Monday, March 23, 2026
Chris Lynch: Peters vows to ‘break up power companies’ and blasts ‘woke agenda’
Labels: Chris Lynch, Winston Peters state of the nation speechNew Zealand First leader Winston Peters has used his State of the Nation address in Tauranga to lay out a hard edged election pitch, promising to restructure the electricity market, reject global influence, and take direct aim at Labour, the Greens, unions and what he called a growing “woke agenda”.
Speaking at the Atrium Conference Centre on Sunday afternoon, Peters said New Zealand was facing a period of global instability not seen in generations.
Melanie Phillips: Why the nation of Churchill is no more
Labels: Iranian conflict, Melanie Phillips, Straits of HormuzThe “special relationship” between Britain and America is currently on life support. US President Donald Trump is furious with the British Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer, for refusing to join the US and Israel in the war against Iran.
He is furious with others in the west too for similarly refusing even to help defend the Straits of Hormuz, the “chokehold” waterway which the Iranian regime is currently threatening to attack. As a result, traffic through the Straits has dwindled to a handful of tankers and the price of oil has soared.
Dr Eric Crampton: We need to learn how to make liveable cities
Labels: Alain Bertaud, City planning, Dr Eric CramptonToo many of the world’s urban planners grew up playing the city-planning game SimCity. You may have played it too. It’s fun, but it’s a terrible guide both to urban planning and to how cities work. It rewards micromanaging the wrong parts of cities.
Alain Bertaud did not grow up playing SimCity.
Bertaud is one of the world’s most influential urban planners.
Dr Benno Blascke: The fire exit leads back into the building
Labels: Dr Benno Blaschke, Public infrastructure, The Amendment BillRecently, during a select committee hearing on an infrastructure funding amendment bill, an MP asked for examples of infrastructure financed without government borrowing.
“Sure,” our chief economist Eric Crampton replied. “The Ngaio Town Hall, a lovely community effort.” Polite smiles.
I added: “The Auckland Harbour Bridge, one of our biggest projects.” Some nodding.
Roger Partridge: Taking Comfort from the 1970s
Labels: 1970s, Carless days, Roger PartridgeWhen a story recently emerged about the government getting advice on carless days under the Petroleum Demand Restraint Act, older New Zealanders will have felt a warm flush of nostalgia.
The 1979 restrictions brought coloured windscreen stickers announcing the weekday car owners had promised not to drive. Thursday proved the most popular choice. A thriving black market followed. Forty-three percent of vehicles secured exemptions.
The first person prosecuted under the original scheme was caught driving at 3.45 am – after falling asleep in his car following a party. His designated non-driving period had begun at 2 am.
Dr Oliver Hartwich: A $110 billion illusion?
Labels: Dr Oliver Hartwich, KiwiSaverKiwiSaver has $110 billion in assets and over three million members. Contribution rates rise from April. Both major parties want to push them to 12%.
Everyone assumes the scheme is working. But no one can prove it.
The only rigorous evaluation of KiwiSaver’s impact on wealth was published in 2017 by Treasury economists David Law and Grant Scobie.
Bob Edlin: Chief Ombudsman has set about rebalancing his office....
Labels: Bob Edlin, John Allen, Ombudsman’s Office, RestructuringChief Ombudsman has set about rebalancing his office in a plan aimed at delivering fairness for all
Whispers have reached us of a restructuring in the Office of the Ombudsman.
We imagine the outcome will be huge efficiencies because the Chief Ombudsman, John Allen, will have learned a great deal from his previous restructuring experiences.
The whispers have been amplified by Allen, who has signalled his plans in the Ombudsman Quarterly Review.
David Farrar: Kainga Ora slipping again
Labels: David Farrar, Kainga Ora housing, Tenancy TribunalThe Herald reports:
A woman’s 14-year-old grandson was nearly mowed down by her neighbour’s car, while her son was threatened with a machete.
Now an elderly Tongan woman has gone to the Tenancy Tribunal after Kāinga Ora refused to terminate her tenancy despite the woman living in “constant fear” of the family next door. …
Alwyn Poole: The HUGELY problematic size of Government in NZ.
Labels: Alwyn Poole, Size of GovernmentUntil a Government has the courage/determination to shrink the size of ITSELF – New Zealand has NO CHANCE of sustained economic growth – or excellence in any sector.
The size of the NZ Public Service workforce, as at December 31 2025, has just been released.
