听has fired a shot at Christopher Luxon after the听听by pointing to the hundreds of millions of dollars that remain in the council kitty.
Brown has said that scrapping the Auckland regional fuel tax - which is part of National鈥檚听- would leave a听$2 billion funding hole听in transport projects, such as the Eastern Busway.
Prime minister Chris Hipkins also criticised the plan, saying it鈥檚 a case of 鈥渞obbing Peter to pay Paul鈥.
Asked about this shortfall while听, Luxon said there was still money to continue that project while he had constructive talks with Brown after the election.
STORY CONTINUES AFTER THE LIVE BLOG听
STORY CONTINUES听
鈥淭here鈥檚 $300 million unspent at the moment in that account, that can be used to continue that project... We want to introduce ultimately a congestion charging mechanism,鈥 Luxon said.
鈥淭hose are the conversations that we will have to make sure that it鈥檚 synced up and that it鈥檚 lined up.鈥
Brown鈥檚 office responded late last night: 鈥淐omments about unspent funds from the regional fuel tax miss the point. Those funds have already been committed to projects that are under way, like the Eastern Busway. Just cancelling those projects mid-delivery by cutting off the funds doesn鈥檛 work.鈥
Brown supports removing the regional fuel tax but only if it is replaced with other funding, without which there would be 鈥渁 large pothole in the transport budget鈥. This would see rates rise by 7 per cent or force the cancellation of $2.4b worth of transport projects.
鈥淭hat includes sensible projects like the Eastern Busway, upgrades to Lake Rd, Glenvar Rd, Lincoln Rd and Botany to Airport buses,鈥 the statement said.
鈥淎fter the election, the Mayor looks forward to sitting down with the Government, whomever that may be, and working out a plan that makes sense for Auckland.鈥
Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown. Photo / Michael Craig
Luxon was responding to Chris Hipkins鈥 claims of further holes in National鈥檚 plans, while the Labour leader fended off National鈥檚 claims that he was about to be rolled so Labour could adopt the wealth tax and capital gains tax that Hipkins has rejected.
Hipkins, speaking from Covid-19 isolation, says he鈥檚 feeling better but is still testing positive.
鈥淚 know the Labour team has been out promoting our plan,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l keep doing that while I鈥檓 isolating.鈥
Hipkins also mentioned the Auckland Mayor鈥檚 warning about the removal of the Regional Fuel Tax.
鈥淚t鈥檚 another case of robbing Peter to pay Paul,鈥 Hipkins said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 too much of a risk with Christopher Luxon,鈥 he said.
Responding to National鈥檚 criticism Labour hadn鈥檛 made any progress reducing poverty or improving health outcomes for M膩ori, Hipkins pointed to smoking cessation, life expectancy increases and the building of 13,000 new 鈥減ublic homes鈥.
Speaking on the Reserve Bank鈥檚 official cash rate, Hipkins said inflation in other countries 鈥渨as proving to be quite sticky鈥.
鈥淚t鈥檚 another example of why now is not the time for tax cuts.
鈥淥ur plan is working. We are seeing inflation in New Zealand come back down again.
鈥淚t鈥檚 going to continue to trend down. A change in government will likely see inflation go up again.
鈥淎ny benefits people get from their tax cuts would be quickly whisked away by increasing prices.鈥
Hipkins repeated his availability for the听Press鈥 leaders鈥 debate on any day from Friday and next Thursday, but Luxon said he was 鈥渇lat out鈥 and unable to find room in his diary.
Hipkins has been trying to portray this as Luxon 鈥渞unning for cover because he knows it will show him up鈥 on the many holes he sees in National鈥檚 numbers and the impact of National鈥檚听. Luxon has rejected this, adding that indexing benefit levels to inflation is a better reflection of changes to the cost of living.
Hipkins continued to question National鈥檚 revenue expectations for its proposed foreign buyers tax, which听. And aside from the impact of cutting Auckland鈥檚 regional fuel tax, he pointed to the lack of allocated funding in National鈥檚 plans for water infrastructure if Three Waters was scrapped - which is also part of National鈥檚 100-day plan.
