Political Roundup: Chris Hipkins hires a lobbyist to run the Beehive

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Here come the Professional Material Class to ensure Developers get their way no matter who the Government is.
New Zealand is the second least corrupt country on earth according to the latest Corruption Perception Index published yesterday by Transparency International. But how much does this reflect reality?

The problem with being continually feted for world-leading political integrity – which the Beehive and government departments love to boast about – is that it causes complacency about the existence of real corruption and shortcomings in our democracy.

For example, one of the biggest failings in New Zealand’s political system is our entirely unregulated system of corporate-political lobbying. Unlike similar countries, we have virtually no laws and regulations to keep the political power of vested interests and the wealthy in check. This means that the lobbying industry is booming, and corporate lobbyists are able to move back and forwards between senior government positions and private businesses with almost nothing to prevent conflicts of interest.

One of the latest high-profile cases involved former Justice and Immigration Minister Kris Faafoi quitting his Cabinet job and taking on a corporate lobbying job almost immediately. The move was one of the more brazen, but it was hardly an isolated incident, as those who work in the lobbying industry frequently shift in and out of senior government roles. This behaviour is referred to as the “revolving door”, in which lobbyists and political insiders frequently trade places, gaining influence, networks, knowledge, power, and then enriching themselves and the private sector.

The Labour Government has a lobbying problem

Lobbyists running the Beehive have become quite a recurring theme since Labour came to power. When Jacinda Ardern became prime minister in 2017 she immediately got rid of her existing Chief of Staff, Neale Jones, who straight away became a lobbyist. She then employed another well-known lobbyist, GJ Thompson, who helped set the Government up, employed the staff, and then shifted straight back to the private sector to help corporates lobby the Beehive.

Yesterday we learned PM Chris Hipkins has hired another lobbyist to run the Beehive – Andrew Kirton. The new Labour prime minister has therefore followed Ardern’s democratically dangerous precedent of bringing in someone from the world of corporate power and influence, who is likely to eventually go back to lobbying afterwards.

Kirton has been working for the last year for Anacta Consulting – a trans-Tasman “government relations” firm run by David Talbot who, with political commentator Stephen Mills, also provides opinion polling to the Labour Government and corporate clients.

A former student of the University of Oxford and London School of Economics, Kirton has in the past run his own lobbying firm, Kirton Consulting, but is more well known in the lobbying industry for being the head of government relations for Air New Zealand, working for Christopher Luxon when he was CEO. Kirton’s background in the corporate world also includes working for housing property developers and, when living in London, with the London Chamber of Commerce and head of public relations for Heathrow Airport.

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Kirton also has a very strong political background in the Labour Party, having worked as the party’s general secretary responsible for corporate fundraising, and as a spindoctor and strategist for Helen Clark’s Labour Government.

He rose through the ranks of the Labour Party in the typically modern way, first as a president of the New Zealand University Students Association, and then working for a union (Finsec). He then became close friends with rising Labour stars including Jacinda Ardern, Grant Robertson, and Chris Hipkins. In 2017 he ran Labour’s successful election campaign.

He is now married to Labour list MP Camilla Belich, who is the frontrunner to take over from Ardern as the MP for Mt Albert. And Kirton himself has been upfront about wanting to enter Parliament. Wellington insiders say that despite his deliberate low profile, Kirton is one of the most well-connected in the Capital.

Kirton is no stranger to controversy, however, as he was General Secretary of Labour at the time of the 2017 Summer Camp scandal, when allegations of sexual harassment occurred. Kirton was criticised for presiding over an investigation that took a “victim-centred” approach, which was seen by some as a “cover-up”, with Police not called, no outside investigation launched, and families not informed.

The problem with a lobbyist running the Beehive

The conflicts of interest involved in having corporate lobbyists come in and run governments are immense. In other countries, it would be illegal. Here in New Zealand, unusually, there are no rules preventing lobbyists from coming in and out of top political rules.

While lots of media analysis is given to the ministers running the country, especially when there are reshuffles, there is a lack of acknowledgement that it is the unelected officials in the Beehive who often have much more power and influence over what happens.

Therefore, it is disappointing that Kirton’s appointment is not receiving much publicity or scrutiny. So far, the news items about his appointment don’t even mention that he is a lobbyist, and instead there is a vague mention of him being a “PR man”.

Kirton has deleted his social media accounts such as Twitter, and his LinkedIn profile, which gave the details of his past lobbying and corporate employment roles.

