Good News

Budget 2024: Finance Minister Nicola Willis on tax cuts charm offensive as Labour highlights cuts

Editor Written by Editor · 2 min read >



Finance Minister Nicola Willis is continuing her Budget sales job in Christchurch today as the Government comes under pressure for its failure to fund its promise for new cancer drugs.

Willis will speak to media at about 2pm after speaking to Business Canterbury this afternoon about the Budget she unveiled last Thursday.

A Taxpayers’ Union Curia snap poll taken immediately after the Budget showed respondents thought the Budget’s contents were “okay” and most people were content with the size of the tax cuts offered. Those tax cuts were passed into law under urgency late last week.

However, there has been a weekend of criticism for not including National’s election campaign promise to fund 13 cancer drugs in the Budget – and an open letter this morning from a raft of cancer advocacy and treatment groups is urging the Government to rectify it.

This morning, Labour leader Chris Hipkins also took aim at the Budget’s failure to deliver on cancer drugs.

“I think Christopher Luxon and Nicola Willis, who went up and down the country promising New Zealanders access to those cancer treatments during the campaign, are simply cruel in making a promise and then not delivering on it. It is not a commitment they should have made in the first place, but having made it, they should have made sure they delivered on it. They haven’t done that.”

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has flown out for a visit to Niue and Fiji, but earlier told Mike Hosking on Newstalk ZB that the Government was working to deliver on its promise to fund 13 new cancer drugs.

He expected an announcement “well before the end of the year” – despite Health Minister Shane Reti saying last week that it would be at least a year before the funding was there.

Luxon said he wanted to reassure patients and their families that it was still a priority. ”We are going to do it, we are going to deliver on it, it’s a promise we have made.”

He blamed the hold-up on the need to bolster Pharmac’s funding by an extra $1.8 billion to keep its current services going, as well as the complexity around the process of drug purchasing.

Hipkins visited the Sustainability Trust to highlight a scaling-back of the work that could be done in insulation and energy efficient measures for lower income households in the Warmer Kiwi Homes programme.

Hipkins said the Government had not considered the consequences of their decisions.

Labour also took aim at Budget cuts in the housing area. Housing spokesman Kieran McAnulty said Labour had identified $1.5b in cuts.

“There is $1.5b less for building and maintaining public houses, which will slow the progress we’ve made as a country to fix the housing crisis. The Government has cut $435m from the Kāinga Ora house build programme and over $1b from the maintenance fund,” McAnulty said.

“The National Party did this last time. Public houses got so run-down that a big investment was needed to do them up, and instead of fronting up what was needed, they sold the houses off instead.”

‘We will meet that commitment’

In her speech, Willis highlighted the Budget’s funding increases for health and for new measures including extending breast screening and paying for security guards at emergency departments.

She referred to the criticism of the Government around the cancer drug promise.

”I can assure you we will meet that commitment.”

She said she expected to have more to say about that soon. However, she said first the Government had to secure the funding needed for life-saving treatments purchased by Pharmac, saying the Budget had to “fill funding holes left by the former Labour government.”

She said infrastructure was a big priority, critical for economic growth.

”More than $68b is forecast to be spent by Government on infrastructure over the next fives years.”

She said 2024 was expected to be a record year for spending on infrastructure and the Government had topped up the budget for it by an extra $7b.

She said Shane Jones $1.2b regional fund was “ready to go” and had already identified projects for resilience after major weather events.

On law and order, she pointed to funding for new police and to up-size Waikeria prison.

On the tax cuts, she said the package was fully funded so would not be inflationary.

Claire Trevett is the NZ Herald’s political editor, based at Parliament in Wellington. She started at the Herald in 2003 and joined the Press Gallery team in 2007. She is a life member of the Parliamentary Press Gallery.



Source link

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com