which collude to seek electoral
advantage so they can push their ideology into law in order to
satisfy the special interest groups that provide their
support. All that matters is whether they have the numbers:
the question of whether a proposed public policy change will
serve the common interest and the public good has now been
subsumed by the desire to be seen to be winning a victory in
Parliament.
Most of the time they get away with it,
but this time, with public opinion polls showing that the
views of over 80% of New Zealanders are being ignored by our
MMP parliamentarians - who look set to pass the anti-smacking
bill into law - then surely it is time to question the
electoral system itself.
Peter Shirtcliffe has always held serious
doubts about the suitability of MMP for New Zealand. He is the
NZ Centre for Political Research guest commentator this week.
In an article entitled The
Nonsense of the List MP he explains:
“One of the most heavily-promoted
arguments in favour of MMP was that its introduction would
transform for the better the way in which Parliament worked.
We were promised… greater sensitivity to the wishes of the
Electorate”.
Peter goes on to say: “The signs of
politically-driven control agendas are starting to show and
objective common-sense solutions will not readily emerge from
arrogant, unelected MPs who are at the same time seeking ways
to use more taxpayers’ (your) money to fund their own
organisations”.
Peter is not alone in believing that a
further referendum on MMP is now warranted - although he does
note that it is extremely unlikely that such an initiative
would be generated by this Parliament. I suspect that a good
many of the 1,032,919 voters who supported MMP in the 1993
referendum did so believing that if it didn’t work out, they
were going to be given another chance to change it in a later
referendum.
With the vexed question of how to best to
safeguard ourselves from hasty, unwise or ill-considered
legislation uppermost in our mind, maybe the time is now right
for that long-awaited binding referendum on whether MMP has
delivered to New Zealand a system of government that ensures
that not only do our elected representatives reflect the will
of the people, but they also protect their rights and their
liberties.
The
poll this week asks: The
poll this week asks would
you support New Zealand holding a binding referendum on MMP?
Take
part in poll >>>
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