It’s time to have some clear rules about ministerial jobs and the lobbying industry. Currently, there is nothing in the Cabinet Manual to prevent the likes of Kris Faafoi or the various lobbyists from moving in and out of the Beehive. And of course, once Kirton finishes his job as Chief of Staff, perhaps in October, he will be free to go straight back into the corporate world lobbying government again.

At the very least, when lobbyists come into positions of political power they should have to manage their conflicts of interest with full transparency. If lobbyists are to be allowed to take on jobs running the Beehive, a condition of employment should be the full public disclosure of the clients of their lobbying firm. But don’t expect to find out who Kirton’s Anacta worked for anytime soon. This isn’t the culture in the Beehive.

When she was prime minister Jacinda Ardern was frequently lampooned for the promise that her government would be the most transparent government ever. We are yet to see how transparent Chris Hipkins will be, and how much he is willing to allow decision-making to be tied up with vested interests. But he is off to a very poor start by giving his top position to a corporate lobbyist.

Further reading on Andrew Kirton’s appointment as Chief of Staff

Thomas Coughlan (Herald): Prime Minister Chris Hipkins appoints Andrew Kirton as chief of staff
Bridie Witton (Stuff): Andrew Kirton appointed as Prime Minister Chris Hipkins’ chief of staff
Spinoff: Chris Hipkins appoints new chief of staff

Other items of interest and importance today

TRANSPORT SUBSIDY CONTINUED
Jamie Ensor (Newshub): Cost of living: Government takes jabs from Greens, ACT, National over fuel tax cut extension
Amelia Wade (Newshub): Cost of living: Fuel tax cut ‘extremely dumb economic policy’ – Infometrics’ Brad Olsen
Anneke Smith (RNZ): Government’s fuel subsidy extension ‘extremely dumb economic policy’
Lloyd Burr (Today FM): Public transport discount continuation a no-brainer
Grady Connell (Today FM): ‘Extending fuel subsidies makes the climate crisis worse’ – Greenpeace spokesperson
Rachel Smalley (Today FM): You can’t yell at society to act on climate change then drink from a subsidised fuel pump
Thomas Manch (Stuff): Fuel excise tax cut and half-price public transport extended, PM Chris Hipkins confirms
RNZ: Chris Hipkins confirms fuel excise cut, public transport support to be extended until June
Bernard Hickey (Interest): Govt extends 25c/litre fuel tax cut for yet another three months, saying it wants to focus first on ‘bread and butter’ ‘cost of living’ issues
Newstalk ZB: Finance Minister defends decision to extend the fuel tax subsidy

ECONOMY, COST OF LIVING, BUSINESS
1News: Poll reveals price of food is top of mind for New Zealanders
1News: Unemployment rate ticks up ahead of expected recession
Gyles Beckford (RNZ): Unemployment edges up to 3.4%, wages grow at record levels
David Hargreaves (Interest): Shock rise in unemployment to 3.4% – and shock slower wage growth
Rebecca Howard (BusinessDesk): A 50-basis-point rate hike is hardly a respite (paywalled)
Rebecca Howard (BusinessDesk): NZ unemployment rate slightly higher in December (paywalled)
RNZ: 400,000 Kiwis behind in credit repayments with arrears hitting 11.3% in December
Susan St John (Daily Blog): Why have a big fund for a rainy day when the rain is here today
Brigitte Morten (NBR): Chris Hipkins needs to outrun the economy to walk the talk (paywalled)
Simon Bridges (NBR): Let’s not make a Kiwi recession inevitable (paywalled)
Eric Crampton: Cost of living absurdities
Rebecca Stevenson (Interest): Countdown boss says ‘don’t break us up’ while acknowledging Kiwis pay a 10% price premium over Aussies
Paul McBeth (BusinessDesk): Foodstuffs takes softly-softly approach to water down regulation (paywalled)
Ernie Newman (Herald): NZ’s supermarket crisis needs lateral thinking (paywalled)
Paul McBeth (BusinessDesk): Beware politicising petrol prices, MPs warned (paywalled)

