ACT supports equal rights for men
Dr Muriel Newman
Speech to the Christchurch Mens Political Forum, Christchurch Community Law Centre, 7pm.
Today we are being asked what our parties would do for New Zealand men. For a long time I have been extremely concerned about government policies, which disadvantage men and marginalise fathers. Since entering Parliament, ACT has consistently campaigned to right the balance in our laws.
As a priority, ACT would reform family law to introduce shared parenting. This means that in the event of a family breakdown children would have the support of their mother and father, as well as both sets of grandparents and wider family. It is disgraceful that in spite of a Private Members Bill to introduce shared parenting having twice been debated in Parliament, the Labour party, the Progressives, the Greens and New Zealand First failed to consider the issue important enough to send it to a Select Committee.
As a consequence of the present system, which gives the custody of children almost exclusively to mothers – and tolerates the frequent use of false allegations against the fathers of the children — many fathers lose contact with their children. That not only causes intense heartbreak and trauma for children, fathers and grandparents, but it leads to far higher levels of non-compliance with child support orders than would be the case if dads were able to take part in parenting.
The Child Support Act has been problematic since its inception. It is in urgent need of a complete overhaul from the bottom up and it is extremely disappointing that Labour and National have both failed to instigate the necessary changes.
ACT would review the Child Support Act, basing payments on a realistic measure of the cost of raising a child, ensuring that the payments go directly to the children not the IRD and properly adjusting payment levels to take account of the contributions already made by the non-custodial parent as they share in the raising of their children.
The fact that uncollected child support has now reached almost $1billion demonstrates the lack of commitment by Labour to unfair and unjust laws that affect fathers.
But the real victims of Labour’s unfair laws are children.
The Labour party has been driven by a radical feminist agenda for thirty years, which regards traditional marriage and the family as a means of oppressing women. That’s why they introduced laws to encourage single parenthood as a way of life, why they promote family diversity at the expense of marriage and why they are incentivising women to leave their three month-old babies and return to the workforce.
With a quarter of a million children living in homes without their biological father — for Maori the situation is much worse with three out of four babies under 12 months old living in a family without a father — the situation, as the OECD recently pointed out is disastrous.
Research – both from New Zealand and overseas is unequivocal — children raised in homes without a father are much more likely to become involved in crime, drugs, teen pregnancy and abortion, youth suicide and school truancy.
Many mothers, of course, have no choice but to try and raise their children as best they can because the fathers have walked away, abdicating their responsibility for proper love, discipline, support and protection. But not all fathers are separated from their children voluntarily — many are the victims of our archaic family laws.
Whatever the reason for the separation, one of the awful consequences is the escalation in child abuse that is now affecting more and more of New Zealand’s most vulnerable children. Over the last twelve months the number of cases of established child abuse being investigated by the Department of Child Youth and Family has skyrocketed 45 percent to 13,017. This is a direct result of family instability, sole parenthood and welfare dependency.
ACT would seek to address the problem by curbing the incentives that create sole parenthood: Abolishing the Domestic Purposes Benefit as a long term benefit in favour of a temporary benefit to support sole parents into work, so they can become the breadwinner of their children. By doing that, much of the damaging impact that long-term welfare has been shown to have on the children of sole parents, would be reduced. Such a change would also act to strengthen marriage — if a couple are having relationship difficulties and the option for the parent most likely to be awarded custody of the children is a benefit leading to work, instead of the present situation of income support for life, then that parent is far more likely to put more effort into making the relationship work.
There are many other things where the balance needs to be put right — encouraging more men to consider primary school teaching would be a good start — but there is one area in the health field that I would like to mention.
In particular, it is wrong that a national screening programme for prostate cancer has not been given the proper consideration it deserves. Six times more men die of prostate cancer a year than women die of cervical cancer, yet women not only have a cervical cancer screening programme but a breast screening programme as well. The false positives for prostate cancer screening are the same as for breast cancer screening and the number of deaths from those two types of cancer are about the same.
I am collecting signatures for a petition to Parliament to consider the introduction of a national prostate cancer screening programme. If you support that — and would like to see the balance in law tilted back towards men’s rights instead of exclusively focussing on women’s rights — then I urge you to gather as many signatures for the petition as you can.
Of all the parties in Parliament, ACT has never swerved from our commitment to create a better balance in law for men. Abolishing the Ministry of Women’s Affairs — a hotbed of radical feminism — is still an important first step. Reforming family law to introduce shared parenting, replacing the present child support system in favour of one that is fair, abolishing the Domestic Purposes Benefit as we know it and replacing it with a benefit that encourages work and introducing a better balance in our legislative system to support the rights of men, are important steps in the way to once again properly respect the vital contribution that men make to a well-functioning society. If you want to support ACT in our commitment to equal rights for men, then you will need to give ACT your party vote at the election.
Men need to seriously consider what will happen if we loose Dr Newman’s voice from the House of Representatives!
Unlike John Tamahere Muriel has been a consistent advocate of real reform of Family law and Child Support and continuously advocated for such things as shared parenting and a screening programme for postrate cancer.
When you cast your party vote dont forget that past performance is a pretty good indicator of future preformance.
