There is no money for - well, there is money for the important stuff. You’ve got the schools and the classrooms, and the hospitals, and the Waikato Expressway, and Winston Peters’ pet projects.
Friday, May 29, 2026
Perspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: I would argue Budget 2026 wasn't tight enough
Labels: Budget 2026, Heather du Plessis-AllanThere is no money for - well, there is money for the important stuff. You’ve got the schools and the classrooms, and the hospitals, and the Waikato Expressway, and Winston Peters’ pet projects.
Breaking Views Update: Week of 24.5.26
Labels: Breaking Views Update: monitoring race relations in the mediaFriday May 29, 2026
News:
Budget invests in Māori language and cultural capability
The Government is investing in te reo Māori by strengthening Māori broadcasting and supporting Māori cultural and creative capability, Māori Development Minister Tama Potaka says.
Budget 2026 sets aside $48 million over the next four years to support the long-term sustainability of Māori broadcasting by helping Māori media organisations adapt to a changing digital environment, commission new te reo Māori content, develop talent and strengthen their capability.
Budget invests in Māori language and cultural capability
The Government is investing in te reo Māori by strengthening Māori broadcasting and supporting Māori cultural and creative capability, Māori Development Minister Tama Potaka says.
Budget 2026 sets aside $48 million over the next four years to support the long-term sustainability of Māori broadcasting by helping Māori media organisations adapt to a changing digital environment, commission new te reo Māori content, develop talent and strengthen their capability.
Graeme Spencer: The CCO That Put Culture Before Consumers
Labels: Graeme Spencer, Mana Whenua, Taonga, Te Ao Maori, Three Waters, Tikanga, Treaty PrinciplesTimaru District Council after a suspect consultation process have finally formed a CCO (Council Controlled Organisation) with MacKenzie District Council.
The result - a subscale entity, too small to deliver real efficiencies but big enough to add cost and distance from accountability. The worst of both worlds.
Colinxy: Why Is Labour Delaying Its Policy Announcements?
Labels: Chris Hipkins, Colinxy, Labour's delayed policiesThe politics of silence, vagueness, and strategic fog
Labour’s refusal to release its full policy platform is no mystery. It is a strategy, and not a particularly subtle one. When a party is confident, it releases policy early. When a party is terrified of how voters will react, it releases policy late, in fragments, or not at all.
Chris Hipkins’ Labour is firmly in the second category.
Gary Judd KC: India FTA - The Sting Beneath the Sting
Labels: Gary Judd KC, India - NZ free trade ageement, United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP)Cabinet Said Stop. The India FTA Says Go
In The Sting in the India Trade Deal A Constitutional Trojan Horse: advancing change through political stealth, I examined the inclusion of clause 13.2.2a in the India FTA. That clause states:
David Farrar: 260 regulators!
Labels: David Farrar, RegulatorsDavid Seymour announced:
For the first time, the full scale and structure of New Zealand’s regulatory landscape has been mapped, exposing decades of overlap and complexity, Regulation Minister David Seymour says.
“In New Zealand there are over 260 regulators. This includes 95 in central government, 79 in local government, and 57 statutory bodies, committees, or tribunals,” Mr Seymour says.
The total number is bad enough, but look at how many one entity may have rot deal with.
Dr James Allan: Just Repeal and Undo
Labels: Bureaucracy, Conservatism, Dr James Allan, government, Left-wing, Reform, Right-wingHow many readers have noticed this huge failing in so many longstanding, establishment conservative political parties around the democratic world? To start, the Left side of politics when in power will seed or remake some institution. Or it will enact some big-ticket legislative reform. Maybe it’s bringing into being a beefed-up, more potent and renamed Australian Human Rights Commission. Maybe it’s enacting a statutory bill of rights in Victoria, in Queensland, in New Zealand, in Britain.
John McLean: Sherman Tanks......
Labels: John McLean, Maiki ShermanBut still snares lamestream media’s Political Journalist of the Year award
Maiki Sherman has left Television New Zealand. And not before time. Her last day as TVNZ’s Chief Political Editor was 8 May. She claims she resigned, but it’s not clear that’s true. Almost certainly, she’s been paid a handsomely dollop of cash out of TVNZ’s trough in connection with her exit.
Kerre Woodham: Have you crunched the numbers with your new rates bill?
Labels: Kerre Woodham, Rates increases
Have you done the sums yet to work out how much more you're going to have to pay, how much more you're going to have to find to pay the rates bill? We were talking before the show, for some of my colleagues it's an extra $45 per fortnight, they're in an apartment out of the main city. I can't even imagine how much the increase will be for people living in the leafy suburbs.