GOVERNMENT
Graham Adams (The Platform): Ardern’s resignation a wise career move
Luke Malpass (Stuff): Chris Hipkins moves to stem the bleeding of Labour’s vote in Auckland
Mike Hosking (Herald): New leader, same Labour Party (paywalled)
Glenn McConnell (Stuff): New Auckland Minister Michael Wood to focus on flooding, Auckland Light Rail under review
Anna Whyte (Stuff): ‘We need him to show up’: What community leaders want from new Auckland minister Michael Wood
Brent Edwards (NBR): Government impetus helped by positive polls (paywalled)
John Weekes (Stuff): Retail crime fog cannon scheme coincides with new Police Minister Stuart Nash’s return to job (paywalled)
Matthew Scott (Newsroom): ‘Kiwis are getting quite good at this’: Hipkins tours a water-logged Auckland
Joseph Los’e (Herald): Labour’s Māori caucus asserts mana to bring in a record number of Māori Cabinet ministers
Adam Pearse (Herald): Governor-General delivers climate-change warning to new ministers amid Auckland floods
Bridie Witton (Stuff): New ministers sworn in amid ‘times of difficulty and change’
Giles Dexter (RNZ): New ministers sworn in following Chris Hipkins’ Cabinet shuffle
Paula Bennett (Herald): The changing of the guard – but not the tide (paywalled)
Steven Cowan: What is the point of Chris Hipkins?
Mike Hosking (Newstalk ZB): Polls show the Govt got the hit it wanted, but issues still remain
Kate Hawkesby (Newstalk ZB): Cabinet reshuffle was confirmation this is the same old govt doing the same old stuff
Kate Hawkesby (Newstalk ZB): Labour is still the same, even with Chris Hipkins in charge
David Robie (Café Pacific): What the resignation of New Zealand’s inspirational prime minister means

NATIONAL PARTY
Newshub: Christopher Luxon says New Zealanders can trust him, despite Newshub-Reid Research poll results showing many don’t
Thomas Coughlan (Herald): Politics’ big question – what does a National-Act government look like? (paywalled)
Richard Harman (Politik): Why Nicola Willis doorknocks
Peter Wilson (RNZ): Chris Hipkins’ first question time as PM: Will he ‘win the House’?
Tova O’Brien (Today FM): A question I’ve been trying to get to the bottom of – Who is Christopher Luxon?

AUCKLAND FLOODS, WAYNE BROWN
David Fisher (Herald): Auckland floods: Mayor Wayne Brown’s 30min phone call with the Herald (paywalled)
Todd Niall (Stuff): Rain lashes Auckland while the mayor Wayne Brown lashes media
Dita De Boni (NBR): Eyes Wide Shut when business backed Wayne Brown (paywalled)
Todd Niall (Stuff): Leaked emails reveal Auckland mayor Wayne Brown trying to gag councillors amid flood response
Raphael Franks (Herald): Auckland floods and the council leaks: Email reveals Mayor Wayne Brown tells councillors ‘I will take care of the big picture’ in leaked email
1News: ‘Ludicrous’ – Auckland councillor fires back to Wayne Brown email
Peter Dunne: Wellington and Auckland – A Tale of two emergencies
1News: Deputy mayor ‘devastated’ over Wayne Brown ‘problem’ slip-up
Damien Venuto (Herald): The Front Page: Auckland Floods – MP Chloë Swarbrick and Councillor Josephine Bartley on the kind of leadership Auckland needs
Kirsty Wynn (Herald): Community leader Dave Letele extends offer of help to those in need on North Shore
Anna Rawhiti-Connell (Spinoff): Now might be the time to stop talking about empathy as a nice-to-have
Jonathan Milne (Newsroom): Why the sluice-gates didn’t open: ‘We’re petrified it might happen again’
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): When are we going to talk about allowing rapacious Developers building on Aucklands floodplains?
Nathan Morton (Herald): West Auckland’s plea to council as neglected work worsens flood damage
Rebecca Stevenson (Interest): Warning some flood damaged Auckland houses won’t be fully assessed for months, or potentially even years
RNZ: Auckland rents to go up after flooding, property investors body says
Michael Naylor (The Conversation): Climate change is already putting the heat on insurance companies – Auckland’s floods could be a turning point
Cameron Bagrie (BusinessDesk): The price of mother nature’s wrath (paywalled)
Rob Stock (Stuff): Price of new and used cars expected to surge as hundreds are written off in floods
Grady Connell (Today FM): Ministry of Education facing ongoing criticism of mixed communications around school closures
William Hewett (Newshub): Christopher Luxon slams ‘shambolic communication’ over school closure announcement, says some should have been open on Tuesday
David Farrar: The Government’s many stances on Auckland schools and ECEs
Lane Nicholas (Herald): Auckland flooding: Motorists stung with penalty parking charges at Auckland Airport after delayed flights

