Not a well crafted bill

The House has voted through the Legislation (Definitions of Woman and Man) Amendment Bill to select committee. I understand the intent of the bill, but is is really badly drafted. The key provision is:

13A Meaning of woman or female

In any legislation, regardless of gender identity,—

(a) woman means an adult human biological female; and 
(b) female means a human biological female.
13B Meaning of man or male

In any legislation, regardless of gender identity,—

(a) man means an adult human biological male; and 
(b) male means a human biological male.

So three big issues.

  1. They define female as meaning a human biological female. So they say a female is a female. Umm.
  2. They don’t define adult, making it 20 by default
  3. They don’t define biological woman or male, which Liam Hehir sets out as a problem below

https://twitter.com/PronouncedHare/status/2056981151156437214

I also have a substantive problem in that the proposed law would potentially remove flexibility, where it is warranted.

My preferred legislative solution would be:

  1. Define sex as meaning biological sex as determined by gametes.
  2. Define gender as meaning your sex unless you have gone through a legal process to change your gender identity to either the other gender or non-binary.
  3. Birth certificates would reflect sex
  4. Passports would reflect gender
  5. In legislation any reference to male or female would be assumed to be sex, unless explicitly stated to be gender. This would allow flexibility as appropriate.

General Debate 07 June 2026

Verity on Gerry

Verity Johnson writes:

But I did spend, over the period of three days, over five hours talking to Gerry Brownlee one on one. We see the world completely differently. We have nothing in common. And I don’t think we share a single similar opinion. I don’t think he agreed with a single thing I said the whole time.

But I don’t think I’ve ever had someone listen so sincerely to what I was saying.

Nor engage so thoughtfully, and genuinely, in the points I’m trying to make.

And, above everything, care.

Now, I talk a lot of smack about politicians. About an indifferent, unshakable, elite old school mentality of The Establishment that has screwed over a whole new generation of New Zealanders.

I assumed he’d be the poster boy for that. And I got him totally wrong. I arrived thinking I’d loathe him. I left thinking I should go drinking with him next time I’m down here.

In other words, I wrote him off as a pale stale boomer male who’d bounce between patronising me and dismissing me. And in doing so, I learnt a lot more about myself than I did about him.

I’m pleased Verity got beyond the caricature.

Well done Little

Before the Mayoral election I blogged:

Received a pamphlet from Andrew Little in the letterbox. He makes five key pledges in it, so I thought it would be useful to record them here, and analyse how one could judge if he has kept his word, if he is elected Mayor.

They are:

1 Keep Rates down

A rates increase no larger than inflation would fulfil this promise well. But what could count as even a partial success? Well the Whanau Council has a 12% rates increased planned for next year, so a minimal success would be getting that to under 10%.

The current Council has further rates increases of 7% for out years. So rates increases of under 5% from 27/28 would qualify.

I said under 10% would be a minimal success. Little and the Council got it down to 5.8%. That is a pretty decent achievement. I continue to be impressed with Little’s initial year as Mayor.

Let’s not celebrate copyright law extension

The Herald reports:

The Government is introducing sweeping changes to copyright law, which will see songs like I See Red by Split Enz, Dragon’s April Sun in Cuba and Hello Sailor’s Gutter Black enjoy extended copyright protection.

Copyright protection for these songs would expire in the next two years without the law change.

As they should. It was released 48 years ago. 50 years is more than enough time to be copyrighted. Without finite copyright limits we would be paying copyright of Shakespeare and Mozart.

I think the maximum copyright term should be 50 years or life + 20 years.That is enough to reward the creator and if they die, their children.

Copyright reform as been on the cards since the last Government entered into trade agreements with the UK and the EU that promised to align some parts of New Zealand’s domestic law with international standards.

The changes must be made by May 1, 2028.

The laws extend the copyright protection period for most works by 20 years, so they are protected for either 70 years from the creator’s death or 70 years from publication.

So we have to do it, under the FTAs. But that doesn’t mean we should try and sell it as a good thing for NZ. It will mainly benefit huge multinational studios.

Copyright for life + 70 years means it could be 150 years until something enters the public domain.

General Debate 06 June 2026

Nicola vs Grant

Grant Robertson’s 2023 Budget included forecasts for 2026/27. This allows us to directly compare what Grant Robertson said Labour would spend in 26/27 vs what Nicola Willis said she would spend.

