The New Zealand Herald

Winston’s very National speech

Nats will have to reform if they want Coalition deal in 2020, attendees at NZ First convention told

- Boris Jancic politics

Winston Peters has spent his party’s annual gathering lashing National while saying he won’t be picking sides ahead of next year’s election.

But it was the party’s young members who looked to grab the reins yesterday.

The New Zealand First leader took the stage at the party’s annual convention for a 45-minute speech that mentioned National at least 14 times, just shy of the number of times it named New Zealand First.

While mentioning a handful of broad policy ideas for next year’s election, Peters spoke at length about National’s record on economics, individual members current and past, and saying it would have to reform if it wanted a Coalition deal in 2020.

“Unless they change, and we hope they do, a future National facing economic headwinds will embark on austerity policies, condemning New Zealand to more social fallout,” he said.

“We hope they change but the fact is New Zealand First, right now, as a party of the centre, is the National Party, when it had a capital N – when it put New Zealand first.”

So many times did Peters mention the Opposition that when he said “now turning to National”, 35 minutes in, the room laughed along with him.

When a heckler interrupte­d to complain about police numbers, Peters accused them of being from National.

About 10 minutes later, the Right Honourable Peters — as attendees during the weekend called him — rejected that he had spent a significan­t chunk of the speech on the Opposition.

“If that’s all you saw in that speech, I invite you to go read it again because that is a road map for where we are going to go in the future as a party,” he told reporters.

But Peters’ master plan involves positionin­g himself as kingmaker again in 2020 and he concluded his speech noting his long-held stance that he wouldn’t be picking sides or doing deals ahead of the election.

He made no repeat of a jab at ailing MediaWorks that overshadow­ed a similar speech on Saturday morning.

And although Peters earlier in the weekend popped out of the conference to meet gun-owning protesters calling on his party to halt the Government’s upcoming firearms reforms, he had no plans to do the same for a few dozen Extinction Rebellion environmen­tal protesters gathered at the front door yesterday.

It was the party’s youth wing that scored a major victory yesterday, after convincing the party to rethink its position against testing of pills at music festivals.

Last month NZ First's caucus appeared to have halted the plan for pill-testing at public events, when several of its MPs came out in opposition. But the party’s membership yesterday made time to publicly debate the issue at its annual conference. The youth wing won the vote despite criticism from MPs Clayton Mitchell, Darroch Ball and Mark Patterson.

In an at-times preacher-like

speech, youth member Rob Gore, 23, tried to bridge the generation­al gap.

“Here you are judging young people for taking MDMA, but we are a generation who watched our parents and our grandparen­ts drink themselves into an early grave,” he said.

“Brother, do not point out the sawdust in my eye, look at the plank of wood in your own.”

The policy will now go to the

party’s caucus for further considerat­ion.

Speaking to reporters afterwards, a trio of NZ First youth MPs said they had “worked their bums off” for four years to be able to get the floor and said the key to their victory was emphasisin­g relationsh­ips, not the age gap.

“We were talking to people who otherwise would have been our grandparen­ts. People for whom we

are their grandchild­ren,” Gore said.

The members voted through a remit asking the party to look at giving all teenagers 100 hours of compulsory community service.

And Regional Developmen­t Minister Shane Jones received applause when he said he still sent physical letters to his mother in Awanui.

The party also announced its new board, including Rotorua’s Kristin Campbell-Smith as president.

 ?? Photo / Boris Jancic ?? Winston Peters said his speech was a road map for where the party was going.
Photo / Boris Jancic Winston Peters said his speech was a road map for where the party was going.

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