By DaveForCouncil, on May 23rd, 2025
In the leadup to National’s first budget I protested that the planned tax cuts were unaffordable and stood on a roundabout in my home town and let everyone know I was concerned. The support was just incredible. Soon I was joined by more and more people and we made a big noise predicting that everything that has happened was the only outcome from such disastrous policy. The Postpone The Tax Cuts Facebook Page remains a valuable historical resource recording how many people predicted the disaster that is this National led coalition government would be. . . . → Read More: Postpone The Tax Cuts Campaign – 2024
By DaveForCouncil, on May 21st, 2025
In 2025, as we look towards Nicola Willis’s second budget it seems everyone is talking about National’s unaffordable $14 billion tax cuts.
In 2024, Whakatane was doing more than talk about them.
The Postpone The Tax Cuts campaign by the Whakatane Act Local group were taking to the streets of our hometown calling for . . . → Read More: Wasteful Spending and Fiscal Responsibility, Coalition Style
By DaveForCouncil, on May 19th, 2025
Every council in Aotearoa agrees and every economist accepts that government keeping the GST portion of our rates is a ‘tax on a tax’. Government needs to get back to basics and stop treating ratepayers like a bottomless ATM . Return the $1.1 billion GST component of rates back to councils. . . . → Read More: Government Needs To Return $1 Billion GST To Councils
By DaveForCouncil, on May 16th, 2025
I think we are all focussed as a community, as a world even, on what divides us and what we disagree on. We stand far apart from each other and shout across a huge divide, no one prepared to give an ideological centimetre to their opponents. But what good is that doing? . . . → Read More: Why Support Dave When You Don’t Agree With Him?
By DaveForCouncil, on May 9th, 2025
The solution has to be based on users of the service and I think the proactiveness of the Chamber of Commerce in this leads to the solution. At the same time all users will most likely have to accept less competitive fares. The first step is with the airline itself. The airline has to have a business friendly timetable at the heart of a solution however. Then I think the business community needs to step up and form some sort of compact with Air Chathams where business users agree to pay ‘business class’ tickets. These are the same tickets as regular passengers but are more expensive and offer Air Chathams practical support from those most able to provide it, to the people who will benefit from it the most – our businesses. . . . → Read More: Air Chathams and Whakatane
By DaveForCouncil, on May 8th, 2025
Gearing up for the local body election campaign where I am running and have the opposition scared witless. A local poll was held last weekend by my opponents and I was winning so my opponents deleted my name off it. The wont be able to do that in the real world.
Follow me on . . . → Read More: Connect On Instagram
By DaveForCouncil, on May 1st, 2025
If you have spent about 5 minutes on the pages that are promoting the National led coalition government’s local council agenda you’ll have heard them swoon when the PM addressed the local council conference and told them his lot were going to amend the law and insist councils stopped doing things other than collecting . . . → Read More: Government calls on mayors to boost school attendance and wellbeing
By DaveForCouncil, on April 24th, 2025
Source
Australia is now in the thick of a federal election cycle, the United States just came out of one and in New Zealand, the fallout from the last national election has brought into focus a part of the political machine often out of view.
To a voter’s naked eye, the impact . . . → Read More: How Atlas Network amassed a global network of free market think tanks and reached into Australia and New Zealand
By DaveForCouncil, on April 23rd, 2025
My coalition aligned opponents are forever finding new electoral promises that they say will reduce our rates, but they never cost them.
In reality they’re just regurgitating decades old neoliberal nonsense that, at the end of the day, just hands over public assets to private enterprise operators.
Our holiday park, something that is central . . . → Read More: Government In Wellington Are Treating Ratepayers Like A Bottomless ATM
By DaveForCouncil, on April 4th, 2025 Source
Korero
Author – Jack Karetai-Barrett
Māori wards in New Zealand have been a big topic in local government, especially when it comes to fair representation and Te Tiriti obligations.
These wards give Māori a dedicated voice in decision-making, similar to Māori electorates in Parliament. But their introduction has been controversial, with laws . . . → Read More: The future of Māori wards
By DaveForCouncil, on March 26th, 2025 Source
Yes, it’s flat, but there’s another crucial reason why so many Christchurch residents ride – the city’s extensive network of cycle lanes.
Simon Kingham’s 9km commute, from Beckenham in south Christchurch to the University of Canterbury west of the CBD, is mostly on cycle lanes. “It’s only the first 400 metres on the . . . → Read More: What has Christchurch done right to get so many people on bikes?
By DaveForCouncil, on March 13th, 2025 Source
Here’s a classic example of Wellington telling local councils what to do but not funding it. Auckland ratepayers will have to fund $4 million because of the National led coalition government’s deal with the minority ACT Party to remove Safer Speeds from around schools. With rates rises reaching eye watering levels as a result . . . → Read More: Explained: Why are speed limit changes costing over $8 million?
By DaveForCouncil, on February 28th, 2025 There are a few big reasons I want to be involved in the local body election campaign, and I haven’t looked past the campaign itself really. There’s so much silly talk being talked, especially in Whakatane with the kind of nonsense being floated. I’ll go into those in greater detail as the campaign proper . . . → Read More: Shake-up of council infrastructure funding announced
By DaveForCouncil, on February 28th, 2025 Source It’s time for councils to have a respectful and mature conversation with central government about underfunding and undermining local democracy. Expect a call, Minister.
New Local Government Minister Simon Watts. Photo: RNZ / Nick Monro
New Local Government minister Simon Watts announced to councils across the country today to speak up if . . . → Read More: Local Government Minister Simon Watts tells local governments to ask for help if needed
By DaveForCouncil, on February 27th, 2025 Source
Simeon Brown MP
Simeon Brown Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone
The new government’s Transport Minister has pulled the brakes on dozens of council projects designed to encourage cycling, walking and use of public transport across the country, sparking confusion in local authority ranks and fury amongst cycling advocates.
In a letter . . . → Read More: Minister pulls brakes on cycling and walking initiatives
By DaveForCouncil, on February 7th, 2025
There are a few loud and vocal supporters of the National led coalition government’s plan to demolish local democracy and run our town from Wellington.
The Whakatane Action Group (WAG) is one of the loudest voices in support of Wellington versus Whakatane.
In today’s Beacon there is a very good example . . . → Read More: Wellington v Whakatane
By DaveForCouncil, on January 24th, 2025
Fri, Jan 24, 2025 5:20 AM
Someone’s got to sort this mess out – council candidate
Standing up: Dave Stewart plans to throw his hat in the ring for a seat on Whakatāne District Council at this year’s local government elections. Photo Troy Baker E5208-13
Diane McCarthy
Whakatāne District . . . → Read More: Someone’s Got To Sort This Mess Out
By DaveForCouncil, on January 1st, 2025
If you haven’t liked or followed my political page which is where I am running a local body election campaign in Whakatane, you’re missing the fun, and the facts.
Rates are unaffordable, but the real reason is being fudged over by friends of the government.
Central government makes demands on councils . . . → Read More: Vote For Dave!
By DaveForCouncil, on April 10th, 2024
Well, I guess when you read this from a year ago, I kind of walked my way in to running for council without even realizing it.
If there’s one thing I don’t like, it’s people who say they don’t like something but haven’t got the balls to front up and fight for . . . → Read More: Whakatane War Memorial Hall Public Meeting 2024
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