Strong Response From Mangere’s Young to Compete for Role As Youth MP

16 March 2010

Media Statement
Mangere Youth MP Nominations Close


Nominations for the Mangere Youth MP position closed yesterday and a total of 15 young men and women living in Mangere and attending local schools including Mangere College, De La Salle, Seventh Day Adventist High School, Aorere College, Onehunga and McAuley High have applied.

Labour MP for Mangere, Su’a William Sio says he’s excited by the number & strength of young people that have applied.

“It takes a lot of courage and personal belief to put yourself forward to be scrutinised by others for public office and I’m pleased we have a strong group of contenders,” says Su’a William Sio.

“Personally, I’m proud of the 15 individuals that have come forward, and it makes me very confident about the future leadership that have stepped forward now.”

Final selection will take place on Monday 22 March 5-7pm at Nga Tapuwae Hall, Mangere, where a Selection Panel will listen to each student give a speech to a public audience.

The Mangere MP says parents, families and supporters are all invited to attend and would like to encourage the community to support and get behind our young future leaders of tomorrow.

“This will be a valuable opportunity for these young people to experience a real live political selection process, if they chose this career pathway,” says Su’a William Sio.

The Youth MP for Mangere will attend Youth Parliament on 6-7 July 2010 in Wellington and will experience the day to day operations of Parliamentary Select Committee work, Parliamentary debates, and will get a glimpse of what its like to work as a Member of Parliament.

The Selection Panel will involve school prefects or leaders from the participating schools.

Ends.


NZ Parliament Winds Down For the Year

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WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND – MAY 19: Tongan Prime Minister Dr Feleti Sevele (2nd L) and New Zealand Prime Minister John Key (2nd R) walk up the steps of Parliament after a welcome ceremony on May 19, 2009 in Wellington, New Zealand. Prime Minister Sevele is expected to discuss Tonga/NZ relations, New Zealands aid programme, the impact of the global financial crisis, and political reform in Tonga. (Photo by Marty Melville/Getty Images)

This is the final week for NZ Parliament for 2009, closing a week earlier than initially scheduled. Listening into the debating chamber this afternoon, we can hear their excitement already, along with louder than usual heckling, from both sides of the House.

You can listen online to Parliament by clicking here and following the directions. We will shortly post some of the highlights in NZ Parliament this year.


NZ Parliament Debates Maori Television ; Maori TV Issues Statement

Minister of Broadcasting Jonathan Coleman. Labour’s Shane Jones has asked the House, when will Pita Sharples get an apology from Government over its treatment of the Maori Affairs Minister in relation to Maori Television’s bid to broadcast Rugby World Cup Games on free-to-air television.

In Parliament, Jones says that Maori Television were about to serve Government with legal writs for things like, disclosing commercially sensitive information to its competitors TVNZ and TV3.  He expressed concern that Sharples was treated so

NZ Minister of Broadcasting Jonathan Coleman (left), NZ Prime Minister John Key

NZ Minister of Broadcasting Jonathan Coleman (left), NZ Prime Minister John Key

poorly by Government.

On the matter of commercial information, it is usually a breach of commercial confidentiality and sensitivity agreements for documents to be released to its competitor. You just don’t do that in the commercial world (it’s contractual suicide) and yet Government Ministers did that, passing on commercially sensitive information to TVNZ and TV3.

Either Government is commercially naive.  The Prime Minister John Key is certainly not. Or did he, and the Minister of Broadcasting, completely underestimate Maori Television’s reaction to being publicly humiliated and having its commercial documents leaked to all and sundry? Read the rest of this entry »


National’s 1975 Ad On Pacific Island Immigration; Deja Vue

National’s immigration spokesperson Lockwood Smith opened some old wounds for the Pacific with his racist remarks to a reporter from Marlborough Express this week.

In 1975, with National aiming to win the election, they campaigned using TV ads targeting Pacific immigration…sound familiar? It must have had some impact, along with the other interesting TV ads, because National won that year. That is where we begin the story of the dawn raids. Read the rest of this entry »