Monday, January 19, 2026
Roger Partridge: The Hidden Architecture of Government Failure
Labels: Accountability, Government failure, Institutional Design, Public Service Reform, Roger Partridge, State IncentivesBad incentives, not bad people, keep breaking New Zealand’s institutions – and only structural change will fix them.
New Zealand has never spent more on public services, administered by a workforce that has grown by a third in less than a decade. And yet hospital waiting lists stretch into years, students leave school unable to read, and infrastructure crumbles.
More money. More people. Worse results. If resources are not the problem, what is?
David Farrar: Fran on India FTA
Labels: David Farrar, Fran O’Sullivan, FTA with IndiaFran O’Sullivan writes:
Bold ambition and fearless execution – that’s what it has taken to get intense bilateral negotiations between India and New Zealand finalised so a trade deal could be announced just before the country broke for Christmas.
Matua Kahurangi: Indian mass immigration and the price we are paying
Labels: Canada, Indian mass immigration, Matua KahurangiWestern governments have found the perfect shield against accountability. Flood a country with people, then label anyone who notices a racist. It is lazy, dishonest, and it is now failing in real time.
New Zealand is living it. Canada is drowning in it.
Dr Will Jones: Trump to Hit Britain With Tariffs Over Greenland
Labels: Britain, Donald Trump, Dr Will Jones, Greenland, TariffsDonald Trump has announced tariffs on the UK and other European countries for their opposition to a US takeover of Greenland as he ratchets up the pressure in his move to acquire the Danish Arctic territory. The Telegraph has more.
Centrist: Households now paying the real price of bread
Labels: Centrist, food prices, Global wheat pricesNew Zealanders are paying a lot more for basic food not because inflation has suddenly spiked, but because years of artificially low pricing have quietly ended.
New data from Stats NZ shows food prices rose 4 percent over 2025, while the price of a standard loaf of white bread jumped almost 60 per cent.
Lushington Brady: Japan Returns to the Polls, Again
Labels: China, Japan, Lushington Brady, Sanae Takaichi, Snap electionHere they go again, for Japan’s long-suffering voters. Just months after electing their fourth prime minister in five years, Japanese voters are going back to the polls for another snap election. The election will decide the future of Japan’s first female leader, who remains hugely popular even as her party’s fortunes remain dire.
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Muriel Newman: A Personal Message As We Begin 2026
Labels: Dr Muriel Newman, NZCPRPlease Note: Since Breaking Views is a key part of the NZCPR community, this message is important for BV readers...
Dear Reader,
I hope you had a wonderful Christmas and New Year.
As we put the finishing touches to our first New Zealand Centre for Political Research newsletter of 2026 — featuring our State of the Nation analysis — I want to personally thank you for being part of our NZCPR community.
Caleb Anderson: Humility and the tyranny of certainty
Labels: Caleb Anderson, humility, NZ education systemIs it possible that we have forgotten what humility is, and how elusive, and unwarranted, certainty can be (or necessarily is)?
Breaking Views Update: Week of 18.1.26
Labels: Breaking Views Update: monitoring race relations in the mediaSunday January 18, 2026
News:
Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei accompany America’s Cup to Italy
Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei will accompany Emirates Team New Zealand (ETNZ) to Naples, Italy, to attend an America’s Cup ceremony marking the next phase of the competition.
For more than 30 years, Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei has stood alongside ETNZ as iwi manaaki, a relationship both parties say has contributed to the team’s global success.
Net Zero Watch Samizdat: Mad Miliband pushes ahead with Big Wind rip-off
Labels: Climate change, Net Zero Watch SamizdatUK
AR7: Miliband secures 8.4GW of new offshore wind
Hundreds of new wind turbines are to be built around Britain’s coastline after Ed Miliband awarded yearly subsidies of up to £1.8bn to green energy developers. The Energy Secretary has approved plans for six new offshore wind farms following an auction of renewables contracts known as Allocation Round 7 (AR7). He secured a strike price of £95/MWh (2026 prices). As one of the UK’s largest-ever subsidy rounds, the costs will be borne by billpayers over a period of 20 years under Labour’s plans to hit net zero.
AR7: Miliband secures 8.4GW of new offshore wind
Hundreds of new wind turbines are to be built around Britain’s coastline after Ed Miliband awarded yearly subsidies of up to £1.8bn to green energy developers. The Energy Secretary has approved plans for six new offshore wind farms following an auction of renewables contracts known as Allocation Round 7 (AR7). He secured a strike price of £95/MWh (2026 prices). As one of the UK’s largest-ever subsidy rounds, the costs will be borne by billpayers over a period of 20 years under Labour’s plans to hit net zero.
