Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

THE GAUNTLET DOWN

EVERY PENNY WANTED. MINISTER’S SPIRITED SPEECH. WELLINGTON, October 22. Throwing down the gauntlet to the Opposition by telling them in unmixed terms,that the Government fully recognised that the, -Jung debate which had preceded committee work.: on the Land and Income'Tax Amendment Bill Wvas nothing but the. Reform. Party’s way oif obstructing the passage the deputy-leader of the House, the Hon. Gv W. Forbes, made an arresting speech; it-v-‘ ... “We recognise... that the. purpose of the discussion ,was. to delay the Bill,’’' he said, whereuppn the leader: of ; the Opposition’; shouted heatedly, “ Now that is absolutely ridiculous,”. » (Government and Labour laugh ter.) Mr Forbes: What’ - other purpose could the long discussion., on the Gov-ernor-General's message have had? Such a thing .has never happened before. • The Hon. T. Wilford r. Not during my time in the House. A /Reform member; You’ve dont it yourself. (Laughter.) • ' v Mr Forbes. repeated that the, idea of the protracted: ’ diseus'sion was not to elicit infonhaJtfipnj jbjit to. delay th 4 Bills Mr Coates’: So ydu ‘Haven’t gdt nn 1 argument ? . Mr JTorbesr Yes I have, butwhen we remember that this Bill was under discussion for three days on the second reading and. that it was thrashed out as no other Bill has be6n the' reason is clear. - • •• • • • Mr Samuel: There has been no other legislation to! thresh out. / ! /•., REFORM’S ARGUMENTS * ANALYSED." '■>" ; Mr Forbes then dealt with • some of the Opposition’s arguments. All the arguments used were, he said;, those heard btlfore the Government intro-; duced the hardship clause. They were also the arguments heard when,' the mortgage exemption was' £SOOO instead, of £7500, and when snper-tax started at £12,500. Every deputation‘.wliich waited on the Government before the concessions werp granted had stressed the fact that all would be well, if- only a hardship/blause/werb put ; in, .so .that farmers would; not? be ruined.,-yThe - Governments bad respbnctedl.by sprbviding a haMsbip elaUsb, so tiow it cduld not he said with, fairness;,that any, farmer would be ruined.'- , The assumption that -'the Hardship Commission would not act fairly could not Be accepted by men who did not/take .a jaundiced view. The truth was that the Government was out to give the fullest .consideration to men who .felt that they' b^.fina)ifcifllly ( rassed. ; Men who! could pfford to coni tribute their fair share -towards the country’s revenue should do so. ; , ; /

REASONS WHY REVENUE ; ; REQUIRED. , ; “ How could we, with an empty exchequer,. a national deficit arid an expenditure of £1,500,000 addiiibrial to' face tills year, meet the situation witfi.out seeking extra revenue asked Mr Forbes. . ' , / , ~ , ."'j * Mr Coates (sarcastically) ,: Make the farmer sweat. <.j , X. , Mr Forbes said it was only right that.' fair contribution should 4be made; .bfy men who had large holdings. If it was more profitable to keep those holdings, intact than to have them subdivided then the owners of those large holdings shoiild pay their fair share of the coun-: try’s revenue. Especially was this true when expenses were increasing by leaps and bounds. Was it reasonable that the burden of extra taxation should be • placed on some other shoulders ? Surely no reasonable farmer would expect that.,. ■ V . ' REFORM HAD NO HARDSHIP CLAUSE. j Mr Forbes reminded the House that when the big change over‘took place in .1912 and Reform replaced the Liberal party on the Treasury Benches the first alteration made by Retform was in the graduated land tax, which they increased. Reform had then taunted 1 the Liberal party by saying that it had been left to them to make the increaess and they claimed that they were the real Liberal party. . In doing that, the Reform party had said the reason was to burst up large estates, but it had not provided any hardship clause. Mr Hamilton (Wallace): That was a war-time measure. Mr Forbes: It was not war time. It was all the time, till, we took over. Mr Coates: There was a hardship clause, Section 43 of the Acti Mr Forbes said it was all *very well, to criticise the Government for doing what it . had been asked to do. Men who found themselves embarrassed would be pleased to find there was provision for consideration of cases of hardship which would act fairly and minimise hardship in genuine cases. Ilf the Reform party claimed to represent the landowners and persisted in attacking the Government for putting in a hardship . clause it would be easy to drop that . clause. A Reform member: Oh, you are always saying that (Government laughter). •

Mr Forbes concluded by saying that every additional penny of revenue was required, and would be required in future.

A REFORMER REPLIES. The Hon. Downie Stewart (Dunedin West), who sat silent all the afternoon, followed the Minister of Lands, prefacing his remarks by saying he had waited patiently to hear whether the

Government had been impressed with the representation's J which had been made since the original proposals were annoUriced. It seemed that those representations had been regarded as o(f no importance, because the Minister had claimed to have met them all by introducing a hardship clause. The Amendments introduced ain the afternoon seemed to indicate that no land used at fpreserit for pastoral or agricultural purposes could possibly be the subject of hardship, but to his mind there could be just as much difficulty and hardship with lands under full cultivation as there could be with any other class. Mr Stewart believed that more progress would be made with this Bill had the Government acted on the, suggestion that the measure be referred to . a committee of .the House so that it might be threshed out. Had that been done everything not equitable or just could have been deleted from the Bill; There would have been plenty of time. • ; 1 . Mr Stewart added that he could not see why income tax had been provided for at all, because the Government’s land taxation proposals were of such a swinging nature that very few farmers would be called upon to pay income tax as the greater, tax. The Hon. T. M, Wilford : What sort of tax. did you say ? . Mr Stewart: I said swinging not swindling (Reform laughter). Continuing, the ex-Finance Minister said that few farmers had more taxable income than the amount on which they would be taxed under the land taxation proposals, and for that reason it was only a gesture and mockery to put income tax in the Bill at all. This showed that it was unjust to subject farmers to heavy land tax, because they did not, have the income to pay it. Personally he believed.the Government had gone farther than the Labour party Would have gone. The Labour party would considered such a policy for one moment, but because it was introduced by a party supposed to be less. Radical than itself the Labour party accepted it as all right. In conclusion Mr Stewart said he objected to - the Bill because it would mean : the appropriation of the whole annual value of a property. Far better wou)d it have been to impose income tax on farmers and leave the rest of the Bill, till later on. Personally he did not believe that farmers had the income to tax. The Prime Minister had 'stated on one occasion in the past that he did not believe in confiscation but confiscation could be the only effect of this measure, and that was Mr Stewart’s principal objection to it. The debate on the short title was continued.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19291025.2.7

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 25 October 1929, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,244

THE GAUNTLET DOWN Hokitika Guardian, 25 October 1929, Page 2

THE GAUNTLET DOWN Hokitika Guardian, 25 October 1929, Page 2

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert