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Saturday, April 18, 2026

David Farrar: MBIE’s taxpayer funded waiata sessions


The Taxpayers’ Union released:

While Kiwi businesses are facing economic uncertainty, the Ministry supposedly responsible for helping businesses has been spending our money on Workplace Waiata – i.e. staff singing sessions in their Wellington offices.

And this isn’t just a one-off thing: At their swanky Wellington offices, MBIE were hosting 30 minute sessions every work day, every week!

MBIE employs 5,892 bureaucrats (it’s grown from 4,676 in 2020), literally being paid to sing, clap, poi, and recite Māori proverbs and hymns.

According to documents we’ve unearthed, last year, MBIE bosses attempted to reduce these sessions from daily 30-minute sing-alongs across various floors, to “just” 20 minutes, twice a week.

According to email correspondence (obtained under the Official Information Act) one of the reasons for the ‘cut back’ was concerns about the Workplace Waiata causing noise distraction for others in the office.

No kidding!

But here’s where it gets even more ridiculous…

The precious MBIE staffers weren’t having a bar of it!

They revolted at management for daring to cut back the entitlement.

This reminds me of how MBIE staff went on strike a few years ago. A former Beehive senior staffer quipped that the impact on the Government of this strike would be the equivalent of the Dom Post running a second daily quiz!

David Farrar runs Curia Market Research, a specialist opinion polling and research agency, and the popular Kiwiblog where this article was sourced. He previously worked in the Parliament for eight years, serving two National Party Prime Ministers and three Opposition

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Just wipe this (& the education department) out and start again clean….make them all redundant tomorrow and redesign them starting with a completely clean management team who have a fresh mandate to deliver for the elected government with a cap on employment numbers

Robert Arthur said...

In this age of communications many seem more out of touch with goings on than in former times of social gatherings etc. Was the Minister responsible aware of these goings on? Did no one previously leak details to government members?The msm is blind to anything which may be interpreted as critical of maori so no coverage can be expected there.

Anonymous said...

That is exactly why Luxon has to go.

Anonymous said...

Luxon off yes, but we badly need a revision of the power of the public service over the elected representatives - NZ is in no way a democracy - entirely a bureaucracy!

Anonymous said...

Amazing! Paganism via Maorification being preached and pushed down the channels of government with Luxon & National blissfully unaware?

Anonymous said...

Until Ministers acquire the power to sack Dept CEOs, at will, the bureaucracy will continue to rule.

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