CO-GOVERNANCE, PARTNERSHIP, THREE WATERS
Kate MacNamara (Herald): How to reform the Three Waters Reform (paywalled)
Audrey Young (Herald): Tariana Turia and Chris Finlayson on partnership, principles and co-governance (paywalled)
Ben Thomas (Stuff): Dump the ‘co-governance’ name, it’s too tainted by confusion
Ngarimu Blair (Stuff): 2023: the year of the backlash against Māori. Again
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): 3 Waters is about drains! How did drains become an existential race threat?

LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Nikki Mandow (Newsroom): Citizens Advice Bureau faces closure in Auckland Council budget cuts
Neil Holdom (Taranaki Daily News): Approach to funding infrastructure needed to avoid ‘managed retreat’ from climate change damaged assets
Stephen Ward (Waikato Times): ‘Citizens’ assemblies’ to tackle big changes to local government
Steven Walton (Stuff): New ‘raised’ bump will make busy intersection safer, but the mayor isn’t a fan

ENVIRONMENT, ENERGY
Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): Megan Woods brushes off ‘hurry along’ from Environment Commissioner
Olivia Wannan (Stuff): Power companies don’t have green interests at heart – watchdog
Ian Llewellyn (BusinessDesk): Govt says energy timetable is appropriate, welcomes passion for Onslow (paywalled)
Catherine Knight (Newsroom): The future must use less energy and have more of the things that really matter
Ian Llewellyn (BusinessDesk): Govt policy driving peak power shortage: Meridian (paywalled)
John Carnegie (Herald): The need for energy diversity (paywalled)

FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Charlotte Graham-McLay and Henry Belot (Guardian): New Zealand PM welcomes change to Australia’s ‘corrosive’ deportation policy
Thomas Manch (Stuff): Government officials unconcerned after probing claims of Chinese police station in NZ

WAITANGI
Ripu Bhatia (Stuff): The three flags of Waitangi
Katie Doyle (Stuff): Kōtamutamu: New Stuff podcast serves up fresh takeaways from Waitangi

HOUSING
Malcolm McCracken: The tension between housing supply and infrastructure funding
Kelly Makiha (Herald): Kāinga Ora invites residents to hear about 60 new homes for Pukehangi in Rotorua
Greg Ninness (Interest): Buyer’s market continues with the number of homes for sale up 39% year-on-year
Greg Ninness (Interest): Property values continuing their downward slide at the start of 2023, CoreLogic says
Alwyn Poole (Kiwiblog): The Housing Crises walked into my home

OTHER
Glenn McConnell (Stuff): Half of children in Oranga Tamariki care don’t have a GP
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): This reeks of political damage control and it is deeply deceptive to the NZ public
Lauren Crimp (RNZ): Mammogram targets missed for third year running
Jonathan Milne (Newsroom): Pak’nSave’s 67c beers are ‘simply irresponsible’
Thomas Coughlan (Herald): Fund for fixing damage to roads needing top-up after years of storms
David Williams (Newsroom): Fertiliser funding ‘compromises’ university
Ian Llewellyn (BusinessDesk): Court asked if clear felling erosion prone land is legal (paywalled)
Andrew Bevin (Newsroom): Calls to bring 30-year-old company law into the future
Pat Baskett (Newsroom): We must protect what the cats drag in
Guy Trafford (Interest): Rural mobile still second class, despite years of promises
Jade Winterburn (Spinoff): The rebirth of Auckland Pride

25 COMMENTS

  1. You expected changes in the Labour Party. Why? They changed the placeholder to front the drongos from the Media, but that is about it. I mean the new PM re-instated Stuart Nash as Police Minister a job Stuwie lost under Jacinda for failure to perform. Surely he will do better now.

  2. Bad move Chippie.

    Will unravel the ‘bounce back’ he got from his blue collar, “New Zealand” speak.

    People tired of corporate speak and even more tired of corporates trying to be blue collar lobbyists.

  3. Another day another attack on NZ Labour–I attack them enough my self–the difference being I am not a professional pundit with a vested interest, just a working class political activist.

