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National Party unleashes at ‘nasty’ Chris Hipkins and union ad in the Herald

Author
Derek Cheng, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 4 Sep 2023, 11:15am
A digital billboard on the corner of Sandringham Rd and St Lukes Rd featuring Christopher Luxon and the slogan "Out of touch. Too much risk.". Photo / Jason Oxenham
A digital billboard on the corner of Sandringham Rd and St Lukes Rd featuring Christopher Luxon and the slogan "Out of touch. Too much risk.". Photo / Jason Oxenham

National Party unleashes at ‘nasty’ Chris Hipkins and union ad in the Herald

Author
Derek Cheng, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 4 Sep 2023, 11:15am

The National Party says a union advertisement on the front of the NZ Herald newspaper this morning shows Labour diving into the 鈥渕ost negative campaign in history鈥.

鈥漈he Labour-aligned Council of Trade Unions has launched nasty American-style attack ads on National to help their mate Chris Hipkins and his increasingly desperate Labour Party,鈥 said National鈥檚 campaign chair Chris Bishop.

鈥溾楤e kind鈥 has truly become 鈥榖e nasty鈥 under Chris Hipkins and his union elite buddies.鈥

The ad wraps around the front of the NZ Herald newspaper this morning and is clearly labelled as an ad, carrying a promoter statement and NZCTU tag.

It features a photo of Luxon with a Mussolini-esque pose and makes claims that are similar to what the Labour Party has been touting about Luxon being out of touch and focused on the wealthy few with his position on tax cuts, Fair Pay Agreements and paying for prescriptions.

The CTU also launched a new website that restates those claims, and put the ads on its Facebook page.

Speaking to media this morning, Bishop said he had no issue with the Herald running the ad, but the CTU shouldn鈥檛 have run it.

鈥淚t鈥檚 disgraceful. They should be ashamed of themselves.鈥

He said Labour had no track record to stand on so it was resorting to 鈥渘asty, personal, petty, vindictive politics鈥 that was based on 鈥渟currilous lies鈥.

Asked if Labour perhaps wasn鈥檛 aware of the CTU ads, he said: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anyone would believe that.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to engage in personal attacks. Of course, we are going to attack the Labour Party鈥檚 record ... to point to the contrast [between National鈥檚 and Labour鈥檚 plans], but we are not going to engage in the personal.鈥

Asked about the Taxpayers鈥 Union ads attacking Labour and Grant Robertson, Bishop said he hadn鈥檛 seen many of their ads but he believed New Zealanders didn鈥檛 want to see personal attacks.

He said National鈥檚 鈥渁ttack ads, if you want to call them those鈥, were policy-based rather than personality-based.

Labour鈥檚 campaign chair Megan Woods has been contacted for comment. Hipkins is scheduled to address media at 1.30pm today.

The Council of Trade Unions is a registered third-party promoter for the period covering the election campaign.

The spending limit for registered promoters is $391,000 including GST, and if they spend more than $100,000 they have to report their expenses to the Electoral Commission.

An ad promoting a party requires authorisation from the party secretary and counts towards that party鈥檚 election expenses, but the CTU ad isn鈥檛 asking people to vote for Labour.

An ad attacking a party or candidate does not need authorisation from a party secretary, nor does it count towards a party鈥檚 election expenses.

鈥淭he National Party, along with their likely coalition partner, have made it very clear they want to do away with the [Fair] Pay agreements,鈥 political commentator and former Labour Party activist Shane Te Pou told Morning Report today.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a core philosophy for the NZCTU and I think it鈥檚 a fair call for them to make.鈥

He said National had done the same kind of attack ads either directly or via the likes of Groundswell, so if National or Luxon was feeling 鈥渁 little bit bruised, I feel there鈥檚 a bit of hypocrisy there to be honest鈥.

Political commentator and former National government press secretary Ben Thomas retorted: 鈥淣ot too sure that the link between Groundswell and National are quite as clear as the trade union movement and Labour. That might be a bit of an exaggeration by Shane.鈥

Thomas told Morning Report that National was moving towards a more听presidential-style campaign, rightly or wrongly, and that meant focusing on Luxon and deputy leader Nicola Willis more than the whole team.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e going negative, you are talking about the personalities these days.鈥

In a statement, Bishop said the CTU 鈥済rubby attack ads鈥 was aligned with Hipkins 鈥渞unning the most negative election campaign seen in decades鈥.

鈥淪erious questions need to be asked of Chris Hipkins about how much he knew of his union mates鈥 relentlessly negative and scurrilous campaign. It鈥檚 hard to believe Labour didn鈥檛 know about it when a former advisor to Grant Robertson [Craig Renney, the CTU鈥檚 director of policy] is now a senior staffer at the CTU and an active Labour Party volunteer.鈥

Bishop called the ad 鈥渟preading disinformation鈥.

鈥淚t seems Hipkins will stop at nothing to cling to power. This weekend, Hipkins launched his campaign with an email featuring outright lies about National.鈥

鈥淜iwis are crying out to hear how political parties will help them get ahead. But in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis, Chris Hipkins has nothing to offer people but lies and negativity, helped out by big unions that are more focused on attacking National than supporting working people who are drowning in Labour鈥檚 cost-of-living crisis.鈥

He said National was 鈥渞elentlessly focused鈥 on New Zealanders.

Derek Cheng is a senior journalist who started at the听Herald听in 2004. He has worked several stints in the press gallery and is a former deputy political editor.

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