Thursday, April 25, 2024
26 C
Brunei Town

New Zealand’s new leader Hipkins cuts many contentious plans

WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND (AP) – New Zealand’s new Prime Minister Chris Hipkins (AP, pic below) yesterday said he was axing or delaying many of his government’s more contentious policy plans as he looked to refocus on priorities like the rising cost of living.

Hipkins, who was sworn in two weeks ago after the shock resignation of Jacinda Ardern, said his government had been trying to do too much, too fast.

Among the plans he has dropped or delayed is legislation that would have outlawed hate speech against religious groups in the wake of the deadly 2019 mosque shootings, a plan to merge the nation’s public television and radio broadcasters, a new insurance scheme to help laid-off workers, and a mandate for fuel suppliers to increase their use of biofuels and reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

“These are the first and the most significant set of decisions that we are taking to refocus the government’s agenda,” Hipkins said.

“They’ll allow us to shift our focus, our time, our energy and our resources to the most pressing issues that are facing New Zealanders at the moment. They won’t be the last policy changes we’ll be making.” Among criticisms of the plans were that the hate speech bill would have impinged on free speech, the broadcasting merger was unnecessary, the insurance scheme would have been expensive for employers and workers, and the fuel mandate would have raised the cost of gas.

Hipkins said the government was continuing to take a hard look at other contentious plans, which include the government taking more control of water infrastructure, building light rail connections in Auckland, and taxing the greenhouse gas emissions of farm animals.

He also announced a seven per cent increase in the minimum wage, to NZD22.70 (USD14.40) per hour.

Hipkins faces a general election in just over eight months.

After Ardern won the last election in a landslide, her popularity faded and opinion polls put her Labour Party behind its main conservative rival, the National Party. Polls indicate the Labour Party has gotten an initial boost in support since Hipkins took the reins.

Before she resigned, Ardern had said she planned this year to refocus some of the government’s priorities. But the sweeping nature of the reset took some observers by surprise.

Hipkins said the changes could save hundreds of millions of dollars. He said many of the plans remained good ideas but the time wasn’t right to implement them. Taxpayer groups applauded the measures, while environmentalists said the country was in danger of stepping away from its commitment to reduce GHG emissions.

spot_img

Latest

spot_img