    The writer of this piece has attempted a hit job, but…should read “Dirty Politics” and reassess in my view because the dirty filthy Natzos are the actual experts at this type of thing. Managerialism is not how to run any Govt. but hey–I would put Mike Treen, Joe Carolan, Robert Reid, Bomber or myself in ahead of whimps like Kirton.

    This culture of professional management, administration, legging it over to the private sector in-between Govt. possies, is part of our embedded neo liberal monetarist system. Contracting out, selling out, penetration of public infrastructure by private capital are “how the world works” for most people. Next year will be the 40th anniversary of Roger fucking Douglas Govt.…let that sink in.

    • Absolute bollox TM
      Anytime you ‘trash labour’ it is after a ‘but…but National did this’…or a ‘National will do this’ attack on the right.
      Please don’t try and pretend you are a middle of the road political novice, this is TDB and not The Standard, where your sycophant postings all in praise of Labour/Ardern are there for all to see!

      • Ba ha Im right! Try harder because the pressure’s on. The oily creeps you share your bath water with are coming unstuck.
        Russell Brand.
        “Zelensky Really Just Said That?!”
        Yes. Yes, he did.
        Question. Politically, what’s the difference between Ukraine and neoliberal AO/NZ?
        Answer. Nothing.
        https://youtu.be/8puG7TIXVNU

        • I’m not interested in listening to your porn habits CB
          What you do to pleasure yourself is between you and Russell….don’t inflict it on the rest of us.
          You pretend to be a ‘socialist’, but obsessed by what a man who is worth 30+million thinks…whatever gets you off CB!?

          • Ba Ha! You need a cup of tea and a wee lie down im right. I bet you’re the kind of person who has high blood pressure?
            How did you manage to spin a porn fetish angle into my comment? Not that I’m complaining, I mean what ever floats your boat so long as no one gets hurt, I say. Perhaps it has something to do with your confusing ‘listening’ with ‘reading’? That could be it? Ahhh…wait? The link to the YouTube clip. That’s why you’re referring to ‘listening’. Oh well. Never mind. Who cares. You’ll hate this then.
            Russell Brand / YouTube
            Bill Gates’s INCREDIBLY AWKWARD Interview – Is THIS What He’s Worried About??
            https://youtu.be/o2HkjhK7aa4

      • Well, the funny old thing is, that The Standard whatever anyone may think of it, is run by a professional programmer–so–there is an extensive archive of contributors comments.

        Now, if you delve into mine you will soon discover what a public self pleasurer you are.

  4. Anyone who still thinks that New Zealand, regardless of which party is ostensibly in power, isn’t effectively run by special interest groups both local and international, and that our three-yearly performative gesture of ticking a couple of boxes actually means anything (the options presented having already been vetted and approved by said interest groups), isn’t paying attention. Nothing much changes whether National or Labour are in government, because they serve the interests of the same people.

    New Zealand is apparently “the second least corrupt country on earth according to the latest Corruption Perception Index published yesterday by Transparency International.” But this is a relative measure: if every country is more or less corrupt, then being the second least corrupt still means that we are corrupt.

    • A number of good points. AF-H.
      I woke up a while ago to the peculiar way that Transparency International carried out its legwork to establish the possible level of corr. in this country. I can’t go into detail about it as I only know enough to know it is a sham; to be called corr. for short, as that is more snappy and efficient, but the farce has been going on for long.

  5. Neo liberalism is the tool of the plutocracy.
    We are already seeing a resurgence of fascist and populist movements as a result of a 50 year period where the plutocracy has run unchecked and its associated dogmas have found almost universal acceptance by western economies.
    Watch the USA for a preview of our own future.

    • What are you talking about? To the extent that there is any “resurgence of fascist and populist movements” this is a response to and rejection of neo-liberalism, not a development of the latter. Who do you think are the people so fervently denouncing and even trying to criminalise these “fascist and populist movements”? It is the neo-liberal plutocrats, for the simple reason that the respective interests are so completely at odds. The idea of these popular movements being “fascists” has been put in your mind by Big Tech and Wall Street, because “fascism” runs counter to their profit motive. The functional definition of “fascism” in 2023 is “poses a threat to our interests.”

      • Hone up on your comprehension skills friend.
        The conclusions you have made as to my position and subsequently criticising are the polar opposite to what I was saying.

        • I think the problem is that you don’t express yourself very clearly at all. What I gleaned from your comment is that, in your opinion, the “rise of fascism and populism” is a phenomenon of the neo-liberal plutocracy. However, if you weren’t saying this, then my response to your comment is perfectly valid, and I hope we can both come together in a populist movement against neo-liberalism.