As opposed to the coalition saying they are frugal the lowlights are:
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Breaking Views Update: Week of 22.3.26
Labels: Breaking Views Update: monitoring race relations in the mediaSunday March 22, 2026
News:
Australian council to remove First Nations flags despite strong community opposition
A southern New South Wales council will remove First Nations flags from their chambers, despite the motion proposing the controversial move failing to be passed and overwhelming community opposition.
Ani O'Brien: A week is a long time: 21 March 2026
Labels: A NZ Politics weekly wrap-up, Ani O'Brien“Things could get worse”: The Government braces for a fuel shock
The fuel shock triggered by the Iran conflict is already biting in New Zealand, and the Government is openly preparing for a worst-case scenario. Ministers have warned that “things could get worse before they get better,” with contingency planning underway. While officials insist there is no immediate supply crisis, it is important for Kiwis to understand the impact will be far more broad than just the prices at the pump.
John McLean: The eagle has floundered
Labels: Chatham Islands, John McLean, NZ's cultural elites, Paul EagleLabourite Chatham Islands CEO comes a criminal cropper. Where are the coppers?
The phrase “The Eagle has Landed” indicates successful completion of a difficult or important task. Astronaut Neil Armstrong first spoke those words on 20 July 1969, from the moon to Mission Control in Houston, Texas. He did so to communicate that the Apollo 11 Lunar Module, named “Eagle”, had successfully touched down on the Moon.
Neil Armstrong died in 2012 but will be fondly remembered and revered for at least as long as the Western Civilization lasts. Without Western Civilization and the likes of Neil Armstrong, humans would have barely escaped the Dark Ages.
Roger Partridge: Behind the Invisible Hand - Adam Smith and the vile maxim of the masters of mankind
Labels: Adam Smith, Roger Partridge, The Wealth of NationsTwo hundred and fifty years on, the father of economics is still being misread – and the misreading still matters.
On 9 March 1776, a Scottish moral philosopher published the most powerful attack on trade protectionism ever written. Two hundred and fifty years later, the world’s largest economy has returned to the policy his great book was written to dismantle. Politicians now justify tariffs as instruments of national prosperity. Adam Smith’s An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations was written to explain why they are not.
DTNZ: Argentina cuts ties with WHO
Labels: Argentina, DTNZ, World Health Organisation (WHO)Argentina has formally withdrawn from the World Health Organization (WHO), completing the exit process one year after first requesting to leave the United Nations health agency.
Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno confirmed the move after President Javier Milei’s government notified the organisation in February 2025 and lodged the formal withdrawal request on March 17 last year.
Melanie Phillips: Wimps and warriors
Labels: A must win war, Iranian conflict, Melanie PhillipsThe war against Iran is having a most clarifying effect. It’s shining a light on those who are prepared to stand with civilisation against barbarism and flushing out those who are not.
The usual suspects — those who hate Israel, despise America and stick pins into effigies of US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — are willing Iran to win, or more to the point, willing Trump and Netanyahu to lose.
Net Zero Watch Samizdat: No easy answers
Labels: Climate change, Net Zero Watch SamizdatUK
Renewable UK CEO urges Miliband to restart North Sea drilling
The UK’s wind farm trade body has called on Ed Miliband to “take energy out of the culture wars” by increasing North Sea production.
Renewable UK CEO urges Miliband to restart North Sea drilling
The UK’s wind farm trade body has called on Ed Miliband to “take energy out of the culture wars” by increasing North Sea production.
Damian Pudner: Britain Once Led the World. What Happened?
Labels: Britian's stagnation, Damian PudnerA country cannot tax its way to success.
An unsettling look at the economic settlement that Britain now seems willing to accept can be found in this week’s latest fiscal forecast. By the end of the forecast period, borrowing will have decreased from 5.2% of GDP in 2024–2025 to about 1.6%. Public debt stabilises at roughly 95% of national income. At those levels, even small shifts in interest rates matter: the Office for Budget Responsibility estimates that a sustained one-percentage-point move in Bank Rate changes government borrowing costs by around £15 billion.
Guest Post: Your land, my rules
Labels: David Farrar, Housing intensification, Property rights, Resource Management Act (RMA)A guest post by a reader on Kiwiblog:
The Prime Minister wants a culture of ‘yes.’ A New Zealand that builds. An RMA replacement premised on the enjoyment of property rights. He has said so many times, in many rooms, and with great conviction.
Good on him. It is what would-be homeowners need, too.
But Auckland’s actual homeowners got upset about apartments. Then the Prime Minister discovered the word ‘impose.’
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