National鈥檚 alternative to听is to allow councils to band together for borrowing purposes if they choose to, and Luxon said central government funding could be made available to authorities that still needed help. This could come from the $9.9b in unallocated operating allowance over four years and $8b in capital allowance in听.
The country鈥檚 30-year investment shortfall in water infrastructure has been estimated at anywhere between $90b and $185b.
Luxon visited a retirement village and a mall in Christchurch while announcing longer post-natal stays for the mothers of new babies (from two days to three), free Continuous Glucose Monitors (CGMs) for under-18s with type 1 diabetes, and more training places for psychiatrists and clinical psychologists.
The increase in post-natal stays was costed at $19m a year, while for CGMs it was $5.2m a year.
Labour leader Chris Hipkins is in isolation with Covid-19 for at least one more day. Illustration / Daron Parton
Hipkins said there was no tangible benefit in the announcement.
鈥淭hey announced 72-hour stays for women in the hospital when they campaigned back in 2009 and, in reality, the average length of stay that women had in hospital following the birth of a child didn鈥檛 change. Women can stay in hospital for as long as they have a medical need to stay in hospital now.鈥
He also noted that Pharmac is partway through the process of funding CGMs, though it has been听.
National鈥檚 health spokesman Shane Reti said National wanted to extend CGM availability to pregnant women aged 18 to 25, then those aged over 25 and then those with type 2 diabetes - though there was no timeline for this rollout.
Luxon rejected any suggestion that he had chickened out of the听Press鈥櫶leaders鈥 debate, saying if Hipkins wanted to debate people he disagreed with he could talk tax with caucus colleagues David Parker and Ingrid Leary.
Parker made headlines when he听after Hipkins snubbed a wealth tax, while Leary made comments in a public meeting about her personal support for a Capital Gains Tax and a fairer, transparent tax system.
Leary told the听Herald听her comments about the tax system were a reference to the Tax Principles Act, which became law this year and aims to increase transparency and understanding via a new reporting framework.
She said she supported Hipkins despite him听, as did听his predecessor Dame Jacinda Ardern, who was one of many in the caucus who personally supported it but said that she had no mandate for it.
And Labour鈥檚 Wellington Central candidate Ibrahim Omer told a meeting recently that Labour 鈥溾 on the idea of a wealth tax, which earned him a rebuke from Hipkins who said Omer was 鈥渨rong鈥. Omer later said he was trying to tell voters that it wasn鈥檛 on the table for the next term.
This all suggested that a wealth tax and/or a CGT would be adopted in a Labour-Greens-Te P膩ti M膩ori governing arrangement, said National鈥檚 campaign chairman Chris Bishop, or at least taken up by Labour as soon as Hipkins was rolled.
鈥淭he Labour Party caucus is desperate for this. They want a wealth tax,鈥 Bishop said.
鈥淭hey鈥檝e got the Green Party absolutely gagging for a wealth tax and more capital gains taxes. If you vote for Labour, the Greens or the M膩ori Party, there is going to be a wealth tax or a capital gains tax or likely going to be both.鈥
Hipkins laughed this off as 鈥渉ilarious misinformation鈥.
Meanwhile, Act leader David Seymour also released a health policy, aimed at getting the best out of Pharmac and improving access to new medicines.
This would be achieved, he said, by requiring the Ministry of Health to publish a medicines strategy every two years, which would ensure regular performance reporting and international benchmarking of Pharmac.
It would also require MedSafe to approve within one week any drug or medical device that has been approved by two foreign regulatory bodies with comparable systems to New Zealand.
New Zealand First released a long-standing policy of having referenda on social issues instead of conscience votes in Parliament by MPs. These typically happen on social issues such as same-sex marriage, euthanasia or abortion.
Today Luxon will continue his South Island tour, while Hipkins will be in his hotel room again, watching from the sidelines as his team takes up the campaign charge. But he will hold another press conference via Zoom.
Derek Cheng is a senior journalist who started at the Herald in 2004. He has worked several stints in the press gallery and is a former deputy political editor.
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