Overview:

The below question that Stuff put to National MP Stuart Smith is one that contains a false premise that The BFD strongly disagrees with. It is incredibly biased and is actually a shocking question from what is supposed to be an unbiased media organisation. However, that is the question that Stuart had to respond to.

The so-called Freedom protestors who camped at Parliament are a fringe minority which included people who threaten violence against MPs, violence against journalists, and who are so divorced from reality they demand an end to laws that don’t even exist.

Is such behaviour acceptable, and what can we as a society do about people who refuse to peacefully accept what the majority want?

Stuff

Information

Opinion

Stuart Smith
National MP Kaikoura

Everybody has the right to protest, we live in a liberal democracy where people are free to disagree with others and particularly the Government.

In saying that, there is a level of decorum that needs to be adhered to during a protest, and blocking the streets, spitting, abusing people and being overtly anti-social is no way to go about protesting.

Unfortunately, the valid concerns that the protesters have about mandates will likely be overwhelmed by disruption to already struggling businesses in central Wellington by the illegally parked vehicles and the poor manner in which some of the protestors have conducted themselves.

The protest has almost been going on for two weeks, and Wellingtonians and New Zealanders have no clear indication of when it will end. We also have the Speaker of the House Trevor Mallard acting like a toddler turning the sprinklers on and blasting music through speakers against police advice, which has only made things worse.

This is far from the standard of behaviour expected of the presiding officer of our Parliament, and I strongly support the motion of no confidence which the National party lodged last Wednesday.

Instead of turning on sprinklers, and hiding behind the Speaker, the Government needs to show some leadership and work with the police to de-escalate the situation.

The Prime Minister was very quick to insert herself in the middle of the Ihumatao protests in 2019, but has been notably absent in the last couple of weeks.

Leadership is about making tough decisions and dealing with all New Zealanders, not just those who agree with you.

I am more than willing to engage with protestors who have differing views than I do, but first, they must respect the freedoms of others to go about their daily lives.

What I do think the protest symbolises though, is a nationwide frustration to the Government’s response to the pandemic.

They imposed vaccine mandates, without giving New Zealanders the criteria for which they will be abolished. We still don’t have enough rapid antigen tests and the cost of living is rising as a result of the economic excesses that the Government have sneaked in under the cover their Covid response.

All of these things are making life worse for New Zealanders, it is time to “govern for all New Zealanders”.

New Zealanders whatever their opinions and beliefs deserve nothing less.

MP for Kaikoura. Viticulture, EQC.

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