Sharechat Logo

Support swells to prosecute Anderton on People's Bank

Friday 10th August 2001

Text too small?
By Jock Anderson

Pressure is mounting to prosecute Deputy Prime Minister and Economic Development Minister Jim Anderton over alleged securities law breaches surrounding his plugging of a taxpayer-funded People's Bank.

The National Business Review reported exclusively last week that top-secret government papers showed Mr Anderton broke securities law and effectively cost the taxpayer $40 million in a buried People's Bank funding blunder.

National's finance spokesman, Bill English, backed calls for Mr Anderton to be held accountable for any breaches of the law, saying "unequivocal" legal advice the government sat on for 13 months should have been acted on earlier.

The Securities Commission had a strong case to take action against Mr Anderton, according to Act New Zealand MP Stephen Franks, an experienced commercial lawyer and a former member of the Securities Commission and the Stock Exchange market surveillance panel.

Mr Franks said the government could have disclaimed Mr Anderton's comments, reduced the risk of liability and still gone ahead with the public-private funding partnership favoured by its officials.

"But the political embarrassment would rank higher in the mind of a very political minister [Mr Anderton] than the technical ability to purge his default," Mr Franks said.

"Mr Anderton is trying to build himself a reputation as a man who understands business. He can't be seen as innocent and naive in commercial matters and this would have hit him squarely in the solar plexus."

Mr Anderton has rejected the allegations, claiming a government decision to totally fund the bank was based on public policy issues about private shareholdings in state-owned enterprises and the cost of a public float, which he said would have been between $5 million and $6 million.

But Act finance spokesman Rodney Hide said Mr Anderton and Mr Burton continued to mislead the public by claiming the funding option was moot because no shares were offered to the public.

"The legal issues go beyond that. But they omit to say why no shares were offered to the public - because Mr Anderton broke the law, whether or not shares were issued, and the government didn't have the guts to admit he was wrong. That cost the taxpayer an extra $40 million," Mr Hide said.

Formal complaints against Mr Anderton were made last week to the Securities Commission and the registrar of companies by Mr Hide.

Mr Hide said the consistent application of the law was especially critical in Mr Anderton's case because he was the minister responsible for the registrar of companies who in turn was responsible for criminal prosecutions under the Securities Act.

Special investigation

  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

WCO - Acquisition of Civic Waste, Convertible Note & SPP
ATM - FY25 revenue guidance and dividend policy
November 22th Morning Report
General Capital Announces Another Profit Record
Infratil Considers Infrastructure Bond Offer
Argosy FY25 Interim Result
Meridian Energy monthly operating report for October 2024
Du Val failure offers fresh lessons, but will they be heeded in the long term?
November 19th Morning Report
ATM - Appointment of new independent NED