Auckland Council has locked in a 7.9% rates rise, according to Wayne Brown it's to fund the City Rail Link. They've managed to keep everything else, they've managed to cut costs and reduce spending and keep everything level, this is purely to fund the City Rail Link. He's unapologetic. He said we've got this railway, if we don't pay for it this year, then we're just going to have to pay for it next year. And that's quite true, you can't just keep deferring essential spending.
Auckland Council has locked in a 7.9% rates rise, according to Wayne Brown it's to fund the City Rail Link. They've managed to keep everything else, they've managed to cut costs and reduce spending and keep everything level, this is purely to fund the City Rail Link. He's unapologetic. He said we've got this railway, if we don't pay for it this year, then we're just going to have to pay for it next year. And that's quite true, you can't just keep deferring essential spending.
Bob Edlin: The PM (after initial stalling) declares his confidence that FTA obligations are being met
Labels: Bob Edlin, Chlöe Swarbrick, Christopher Luxon, Fossil fuel subsidies, Free Trade agreements, Lawyers for Climate ActionLawyers for Climate Action were among those who kicked up a fuss when the Government announced it would pass a law preventing companies from being sued over climate change damage.
Now they have come up with another niggle. Newsroom reported yesterday that – according to a new legal opinion – two of the Government’s key energy policies are fossil fuel subsidies which breach New Zealand’s international trade obligations.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Ryan Bridge: Budget spending must be careful and calculated
Labels: Budget 2026, Ryan BridgeThere are a few sweeteners on the day, but this time, unless there's a rabbit about to be yanked from a hat, even they might be more Werther's Original than chocolate cake.
Steven Gaskell: Colonialism Apparently Invented Mortgages
Labels: Colonialism, Housing, Steven GaskellCaleb Anderson: The psychopathology of the left and the slow death of decency
Labels: Caleb Anderson, Parliament issues, Political leftPerspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: When will the screws on the economy start turning?
Labels: Economy management, Heather du Plessis-Allan, Official Cash Rate (OCR)Because on the bright side, the Official Cash Rate didn’t go up. On the downside, it looks like it’s definitely going up next time. So yes, it’s a reprieve - but it’s only a reprieve for six weeks, excuse me, before the screws on the economy start turning again.
Clive Bibby: We allow this madness at our peril!
Labels: Clive Bibby, Woke ideologyThe ruling by three activist judges is in many ways a battle between “good and evil” or in the modern vernacular, it is a fight between identity ideology and biological science - a situation which, in spite of all the noise, there should be only one argument.
Colinxy: What Are Erica Stanford’s Education Reforms Really About?
Labels: Colinxy, Education reforms, Erica StanfordAnd are NZ teachers correct about where the system is headed?
I’ll start with a confession: I am pleasantly surprised by Erica Stanford. Not because she is perfect, no minister is, but because she is the first Education Minister in decades willing to say the quiet part out loud:
Critical Pedagogy, the Neo‑Marxist backbone of our curriculum, has to go[i].
David Harvey: The Courts and Climate Change
Labels: Climate change, David Harvey, Fonterra, Mike Smith, TikangaThe Smith v Fonterra case was brought by climate change spokesperson for the Iwi Chairs Forum Michael Smith (Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Kahu) against several major emitters. Smith was attempting to use tort law to address the diffuse, cumulative harms of climate change to his property, culture, and iwi.
JC: Which Way Will Winston Jump?
Labels: JC, Winston PetersWinston will stay where he is and not jump to the left. You might think its gone off track to concentrate on the Labour Party but my purpose is to highlight the policy differences between NZ First and Labour which will contribute to the decision Winston makes.
I note on Backchat and elsewhere there are some still not trusting Winston not to veer left post election and put the left block of chaos and mayhem into power. Despite his categorical statements that he will not do so, a level of distrust persists. This is perfectly understandable given the man’s history but I do not subscribe to it. I agree it is hard to forgive him for his horrendous betrayal of the right in 2017 by giving power to the Morrinsville fish and chips wrapper. The country paid a heavy price for that but so did he.
Mike's Minute: Moana Pasifika showed the market was right
Labels: Mike Hosking, Moana PasifikaLet this be a lesson to all those who argue against the simple truism that the market, most of the time, tends to be right.
Moana Pasifika are in liquidation, the vote was held and the story ends here.
The trouble is the taxpayer footed a lot of the bill and the money is gone, flushed down an ideological toilet.
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