Cindy & Fouda pushes Sharia speech laws during political rally

The Labour leader is campaigning in Christchurch today, where she will do a walkabout as well as visit two venues in her capacity as Prime Minister, including the mosque and R?whiti Domain Canopy in New Brighton.

The canopy is one of nine projects that has been approved for $7 million from the Government’s $3 billion shovel-ready infrastructure fund.

Speaking to reporters in Christchurch, Ardern said National’s agricultural policy would “take New Zealand back decades”.

“It is hugely disappointing to see that change in position from them,” she said when it came to National’s climate change position.

She said it also hurts New Zealand’s brand and would cause more degradation of New Zealand’s waterways.

She said it was “very disappointing” to see National want to unravel all the work the Government has done on cleaning up New Zealand’s waterways.

She said National was coming in “late to the party” when it comes to the changes they are proposing.

She called the policy “backward looking”.

Hate speech law change

She said in a modern New Zealand, no one should be discriminated against because of religion.

Asked about stronger hate speech laws, Ardern said the Government needs to continue to record when these incidents occur.

The Government hasn’t been able to progress hate speech law in this term of Government, but it will be campaigning on this as a Labour Party.

Meanwhile, Woods said it was important the Government keeps working with the Muslim community in Christchurch to make sure the 51 who died are remembered.

“I am confident we will find something that satisfies their desires,” Ardern said on this.

She said New Zealanders reject any idea that people should be discriminated against because of their religion or their ethnic background.

“It’s just not okay,” she said, adding that “change needs to occur.”

Just before she unveiled the plaque, Imam Gamal Fouda asked for an annual memorial day to be held in Christchurch to mark last year’s tragedy.

He said March 15, as well as Covid-19, had “put us all to the test” and changed the way we live.

That darkest of days had left “a scar on our hearts”, but the true legacy was the peace and compassion in the country’s response.

The life sentence handed down to Brenton Tarrant was human justice, but “divine justice still awaited him”.

He said three more things had to happen for “full justice”: To honour the martyrs and victims by remembering them; to inform future generations of what had happened; to embody the calmness and compassion of the response.

He called for a memorial day in Christchurch every year to honour March 15 and remember the cohesion and harmony of the response.

“I don’t want that to be forgotten.”

And he called for political leadership to change the law so that certain types of free speech cannot become the kind of hate speech that can escalate to hate crimes.

The Government has been reviewing hate speech laws but the work has so far not led to any changes.

Ardern is coming off the first leaders’ debate against National leader Judith Collins and a 1 News Colmar Brunton poll on Tuesday that had Labour on 48 per cent.

National was on 31 per cent, Act on 7 per cent, the Greens on 6 per cent and NZ First on 2 per cent.

As preferred PM, Ardern was on 54 per cent – holding her high popularity from the previous poll in July. Collins had dropped slightly from 20 to 18 per cent.

Jacinda Ardern in Christchurch to honour Al Noor Mosque victims