Grant said he would spend $31.6 billion on health. Nicola Willis announced $33.9 billion. That’s $2.3 billion more, or 7.2% greater, And again this is comparing 26/27 vs 26/27. The actual increase from 23/24 is 20.2%. So Nicola Willis has funded the health system 20% greater than in 2023, and 7% greater than Labour promised in 2023.

Grant said he would spend $20.9 billion on education. Nicola Willis announced $24.1 billion. That’s $3.2 billion more, or 15.3% greater, And again this is comparing 26/27 vs 26/27. So Nicola Willis has funded the education system 15% greater than Labour promised in 2023.

Cutting back office expenditure does allow you to spend more on frontline services.

Anyone who claims this is an austerity budget is either one of:

  1. Certifiable
  2. Stupid
  3. Dishonest

The Free Palestine party shows that political advertising for parliamentary parties should not be taxpayer funded

A new political party “Palestine Free from the River to the Sea” are explicitly saying that “Our purpose in creating a party is not to seek power, but to raise awareness. If we can reach 500 members quickly we will qualify for government funding to be used in campaign advertising. Every cent will go towards supporting the cause of Palestinian liberation.” See: https://www.psna.nz/news/newsletter-no-242

They go on to clarify that “You can join even if you belong to another party. We don’t ask for your loyalty to us. We don’t even ask that you vote for us.”

Finding 500 members who do not even intend to vote for you in order to qualify for taxpayer funding to promote a political message is an abuse of the system, and shines a spotlight on the fact that political parties should not be receiving taxpayer funding in the first place. If a political party cannot fundraise enough for its own political advertising, it shouldn’t be running for Parliament.

According to the Elections NZ website, $4,145,750 is currently being allocated to all parties for political advertising: https://elections.nz/media-and-news/2026/2026-broadcasting-allocation-decision That’s almost the entirety of the IPCA’s $5,000,000 annual budget. Scrap taxpayer funded political advertising which has now shown itself to be open to abuse by fringe parties like the Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party or Vision New Zealand, and give it to the IPCA instead. I daresay this country will do without a few extra social media ads for parties which have no hope of getting into Parliament.

The beat up about so called NZ freeloading

1 News reported:

US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth says New Zealand is “freeloading” off the American military because of its low level of military spending.

Multiple media have reported along these lines, but the truth is that Hegseth did not target New Zealand. It only came up because of a question by a journalist that was designed to generate a headline.

It is true that the US wants all friendly countries to increase defence spending, and has said they think 3.5% of GDP should be the minimum. Wanting allies and friends to spend more has been US policy for many decades. Trump has been much more muscular (and successful) in promoting this.

The speech to an Asia-Pacific conference did not mention New Zealand. In fact it was a plaudit to South Korea:

If you want to see what burden sharing looks like, consider the Republic of Korea. South Korea has invested consistently in its own defense, not because, because it does not have the luxury of treating war like an academic exercise. They live on the front lines, and so they build real combat power. President Lee’s decision to increase defense spending to the new global standard of 3.5% and to assume greater responsibility for its conventional defense reflects simply a clear-eyed understanding of the threat environment. It won’t be easy, but it’s necessary for the security and prosperity of his country. This was a hard-nosed decision, because they see the world as it actually is. We applaud the pragmatism and leadership demonstrated by Seoul. The region will be far more stable and more secure when other allies and partners follow that path.

Hegseth also went on to praise increased spending by Philippines, Australia, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and Japan. His speech wasn’t chiding, it was in fact praising allies for doing more.

He then did the stick to go with the carrot:

President Trump is setting the gold standard. We demand 3.5% from our allies and partners, and we are going well beyond that number. We expect every single ally and partner to match that kind of resolve. For those nations that rise to this challenge that embrace responsibility as true partners, the benefits will be clear. As our strategy states, we will prioritize working with model allies those nations who are most capable, clear-eyed and ready to defend their national interests. For those nations, we are moving them to the front of the line, expedited arms sales, deep industrial base collaboration, expanded intelligence sharing, the list goes on that benefits many.

