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Home / The Country

Election 2023: National vows to scrap discounts on EVs and ‘ute tax’ in 100 days if elected

Claire Trevett
By Claire Trevett
Political Editor·NZ Herald·
30 Sep, 2023 02:52 AM4 mins to read

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National Party leader Christopher Luxon is set to announce a new policy today, live from Hamilton.

National will scrap the scheme for discounts on electric vehicles and the so-called ute tax within its first 100 days if elected, leader Christopher Luxon said today.

Luxon made the announcement in Hamilton as the rural Groundswell protest group heads to Auckland for a rally tomorrow.

National’s transport spokesman Simeon Brown said the Clean Car Discount scheme - which taxes high-emission vehicles to pay to subsidise low-emission vehicles - was not fiscally sustainable and unfair.

“National does not believe New Zealanders who can afford to buy a brand-new electric car need a subsidy from hardworking taxpayers to pay for it.”

Brown said the government has paid out over $500 million in rebates on brand-new electric vehicles, likely sold to people who could already afford them without the rebate.

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“The ute tax and the Clean Car Discount scheme will be gone by the 31st of December and it will be a happy new year for tradespeople, farmers, contractors and people who need to buy larger vehicles that will not have to pay this regressive tax,” he said.

Fronting media this afternoon, Luxon was asked about events overshadowing the campaign, as Police investigate reports Te Pāti Māori candidate Hana Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke’s Waikato home was raided and threatening letters sent to her, and an incident in which Labour MP Angela Roberts was slapped on the face after a candidates’ meeting.

Luxon said the National party condemn any threats or any violence on any candidate, their family or their property.

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“It’s entirely wrong.

“In our own party, we’ve had serious incidents that have been referred to the police,” Luxon said.

Luxon said people are frustrated.

“We’ve had six years of a government that has taken New Zealand backwards. But what I say to them is get out and vote”.

Hauraki-Waikato candidate Maipi-Clarke’s Waikato home has been invaded, vandalised and left with a threatening letter in an alleged politically-motivated attack.

A Te Pāti Māori spokesperson said there had been a number of incidents at Maipi-Clark’s home, and they were politically motivated.

“When our billboards are vandalised, and when our candidates are verbally assaulted, it is not an attack on them as individuals or us as a political party.”

This week a group of iwi leaders wrote a public letter urging political parties to stop race-baiting for political gain in the election and Labour MP Chris Hipkins has also accused parties - Act and NZ First - of race-baiting.

Luxon yesterday said that it was Hipkins who trying to make race an election issue because he was “a desperate” man.

Both parties have campaigned against co-governance, which Winston Peters has called “a virus” and “a disease.”

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Act leader David Seymour has denied he is dog whistling and said it was important people could talk about issues such as co-governance without being accused of racism.

National’s fiscal plan was released yesterday, which Luxon said would pay down debt faster and return a healthier surplus than Labour’s - as well as paying for its tax cuts promise.

The biggest saving announced on Friday was $2b cut from the amount forecast to be spent on benefits over the four-year forecast period. National is proposing indexing benefits to the CPI rather than wages, which is expected to reduce the extent to which benefit levels increase.

Labour has said that would result in a boost to child poverty.

National’s plan also carries a $9.9 billion “buffer” of unallocated operating spending to respond to cost pressures and changing circumstances, such as natural disasters.

However, Labour’s finance spokesman Grant Robertson said there was a $537m hole in the first year of National’s fiscal plan because it was banking the gains from its proposed new taxes, such as the foreign buyer tax.

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“You can’t base your fiscal plan on income no one thinks you’re going to get - it’s a sand castle,” Robertson said.

He said National’s fiscal plan leaned on its tax package, so if the tax package fell over so did the whole thing.

Willis called this “nonsense”.

National expects to sell 1700 homes a year to foreigners at an average price of $2.9m, but it hasn’t said how it came to those numbers, prompting Labour to claim they’ve been plucked from thin air.

National has said its numbers have been independently verified by consultants Castalia, though other economists have variously called its expected revenue from the foreign buyers tax plausible, optimistic, and complete rubbish.

Claire Trevett is the NZ Herald’s political editor, based at Parliament in Wellington. She started at the NZ Herald in 2003 and joined the Press Gallery team in 2007. She is a life member of the Parliamentary Press Gallery.

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