Monday, May 4, 2026
Pee Kay: Positive Discrimination?
Labels: Pee Kay, Positive discrimination, Transfer of wealth to MaoriFew would dispute that the government’s fundamental duty is to safeguard our individual rights, specifically freedom of speech, association, and movement, alongside the right to vote and equal access to public services.
Then the question must be asked; Is the government a proactive defender of our individual rights, or a silent witness to their decay? There is little evidence to suggest that the preservation of these rights occupies any significant space in current policy discussions.
Ryan Bridge: Things are about to get a whole lot more expensive
Labels: Cost of living crisis, Ryan BridgeThe good news, I was out shopping on the weekend, which means I didn't actually buy anything but drove halfway across town looking for a bed-head, couldn't find one that fit, and went home empty-handed.
Perspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: Here's the real issue impacting local councils
Labels: Heather du Plessis-Allan, Local councilOne of the topics up for discussion was what councils around the country need to do, or could do, to win back public approval. I have to be honest: I left that room - and you know my views on councils - feeling just a little bit sorry for the councillors and mayors I met.
Matt Ridley: We owe our prosperity to 2 men from Glasgow
Labels: Matt Ridley, prosperity, Scotland, Steam powerA quarter of a millennium ago, the world was changed by two men from Glasgow. In the spring of 1776, Adam Smith, a former professor of philosophy at Glasgow University, published “The Wealth of Nations,” his extraordinary book about how prosperity is mostly a spontaneous phenomenon deriving from the human habit of exchange and specialisation.
John Raine: Petrol head musings on the shape of our vehicle fleet
Labels: Fossil Fuels, John Raine, TransportationAmid mounting evidence that we are not facing anthropogenic climate doom [1], there has been some relaxation in the push to legislate fossil-fuel powered vehicles off the roads over the next 10 years [2]. But let’s not kid ourselves that fossil fuels are an unlimited resource on human time scales. Their replacement in the Earth’s crust requires geological events over tens of millions of years.
Breaking Views Update: Week of 3.5.26
Labels: Breaking Views Update: monitoring race relations in the mediaMonday May 4, 2026
News:
'As damaging as the Treaty Principles Bill': Proposed changes to Treaty clauses revealed
Documents filed with the Waitangi Tribunal have revealed the proposed changes which would set government obligations to the Treaty to no higher standard than to simply "take into account" across nine Acts.
Clive Bibby: Don’t be afraid to put your hand up
Labels: Clive Bibby, ImmigrationThe one thing that helps nations overcome times of real uncertainty and threat to a way of life is the moment when all citizens over the legal age of majority realise that they have a part to play in how we collectively solve the problems we face.
These times are almost always when the nation’s survival is under economic, pandemic or military threats from a source beyond our borders.
Kerre Woodham: The road toll still needs reducing
Labels: Holiday road toll, Kerre Woodham, Road safetyDr Michael Johnston: Setting schools up to succeed in vocational education
Labels: Dr Michael Johnston, Education, High-quality vocational pathwaysIn the minds of many New Zealanders, university degrees carry greater status than industry qualifications. But many tradespeople earn as much, or more, than an average university graduate. Many tradies also go on to start highly successful businesses.
Dr Oliver Hartwich: Is the Public Service Really Fine?
Labels: Dr Oliver Hartwich, Public serviceKerre Woodham: Funding cancer prevention is a no-brainer
Labels: Cancer Society, Government funding, Health New Zealand, Kerre WoodhamSunday, May 3, 2026
David Farrar: Labour’s do nothing agenda
Labels: David Farrar, General Election 2026, Policy announcementsAt this point in 2023, National had launched its income tax policy, its FamilyBoost childcare policy, its renewable electricity generation policy, its policy on interest deductibility for rentals, its brightline test policy, some of its Overseas Investment Act plans, its boot camp and gang patch policies, its youth welfare policies, its “Local Water Done Well” repeal of Three Waters, and a whole bevy of other promised reversals or initiatives.
Ani O'Brien: A week is a long time: 2 May 2026
Labels: A NZ Politics weekly wrap-up, Ani O'BrienThe Maiki Sherman saga has now expanded well beyond the original “faggot” incident. The TVNZ Political Editor is alleged to have used a homophobic slur toward Lloyd Burr at a ministerial event in 2025, an incident confirmed by Finance Minister Nicola Willis, who said she heard “offensive language” and shut the event down. The story, which had circulated privately for months, became public this week when I wrote about it on this Substack. This has triggered scrutiny not just of the incident itself, but of how it was handled and essentially covered up. The fact that TVNZ issued legal threats to another media outlet who was investigating the matter, raises massive concerns.
Mike's Minute: Here's what the Parliamentary briefing on food plant closures will show
Labels: Food plant closures, Mike Hosking, Primary ProductionA briefing is different to an inquiry, just in case you are thinking the committee is going to come up with something tangible.
Bob Edlin: You would read more with Seymour – about anti-money laundering legislation, at least
Labels: Anti-money laundering, Bob Edlin, David SeymourACT leader David Seymour and news media editors obviously have strongly differing ideas of which happenings should be headlined.
On RNZ’s Midday Report yesterday, Seymour played down the dispute between the PM and New Zealand First leader Winston Peters over the release of emails which flushed into the open the urge by Christopher Luxon to support the United States after it and Israel had attacked Iran.
Net Zero Watch Samizdat: Net Zero is taking us for a spin
Labels: Climate change, Net Zero Watch SamizdatUK
Miliband bans tumble dryers
The sale of traditional tumble dryers is to be stamped out in a net-zero drive that will push consumers toward more expensive machines that take longer to dry clothes.
Miliband bans tumble dryers
The sale of traditional tumble dryers is to be stamped out in a net-zero drive that will push consumers toward more expensive machines that take longer to dry clothes.
Graham Adams: Hikoi threat over Treaty clauses review
Labels: Graham Adams, Hikoi, Mainstream media, Treaty issuesThe government’s review of Treaty clauses in legislation has mightily displeased one of the resident Māori activists at 1News. A column by Te Aniwa Hurihanganui that accompanied her televised news segment last week is titled “Govt risks another colossal hikoi if it weakens Treaty obligations”.
Mike's Minute: I like the cut of Anna Breman's gib
Labels: Dr Anna Breman, Governor of the Reserve Bank, Mike HoskingNew charter details were announced yesterday.
Charters and Reserve Banks were once as dry as old dust but these days I think we have a new understanding of the importance of their role.
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