But for those who believe they can continue to free ride on the generosity of the American taxpayer, hear us now. Those days are over. Allies who refuse to step up and carry their own weight for our collective defense will face a clear shift in how we do business. 

So this was aimed at every ally and partner in the world. No mention of NZ.

Afterwards journalist Anna Fifield asked a question:

I couldn’t help but notice that New Zealand was missing from your list of countries. There, they have recently outlined a plan to get from 1 percent to 2 percent of GDP, a long way from 3.5. Would you consider New Zealand to be a free rider?

Now this was a legitimate question, but it was also one in which there could only be one answer. Hegseth has just done a speech saying we want everyone to be at 3.5%, so he is hardly going to then say “Oh except New Zealand”. His answer was:

I appreciate the question. I listen, I mean, if I’m being honest, 2 percent is not enough, and so 2 percent is free loading, but I don’t have anything against New Zealand. I want partners to step up. I didn’t intentionally leave it off my list. I look forward to working with the new Defence Minister there and enhancing those capabilities. I think that relationship has been a very fruitful one for a very long time, but I think, as my friends [Australia’s] Richard Marles and [the UK’s] John Healey know, I’m probably the most blunt with our closest friends about what our capabilities are, and where they need to be to ensure that we’re locking arms and shields, considering the threats of the world.

So he simply answered the question by saying 2% is not enough, but went out of his way to say he has nothing against NZ.

The way other media (not Fifield) have framed this as some sort of public rebuke of NZ is rather silly. He simply answered a question.

It’s what went right, not wrong

Stuff reports:

The world is watching New Zealand’s housing crash — and asking what went wrong

This headline has it entirely wrong. House prices were unaffordable in New Zealand. They have fallen to more affordable levels. This is not a crash. This is the impact if policy designed to lower prices, so that more people can afford to buy a home.

This is not to say that falling house prices have not had some negative consequences. I suspect that the subdued economic growth is partially because households feel poorer because their house is on paper worth less than three years ago. We don’t take into account that our next house is also cheaper – we just focus on our current house.

But all policies and pros and cons, and the massive increase in house prices wasn’t sustainable. The correction is painful for some people, but still necessary.

General Debate 05 June 2026

A necessary eviction

Radio NZ reports:

Jasmine Hanham filmed herself harassing her neighbours and then posted it to social media platform TikTok.

Now her landlord Kāinga Ora has taken her to the Tenancy Tribunal to get her evicted for her antisocial behaviour.

That behaviour included covering her neighbour’s work car with stickers accusing him of “s*** parking” and filming herself verbally harassing her neighbours and posting the videos to TikTok.

The Christchurch woman told the tribunal she was struggling with parenting her high-needs children, which led to the outbursts, and that her tenancy shouldn’t be terminated.

But tribunal adjudicator Rebecca Morgan said in a recently released decision that while parenting can be overwhelming, the three antisocial incidents cannot be justified by stressful parenting.

Morgan ultimately terminated Hanham’s tenancy giving her two weeks to find new accommodation.

This would never have happened under the last Government. Their policy was to basically protect the abusers.

Words that are now meaningless

An academic has labelled the 10% increase in health funding as “austerity”. This made me realises that this was another word which once had a specific meaning, basically a cut in the level of spending, to a meaningless “spending did not increase as much as I think it should have”.

I asked on Twitter for examples of other words that once had a useful specific meaning, but now were meaningless. Some of the contributions were:

  1. Neoliberal – any non-socialist economic policy
  2. Austerity – not increasing spending as much as we want
  3. Racist – has a different view to me on the Treaty
  4. Far right – not left
  5. Nazi – see far right
  6. Disinformation – information I disagree with
  7. Hate speech – speech I dislike
  8. Unsafe – speech or views I dislike
  9. Genocide – death of more than 1 person
  10. Cut – lower increase in spending of taxpayer funds than demanded by self-appointed advocates
  11. Anti-fascist: Anarchist
  12. Diversity – Homogenous opinion
  13. Science – knowledge
  14. Unprecedented – not occurred recently
  15. Gaslighting- saying things I don’t like to hear
  16. Privileged – wrong race or gender

Abolishing HR

News.com.au reports:

A high-profile tech CEO has sparked debate after revealing he quietly axed his entire human resources department earlier this year.

