
By Russell Palmer of
New Zealand First leader Winston Peters says his suggestion Fonterra should face more regulation is not a threat but rather 鈥淧arliament鈥檚 duty鈥.
ACT鈥檚 David Seymour says politicians should leave the decision to those 鈥渕ilking cows鈥, to which Peters bit back: 鈥淲e know what one end of the cow looks like鈥.
Peters penned an open letter to farmers on Friday morning, having earlier like Mainland and Anchor, and other assets, to French company Lactalis.
The letter accused the company鈥檚 executives of not being transparent and warned that if the deal progressed 鈥渢hen perhaps we need to revisit the regulatory environment鈥.
Speaking to RNZ, Peters denied that warning was in any way a 鈥渢hreat鈥. He said his letter was intended to alert farmers 鈥渢o what鈥檚 going on鈥.
鈥淚鈥檓 not interfering with the farming community or with Fonterra. I鈥檓 saying, 鈥榊ou have enjoyed by statute and by Parliament the position of a monopoly privilege and now you鈥檙e selling it and claiming it鈥檚 all of your own right鈥. No, it鈥檚 not. It鈥檚 the right of the New Zealand people,鈥 he said.
David Seymour argues commercial decisions should be left to farmers, not politicians. Photo / Mark Mitchell
鈥淲hen you ask for regulatory conditions and privileges and then you sell them off to some other country鈥檚 advantage with no permanency in terms of benefit to New Zealand - or, dare I say, their children and their grandchildren鈥檚 chance to go farming in this country - then it鈥檚 the Parliament鈥檚 duty to examine the full import of this deal.鈥
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In a written statement to RNZ, Regulations Minister Seymour - who鈥檚 also ACT leader and deputy prime minister - said New Zealand was not a socialist country, and commercial decisions 鈥渟hould be for business owners, and political decisions for politicians鈥.
鈥淚f anyone wants a say on the Fonterra vote, they should earn the right by getting up at 4am and milking cows for a few decades. If they鈥檙e not prepared to do that, they should leave it to the people who are.鈥
That comment did not go down well with Peters: 鈥淚 milked cows almost two decades, and so did Shane Jones, and so did others of us in my caucus.
Fonterra's deal could net over $4.2 billion, with farmers voting on the proposal. Photo / 123RF
鈥淲e actually know what one end of the cow looks like compared to some who don鈥檛.鈥
The suggestion politicians should stay out of business decisions was 鈥渕arvellous, until you demand privileges from Parliament to give yourself the chance of having an edge to then turn against the national interest for your own narrow advantage鈥, Peters said.
Fonterra rejected RNZ鈥檚 requests for interviews but said it would respond to Peters鈥 letter with a statement soon.
A spokesperson also pointed to Parliament records showing it was the select committees that declined to hear from Fonterra, not the other way around.
Peters told RNZ that was not good enough.
鈥淲ith respect, Fonterra could have volunteered, regardless of the committee,鈥 he said.
鈥淛ust because others in the committee have got a perverted idea what free enterprise and capitalism looks like - against the national interest - there鈥檚 no reason for them to repeat a mistake that they made when they did that same thing with the Beingmate investment.鈥
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon鈥檚 office told RNZ he had nothing to add to his comments on Monday, in which he said politicians should not be telling farmers what to do.
鈥淗e鈥檚 entitled to a view of what he wants, but I鈥檓 just saying to you farmers will make that decision, not Winston Peters or not Chris Luxon. We can have our respective reckons and views, that鈥檚 fine, but and they鈥檙e quite capable of making the decision.鈥
The deal is expected to net Fonterra more than $4.2 billion, and pay out $2 per share to farmers - so a smaller farm of 300 to 400 cows producing 100,000kg of milk solids a year could be expected to receive $200,000.
Shareholding farmers have been voting on the deal since October 7, with online submissions closing on October 27 before briefly reopening for a special online meeting on October 30. The company鈥檚 decision is expected to be made public that same day.
Farmers have shareholdings proportional to the amount of milk solids they produce.
-RNZ
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