Ani O'Brien: A week is a long time: 10 January 2026
Labels: A NZ Politics weekly wrap-up, Ani O'BrienIran is burning and the world is hesitating
Iran’s internal crisis has moved into a phase of mass repression, with the regime responding to a nationwide uprising with lethal force and information blackouts. Human rights groups now estimate the death toll at more than 3,000. New Zealand has temporarily closed its embassy in Iran, relocating operations to Turkey.
Dr Noah Carl: Has Britain Shifted to the Right?
Labels: Dr Noah Carl, Green Party, Nigel Farage, Polls, ReformSince the 2024 election and the dramatic rise of Reform, numerous commentators have argued that Britain is ‘shifting to the Right’. And you can see where they are coming from.
Reform is the most right-wing party Britain has had since the BNP contested the 2010 election, and it has led in every single poll since April of 2025. Over the last six months or so, 30% of prospective voters have said they would back Reform — about 10 points more than have said they would back Labour, the next most popular party.
John McLean: Fonterra Fiasco Finale
Labels: Financial Markets Authority (FMA), Fonterra fiasco, John Allen, John McLean, Official Information Act (OIA), OmbudsmanMy final chapter in a sad serial saga
This is my final Substack of a series I’ve published on the Financial Markets Authority doing nothing about behemoth dairy co-operative Fonterra deliberately cooking its financial books.
I’ve catalogued Fonterra’s gross financial reporting misconduct, and my protracted attempts to use the Official Information Act (OIA) to find out why the FMA let Fonterra off, scot-free.
Tim Donner: Venezuela, Cuba, Iran, and the Domino Theory
Labels: Domino theory, Tim DonnerThe once-discredited hypothesis might be proving true – again
Those who lived through the horrors of the Vietnam War will remember the justification for American involvement in a conflict on the other side of the world. It was called the domino theory, based on the notion that communism in one country would trigger a chain reaction, toppling neighboring nations like dominoes. And while the theory has largely been discredited because it is so closely associated with a lost war Americans would rather forget, it is not without logic or merit. In fact, the domino theorists were eventually proven right after the US quit the war, as South Vietnam was swallowed up by North Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos also went Communist, and Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines normalized ties with Communist China. History is replete with events of great magnitude in one country that, for better or worse, spilled over into other nations and regions. So, since Venezuela has fallen, Iran is falling, and Cuba may well be next, let’s consider whether a less regional and more global application of the domino theory could be in play right now.
Melanie Phillips: The high stakes in Iran
Labels: Antisemitism, Iranian people, Islamic regime, Melanie PhillipsThe stupendous courage of the Iranian people has inspired awe at this massive display of unquenchable human spirit. Hundreds of thousands of Iranian demonstrators literally walked into the guns in their struggle for freedom from the monstrous Islamic regime.
At time of writing, it’s unclear whether US President Donald Trump will come to their aid as he promised. An apparently planned US attack on Wednesday night was reportedly called off at the last minute.
Bob Edlin: McClay (a Vice Chair again) is braced for another bout of WTO talks ......
Labels: Bob Edlin, Cameroon, FIT Partnership, Todd McClay, Todd Mclay, World Trade OrganisationMcClay (a Vice Chair again) is braced for another bout of WTO talks – but the future looks tariffying for free trade buffs
Trade and Investment Minister Todd McClay is bound to have been chuffed at being appointed Vice Chair for the World Trade Organisation’s 14th Ministerial Trade Negotiation Conference, “for a second consecutive time following his role at MC13 in Abu Dhabi two years ago”.
Saturday, January 17, 2026
Clive Bibby: A Leopard never changes its spots
Labels: Clive Bibby, Jacinda Ardern, racismChris Lynch: Web series gives voice to New Zealanders suffering Covid 19 vaccine injuries
Labels: Adverse drug reactions, Chris Lynch, Covid 19 vaccines, River of Freedom, The TributeA new web series is set to launch this week giving a platform to New Zealanders who say they suffered serious and lasting injuries after receiving Covid 19 vaccines.
The series called The Tribute, co-produced by award winning film maker Gaylene Barnes, will release its first episode on Thursday and focuses on the experience of Tauranga woman Ange, a former yoga teacher and rest home healthcare worker.
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