DAVID SEYMOUR: “Need, not race” circular honours universal human rights
- Administrator
- Sep 13, 2024
- 2 min read
The government is issuing a Cabinet circular directing all public services be delivered according to need rather than race. This change marks a commitment to ensuring equal rights in the distribution of government resources and services, and reflects the values ACT campaigned on.
Under the new policy, all public services will be directed to those who are most in need, according to real analysis of all factors, rather than defaulting to race as a person’s primary characteristic. This approach is designed to target resources more effectively, addressing disparities and fostering a more inclusive society.
Policies like ethnicity-based surgical waitlists and university admission schemes are corrosive to an inclusive multi-ethnic society. They take the lens of ethnicity and look through it before any other.
The circular is sophisticated. It draws on the International Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Racial Discrimination, to which New Zealand is a signatory. The Convention forbids racial discrimination unless it is necessary, and even then it must be temporary.
The circular goes on to state the Government is concerned about public servants using race as a proxy for need. It says that, in establishing whether racial discrimination is necessary, it must consider all other variables before automatically using ethnicity to target services.
A colourblind public service is far better placed to direct its resources toward eliminating hardship and overcoming hardships that face individual New Zealanders.
Targeting services like healthcare and education based on race is lazy and divisive. The emphasis for the public service should be fitting services to the needs of every New Zealander.
As an example, the new approach means the public sector can’t simply assume Māori have shorter life expectancy because they are Māori, as Jacinda Ardern once infamously said. Instead, they must drill into the data and ask, is this related to living rurally, is it to do with poor housing, or other known factors? This kind of analysis not only avoids racial profiling, it allows practical insight into how health problems can be solved.
Policies like race-based surgical waitlists and university admission schemes run roughshod over principles of good policymaking. No-one should be moved backward or forward in a queue for services just because of who’s in their family tree. The public service has a wealth of data and evidence at its fingertips that can be used to target resources towards actual need, instead of making assumptions based on ethnicity.
Our population is more diverse than just Māori and non-Māori, but you wouldn’t know it from the way government departments have been operating.
Today we’ve also scrapped the so-called progressive procurement policy introduced by Labour that told departments that eight per cent of their contracts must go to Māori providers. Progressive procurement was a travesty that saw certain businesses gain unfair advantage just because the directors were able to identify the ‘right’ people in their family tree.
Government contracting decisions should be made on the basis of value for money, full stop.
David Seymour is leader of the ACT Party
Meanwhile, Newsroom has this to say: https://newsroom.co.nz/2024/09/14/the-secret-diary-of-sheriff-seymour-2/?utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwY2xjawFSLCdleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHQlIVO2_Z3o8u77GwYziHKehuu5xSCVSOVUtXneATj3JmHqDXk391mODPQ_aem_XMltF_HqgfnSZaHX2jyEQA#Echobox=1726292415
Extract: "MONDAY
It was a bright cold day in September, and the clocks were striking thirteen. A cold wind swept through the main street of Dodge. Rain was headed over the mountain range and would wash all the scum off the streets – but not if Sheriff Seymour, First Minister of Moral Conduct and Freedom For All Within Set Bounds, got there first.
He rode his high horse into the saloon.
“Your finest whiskey,” he ordered, “and I’ll have tap water.”
The bar fell silent. The card players put away their hands, and the honky-tonk piano player closed the lid.
Just then Governor Luxon walked through the swing doors.
Sherriff Seymour got off his horse,…
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Over many weeks there is no improvement in spite of the efforts of our administrator. I do hope Wix (?) is aware there's 'trouble at mill'.
The horse bolted years ago, the young & woke liberal middle NZ have been completely won over (indoctrinated) by maori wonderfulness propaganda.
Our deep state Yes minister, behind the scenes regime rules & always will. Cosmetic tinkering by party political posers won't make a jot difference.
A purge of the corridors of power & real change will only come about after some kind of genuine, peoples, grass roots revolution.
We already live in a two tier, us & them nation, which is now fast being colonised by Indians from the sub continent, so I'm now advocating for re-visioning the fundamentals that underpin our nation. I'm all for a brand new, apartheid like NZ which would resemble a world leading, mor…