Ryan Breslow, CEO of Bolt Financial, claims the HR team at the fintech firm was “creating problems that didn’t exist” and fostering a culture of complaining rather than productivity.

“The problems disappeared when I let [the team] go,” the Stanford University graduate, 32, claimed, according to The New York Post.

He is not the only CE to do this or discover this. I recall chatting some years ago to a very very successful CEO and he said that his first step in every new company he took over was to scrap the entire HR department, tell managers they are responsible for managing their own staff teams, and that there is an external law firm they can access for legal advice on employment issues. This CEO said that without fail the improvement in happiness in the company was huge.

Sally Clarke, a burnout and wellbeing consultant, told news.com.au that erasing HR is a “fickle” move that is “bound to backfire”.

A burnout consultant!!

General Debate 04 June 2026

Meet the Greens – ACC

Labou appear to have decided on a strategy of releasing as little policy as possible, making it difficult to assess the impact on us of a Labour-led Government.

Fortunately the Greens are not shy in releasing policy, so in the absence of Labour policy I am going to look at Greens policy to get some idea of what the costs will be of a change in government.

I will go through their policies in alphabetical order. My brain could not cope with reading too much Green policy in one sitting, so these will be spaced out over a few weeks.

Their first policy is ACC. They key aspects are:

  • Extending the ACC scheme to include income support and treatment for injuries, disability, and illnesses, regardless of origin.
  • Revoking requirements for co-payments to treatment providers

So what would this cost, and who would pay for it?

A 2013 Treasury estimate put the cost of extending the ACC scheme at $1.5 billion, which would be $2.1 billion in 2026 dollars. Add in 21% population growth and you get $2.5 billion minimum cost.

Revoking co-payments just for physio is estimated to cost $65 million and physio is 25% of treatments so a conservative cost estimate (in reality number of treatments would increase massively) is $250 million.

So total annual cost of just this one policy is at least $2.75 billion a year. Thus would need the following tax changes to fund it:

  • Top tax rate on income over $180k from 39% to 61%; or
  • Tax rate of 41% on all income over $70k; or
  • Increase GST from 15% to 16.5%

Again this is just the cost of their ACC policy, not all their policies.

Democrat says lock up the Jews

NBC reports:

Top House Democrats are condemning a Texas Democratic candidate days after she took to social media to say she’d turn an immigration detention center into a “prison for American Zionists” if she won.

Galindo, a therapist, finished with the most votes in the March primary in the Democratic primary for Texas’ 35th Congressional District, a new district that state Republican lawmakers drew to be friendlier to the GOP this fall. She’s running in a runoff against Johnny Garcia, who previously worked in the Bexar County Sheriff’s Office. 

Galindo has made a string of controversial comments during her campaign. She wrote last week on Instagram that she’d turn an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center “into a prison for American Zionists and former ICE officers for human trafficking,” going on to claim that many Zionists are “pedophiles.”

95% of jews are Zionists so what she is really saying is that she wants to lock up all the Jews. Like a flash back to the 1930s.

Another British policing scandal

Henry Nowak was an 18 year old student in Southampton, who was cut and stabbed five times by Vickrum Digwa. The Police were called and despite the fact Nowak was the one stabbed and wounded, they handcuffed and arrested him simply on the say so of Digwa who claimed Nowak had racially abused him and assaulted him.

The Police did not investigate. They did not take statements from witnesses. They arrested him because Digwa claimed he had been racist and assaulted him.

Nowak told Police he had been stabbed and he couldn’t breathe. They refused to believe him. They handcuffed the dying man.

This is what destroys trust in institutions.

General Debate 03 June 2026

A win for democracy

Simon Watts announced:

Only elected councillors will be able to vote on council committees, in a move that strengthens democratic accountability, Local Government Minister Simon Watts announced today.

“Councillors are directly accountable to voters for their decisions. We are amending the Local Government Act 2002 so only elected members hold voting rights at council committee meetings,” Mr Watts says.

“Councils and the public nationwide have raised concerns about individuals holding voting rights on council committees, undermining decision-making and diluting the influence of democratically elected members.

“We’ve seen examples in the Far North, in Tauranga and in Hastings where individuals, such as iwi representatives and young people aged under 18, have been appointed to council committees and given voting rights without being elected by the community.