Comment by Scrap_The_CSA — Tue 28th June 2005 @ 10:39 am
She gets my vote, and if she needs signatures on a petition, I will do my best.
Comment by Morris Lindsay — Tue 28th June 2005 @ 11:19 am
good on ACT to have the balls. I just want equal rights for every one!
Comment by Dave — Tue 28th June 2005 @ 6:01 pm
Yes Muriel Newman has been a champion for men’s rights for a long time now. It’s wonderfully refreshing to see her advocating such concrete steps she wants to see taken to rectify some of the more blatant discriminations against men. Sadly I don’t see other politicians in NZ being such empathic and clear headed advocates about what should be done to improve men’s lot there.
Comment by Stephen — Wed 29th June 2005 @ 12:33 am
Got my vote too!
Comment by Mark Shipman — Wed 29th June 2005 @ 9:10 am
Wonderful to hear a consistent appeal like this.
Such a pity other politicians have such selective hearing.
Comment by Ethos — Thu 30th June 2005 @ 8:50 am
So – the law and pretty much society are happy to sit back and let men be villified, and alienated from their children, and financially crushed because they become separated from their partner (sorry for being so brief) And research has shown that fatherless children are much more likely to become menaces in society than children with fathers. We all know this — we hear it all the time. So – wimmen must also hear and & understand this. Yet our Government (and ex’s) are happy to sit back and take our money knowing that their children will grow up with a more major chance of becoming a criminal. My point is that solo mum’s need to realise this fact and do something about it as well. I guess it’s easy for them, because they’re nice and comfy, and have their children and enough money. But this ignorance is almost as bad as the government’s attitude towards men — It’s easy to sit back and forget consequences, when everything is nice and comfy for them. Do they really believe keeping the kids and keeping them from thier dads is doing the best for them ? – I think alot of them do.
Comment by Moose — Thu 30th June 2005 @ 11:25 pm
Hi Moose,
obviously relying on women to change from what you’ve describe above (DBP queens) is never going to happen in current circumstances. I personally have met allot of NZ women who are happy to loll about on DPB for many years suckling on the taxpayer’s titty. They have no incentive at all to become more generative members of society. Insultingly to those of us who have a stronger work ethic manyI’ve met would evn describe themselves as victims saying thier not paid enough for the PRIVELIGE of being closely bonded to thier kids. Never mind that the taxpaying majority are out thier breadwinning to feather thier cosy maternal nest.
Many I’ve seen appear literally hideously fat – bloated by a set -in lethargy with kids who’re very independent. They’ve forgotten what a hard day’s work is years ago.
What really pisses me off is many even have thier mortgages paid out of the public coffers. So they can enjoy having seen thier property values exploding recently. All the while there are I know many hardworking (as in full time jobs, not sitting at home wathcing Oprah) folks who can’t even save enough to raise the deposit on a very humble place of thier own.
Why? because they pay so much goddamn tax
….which goes to fund feminist gravy trains like DPB, DVA (and the Government’s defathering unit- let’s believe women’s false allegations for the ‘sake of the children’
sorry, femily, oops,
I mean the New Zealand family court………..)
You get the picture.
So given the premise that expecting women to change whilst incentivising them to luxuriate in –
a. initiating ‘no fault’ divorce.
b. Thereafter being able to make false allegations about thier former hubbies with impunity. Leading to …..
c. Hanging onto the kid/s and cruising on a benefit……….
then I fully expect they won’t be in any hurry to change a jot.
Therefore I’m led to the inevitable conclusion that the only thing men can do to change this scenario is to change themselves.
So my question and challenge to the male community of NZ is –
What are you prepared to change about yourself to ensure you don’t get screwed over by the above described feminist matriarchy?
Comment by Stephen — Fri 1st July 2005 @ 1:04 am
Stephen,
I agree wholeheartedly. Why would any sane woman want to change even one little bit of this?
While you have the anti-Clark (she is anti-family, anti-child, anti-parent, anti-Chruch, anti-royalty AND anti-man) anywhere near a seat of power and left without check, she and her queer-boys (look at the Oxford “queer (a): strange or unusual”) will shaft every man.
Men need to grow some bollocks and unite in a common cause. There are too many little groups trying to do the same thing. Get everyone onto the same path and show teh neo-fascist, socio-communist femi-nazi brigade what you think. Check out http://www.fairgo.org.nz they run some very interesting commentaries.
Comment by Sparx — Fri 1st July 2005 @ 8:39 am
You may also wish to check out the aims of http://www.parentsforchildren.org.nz and what they wish to achieve to better the lot of children of separated families.
Comment by Ethos — Fri 8th July 2005 @ 5:44 pm
Thanks Sparx and Ethos,
I’m sure the groups you both mention are about getting a fair deal for dads and kids, and getting NZ out of the soc-fem bind it’s currently in.
My life’s too short to wait for many
NZ f_ _ _ _ wits to get the drift, so I’ll probably be bypassing the until it seems it respects men a whole lot more. However, with your heads up on these two organisations I’ll continue to keep a watchful eye on the place, and live with hope for NZ men.
Comment by Stephen — Wed 13th July 2005 @ 5:18 am