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Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Breaking Views Update: Week of 28.6.26







Tuesday June 30, 2026 

News:
Applications open for Te Māori fellowships to the UK.

Applications are open for two fellowships for Māori curators to work directly with some of the taonga Māori held at Oxford in the United Kingdom.

In April Te Māori Manaaki Taonga Trust formalised a partnership with the Pitt Rivers Museum at the University of Oxford and Te Wānanga o Aotearoa opening the door for the fellowships.

NZCPR Newsletter: Deciding Election 2026


For decades, New Zealand has been undergoing a quiet constitutional revolution. What was once largely unnoticed is now becoming increasingly visible – so much so that the Coalition Government can no longer ignore it if it hopes to remain in office.

Steven Gaskell: How the West Ring-Fenced the Global Semiconductor Industry


The global effort to restrict China's access to the world's most advanced semiconductor technology is not based on a formal pact involving Switzerland or Ukraine. Instead, it is driven by export controls and cooperation between three key countries that dominate critical parts of the semiconductor supply chain: the United States, Japan and the Netherlands.

Penn Raine - Plus ça change: the rise and rise of antisemitism in the West.


During World War Two France deported 275, 000 Jewish people to the extermination camps. Three thousand returned.

The sanitised view is that the French boldly opposed these actions largely with the courage of the Resistance. The truth is that even before the occupying German force demanded that the deportation quotas be filled the Vichy government of the allegedly Free France had already drawn up its own plans for deportations.

Geoff Parker: Improving Māori Health Requires Facts, Not Narratives


"The health system is dangerous for Māori." — Dr Lance O'Sullivan

Dangerous in what sense?

That is a fair question, because "dangerous" is an extraordinarily serious accusation. It suggests that Māori are placed at risk by the health system itself—not by illness, not by lifestyle factors, not by socio-economic disadvantage, but by the doctors, nurses, hospitals and institutions entrusted with caring for them.

If that is the claim, then it demands equally serious evidence.

Pee Kay: A Capital Gains Tax is never about economic fairness!


New taxes are a hard sell, so how do you make the unpalatable palatable?

It is quite simple. You simply employ the politician’s oldest political tricks in the book, sleight of hand and deliberate obfuscation.

And labour are well practiced in the art of sleight of hand and obfuscation

Lindsay Mitchell: TOP's Citizen's Income policy


Let's look at the costings first.

Nicole McKee: Speech - Rally '26


I have to admit, I never saw myself becoming Deputy Leader of a political party. In fairness, I never really saw myself becoming a politician. When I gave my maiden speech, I said maybe this was my mid-life crisis. Now I’m a Cabinet Minister and Deputy leader of the only party that has the courage and the principles to unlock New Zealand’s potential.

Mike's Minute: I win one last time against the moaners


I would like to thank Stuff for reporting on what might well be one of the final times my name is associated with the Broadcasting Standards Authority.

It encapsulated everything that is wrong with the BSA.

David Harvey: Reading Between the Lines


How the Human Rights Commission’s Trojan Horse Deepfake Submission Smuggles In a Regime of Pre-Emptive Speech Control

The gift at the gate

The Greeks did not take Troy by force. They took it by leaving a gift the defenders could not bring themselves to refuse — and by hiding inside it the army that would do the actual work. The Human Rights Commission’s submission on the Deepfake Digital Harm and Exploitation Bill follows the same design.

Vance Ginn: The Poverty of the UN’s Degrowth Agenda


The latest attack on economic growth comes wrapped in moral language. Its advocates promise less poverty, greater equality, and a safer climate. Their policies would deliver less production, less investment, and fewer opportunities. That is managed decline, not prosperity.

The UN-backed Roadmap for Eradicating Poverty Beyond Growth proposes 80 policies meant to reduce society’s dependence on growth. A separate Global Justice Report, led by Thomas Piketty and researchers at the World Inequality Lab, puts numbers behind this vision.

James Fite: Is War the Only ‘Understanding’ Between America and Iran?


The US and Iran are fighting again – or still, perhaps, as one could argue they never really stopped. It has been almost two weeks now since Presidents Donald Trump of the US and Masoud Pezeshkian of Iran signed their “memorandum of understanding.” But what understanding was really reached? It was supposed to put an end to the fighting in the Middle East – even if only just long enough to negotiate a more permanent arrangement.

David Farrar: What would a change of Government cost farmers?

The Taxpayers’s Union has looked at what a change of government could cost NZ farmers. It isn’t pretty:

Monday June 29, 2026 

                   

Monday, June 29, 2026

Ryan Bridge: The Opportunity Party needs more time to hit five percent this election


I don't think Opportunity will hit five percent this election.

It's fun to flirt, people are frustrated, but I was there when Colin Craig got close and failed, saw Gareth Morgan then Geoff Simmons have a crack and fail.

I encourage anyone listening to have a look at their policies, do the maths and figure out for themselves how much worse, or better off, you'll be.

Perspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: Well done to Spark Arena


So an email landed in my inbox - Spark Arena named among the world’s top 20 arenas.

Now, this is a big deal. This isn’t a list that’s put together by some random Instagram account in Norway with 100 followers. This is a list put together by IQ Magazine. And if you’re into music in a big way - like, really into it, more than a Rolling Stone kind of way - you’ll know IQ Magazine is a big deal.

Ani O'Brien: How National lost the Conservation Bill argument


Lawyers read statutes. Voters read headlines.

Disclosure: Prior to working in Parliament I worked at the Department of Conservation for about two years in the digital team.

The Conservation Amendment Bill has become one of the Coalition Government’s biggest political headaches of the year. Over the past fortnight New Zealanders have been told the Coalition is planning to sell off conservation land, open national parks to commercial development, and fundamentally rewrite the purpose of the Department of Conservation. These messages exploded onto social media and spread like wildfire. The Coalition, meanwhile, has accused its critics of scaremongering, insisting it only ever intended to tidy up a handful of low value properties and modernise a conservation system that has become bogged down in bureaucracy.

John McLean: Opportunity......


But for what? Analysis of an ascendant political party

New Zealand’s latest political poll, a 1 News-Verian poll conducted from 13 to 17 June, has The Opportunity Party at 4.6% of the popular vote. Opportunity is trending upwards. If the trend continues, Opportunity will get over the 5% threshold for representation in Parliament and would probably form part of NZ’s next Government.

David Harvey: A Good Bill and a Bad Detour


Why InternetNZ's call for a digital regulator should be resisted

The Deepfake Digital Harm and Exploitation Bill is one of the more sensible pieces of legislation to come before Parliament in some time. It does one thing, and it does it well. It should pass. What should not pass — and what should not be smuggled in on its back — is the far larger regulatory apparatus that InternetNZ has used its submission to promote.

The Bill gets it right

Colinxy: A Tax Suggestion for the Coalition


Marama Davidson recently told Ryan Bridge she’d be perfectly happy to pay more tax. Chloe Swarbrick claims people approach her all the time, saying the same thing. And every election cycle, a parade of self‑anointed “rich people” step forward to publicly announce their eagerness to hand more of their money to the State.

Fine. If they’re that desperate to give the government more of their income, let’s make it easy for them.