“That’s not democratic, so we’re fixing it.

An excellent move by the Government. Some may argue that unelected members on committees is okay, as decisions have to be ratified by the full Council. But that ignores the reality that getting the full Council to overturn a decision by a committee can take a huge amount of work and effort, and inertia often wins.

“While it is useful and appropriate that councils are able to make appointments that bolster the skills, attributes and knowledge of elected members, those individuals are not elected by ratepayers and therefore have no democratic accountability.

“Councils can still appoint non-elected members to offer professional advice and represent communities but those appointments will not come with voting rights or count towards a quorum.”

So you can still have an external accountant or lawyer on Audit & Risk. The benefit from them is their advice and knowledge, not their vote.

$600k on a website for a building!

The Post reports:

A glitzy website launched to celebrate the opening of Wellington’s refurbished central library building Te Matapihi cost nearly $600,000, pushing the costs associated with the library opening to more than $800,000.

It was also developed and built by an Auckland company and has been denounced by one councillor as “gold-plated promotional spending”.

The Post was told, in an official information response that the production cost for the dedicated Te Matapihi website was $13,961.

However, it has since been discovered the full cost of designing and building it (the end-to-end delivery) was actually $595,801.

This is obscene. That wasn’t $600,000 on the library website where you borrow and reserve books. This was $600,000 on a website just to celebrate the new library building.

Think what this indicates about the contempt for ratepayers who fund WCC. Think what this indicates about why project after project blows out massively in cost. It is a culture problem. How did no in management not say “Hey no effing way are we spending $600,000 on a website for a building?”

Set housing outcomes not outputs

The NZ Initiative released:

“Our cities have been meeting their housing targets for years while house prices kept climbing,” said Dr Benno Blaschke, Research Fellow at The New Zealand Initiative. “The housing targets gave politicians and communities a number to fight over while ignoring everything underneath.”

New research from The New Zealand Initiative, Beyond Targets, proposes a better way to hold councils to account: replace housing targets with price indicators. They tell planners whether people have real and affordable choices about where to live and build, or whether rules are forcing people and businesses into bidding wars over scarce permissions, jacking up prices.

This seems sensible to me. An outcome (where practical) is the better target, than an output.

General Debate 02 June 2026

Of course GP wait times will skyrocket under Labour

The Post reports:

Labour’s Dr Ayesha Verrall is adamant that her fees-free GP policy will not overwhelm clinics, despite featuring no commitment to fund the training of more doctors.

The policy has faced sustained criticism from Health Minister Simeon Brown, who says the free visits would increase demand on GP clinics without any plan to increase the number of doctors.

“Right now, the biggest challenge facing patients is simply being able to get an appointment in the first place,” he said.

This is correct, I’ve just checked with my GP clinic, and no appointments for two weeks for my GP.

In a sit-down with The Post, Verrall said cutting paperwork for doctors through AI and her plans to introduce a triaging system would free up 4.5 million appointments overall.

This is magical thinking. There is no actual specific plan, just a belief akin to we will build 100,000 homes.

Labour’s modelling anticipated two million more appointments a year once the scheme was fully rolled out after Budget 2028 ‒ increasing the number of appointments from 24 million to 26 million.

We have 5,600 GPs so two million more appointments would need an extra 430 GPs by Labour’s own numbers.

Instead of patients booking their appointments through a first come, first serve system, a nationwide triage system would see patients assessed over the phone to determine the level of care they need and when.

Sounds like centralised rationing. Rather than being able to decide for yourself if you see a GP, you will need to go through the Ministry of Health!!

Verrall said this system meant many patients would not need to see the doctor at all, and instead be referred to a pharmacist or online resources on the Healthify website to manage symptoms

So the phone operator will decide whether or not you can see a GP, and may just tell you to go read a website instead!!

Which language should be used first?

I am a fan of agencies having both English and te reo names. I am not a fan of agencies only using their te reo name as happened under the last Government.

If an agency (or their website) uses both English and te reo, which should be the primary language? Well, let’s look at the census data:

  • 95.7% of NZers speak English, but not te reo
  • 4.1% of NZers speak English and te reo
  • 0.2% of NZers speak te reo but not English

If your job is to serve the public, you shouldn’t need a ministerial directive to work out which language you use first.