  6. ‘The conflicts of interest involved in having corporate lobbyists come in and run governments are immense. In other countries, it would be illegal’

    And which countries would they be?
    Not the U.K,U.S,Australia,that’s for sure.

  7. Fantastic job @ Dr B.E. Thank you for your effort in bringing an education to my every inquiring mind.
    I’m gobsmacked but I’m not surprised so I wonder what kind of gob smack I actually am.
    Our taxes-paid-for public assets are gone, so are our banks and our industry and we only have one, that being agriculture. I suppose then that the next thing to ‘go’ will be the very land we stand upon. And I’ve been expressing that concern here before.
    If hipkins dares to be so bold as to throw us to the wolves and vultures so soon into his tenure as a lap puppy to Big Money imagine what’s to be hatched for our future?
    As I’ve written here before:
    labour, national, act, the green party, the maori party and nz first are the same thing. They’re all neoliberal, which means, of course, they can be bought and they either have been or will be.
    Watch this. Seriously, is good and frighteningly on-topic.
    Russell Brand talks re zelensky/Ukraine
    https://youtu.be/8puG7TIXVNU
    Overall, I think what we have, both here and in Ukraine, is the work of a kind of global, hybrid mafia.
    I always suspected that Adern never quit simply for being called nasty, school boy play ground names. She’s merely passed the baton to *hipkins. The price we’ll pay for not paying closer attention to our politics will be death.
    * The reason why I often don’t use capital letters for a persons name is because using capital letters for a persons name is traditionally a mark of respect.

    • I always thought I would look up why Buddhist monks were self-immolating. Such a terrible decision. This 2012 New Yorker piece says it is looking into it. We might feel driven to do so by the withdrawal of so many of our ‘leading citizens’ from the civilised, communal efforts of the human race, genus NZ ‘Kiwi’.

      A Terrible Act of Reason: When Did Self-Immolation Become the Paramount Form of Protest? By James Verini
      May 16, 2012

      (There is a promotion on this page from The New Yorker which may be current – is interesting. Thinks – when would any of our publications run a piece like this?
      The New Yorker
      Flash Sale
      Subscribe to The New Yorker for $29.99 $6, plus get a free tote. Cancel anytime.)

  8. Overt corruption really is way way better. At least you know where you stand. It won’t be long though before lil ole NuZull that punches above its weight gets there as the populace gets sick and tired of this sort of bullshit.
    Easier to just flick an official a 20 for not having an international driver’s licence, or drive a Uttar Pradesh cop to the local whiskey store or next crime scene instead of their having to use the bicycle.
    Much better than this sort of sleazey shit!
    We shouldn’t forget though that the revolving door doesn’t just apply to the political class and their “officials”
    The worst, and even the very average members of that so-called 4th Estate are into it too.
    And most of them have grown to be so bloody egotistical and arrogant they think that they’re being thoroughly nice about it, and there’s nothing wrong in it.
    (You’re correct @ Bryce – Faafoi’s was probably the most blatant – which is possibly a good thing. Few will trust him again)

    It’s time for a stand down period (of at Least 6 months) between hopping between gigs.
    Also time for politicians to publish their diaries and appointments.
    (Among other things)

  9. So, what does a PM actually do then, besides read out press statements someone else writes, debate in chamber from notes someone else writes, attend interviews and sit around the table at meetings chatting and attend functions? Is that pretty much it?

    • What on earth do you expect. Good glad to see the PM fighting the dirty politics brigade. They do something their wrong, they don’t do it their wrong. Can’t have it all ways

  10. Par for the course sadly.

    For the last fifteen years I have looked at these corruption indices and said exactly the same thing. We have different ways of being corrupt in NZ, maybe we dont hand over bags of cash but influence and favours are rife. Its been getting worse and worse.

    Quite a few mechanisms to divert attention from the truth as well. Under this govt, they have become well oiled and now resemble an art form. Peter Hughes is the Dissembler in Chief.

  11. Lobbyists have been a feature of National Party Politics.
    Names like Crosby Textor and recently Policy Exchange feature.
    Both think tanks are associated with the alt right and their influence on social media like Cambridge Analytica before them is so strong as to put democracy at risk.
    Compare that with the political advisors of Labour whose influence is restricted to our NZ environment.

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