Will 2025 be any different from 2024 in respect of the gun lobby’s influence over the National-ACT-NZ First coalition government’s firearms policy?
This question now has a sharper focus with the Government’s intention this year to rewrite the Arms Act 1983. This legislation is administered by the Ministry of Justice.
It is a reasonable question in light of a revealing paywalled article last year by journalist Derek Cheng published in the NZ Herald (21 September):

Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee: is she joined at the hip of gun owners?
Nicole McKee was elected as an ACT party list MP in 2020. she had founded a firearms safety business.
Of greater political significance, however, was that she had been the spokesperson for the Council of Licenced Firearms Owners (Colfo).
This role included being an outspoken critic of the gun law change by the then Labour-led coalition government following the terrorist mosque attack in Christchurch on 15 March 2018.
How close is too close

NZ Herald journalist Derek Cheng investigates influence of gun lobby on government firearms policy
After the 2023 election she became the Associate Minister of Justice responsible for firearms. Derek Cheng starts from the self-obvious premise that McKee is and remains close to the firearms owners she used to represent.
But, through the Official Information Act, he drilled down further in order to understand “how close is too close?”
Cheng reveals that while the Minister’s written communication with Colfo was kept to a minimum, there was “a steady stream of contact with her office”.
This “stream” included exchanges criticising Police Association president Chris Cahill, advance co-ordination of media releases, and inviting Colfo to fill McKee’s ministerial diary with events.

David Seymour defending Nicole McKee over gun lobby political influence (Body, NZ Herald)
There is also a sharing of frustration over the publicly expressed concerns of Cahill (a former detective inspector).
Cahill had had the temerity to accuse McKee of misleading the public by suggesting that over 6,600 firearms licence holders could possess semi-automatic firearms.

Chris Cahill complains to Prime Minister over exclusion of Police Association from consultation over firearms registry
Cahill had also complained to Prime Minister Christopher Luxon last August that the Police Association was being “deliberately excluded” from a review of the firearms registry. True to form, in an auto-dial Luxon manner defended his associate justice minister.
Increased public safety vulnerability
In her ministerial role McKee is focussing on the public safety requirements of the current gun laws.
This includes looking to ease regulations for gun clubs and shooting ranges, reviewing the firearms registry, and rewriting the Arms Act (including whether there should be greater access to military-style semi-automatic firearms the future of the registry).
Cabinet has also given McKee authority to change regulations, where legislation is not necessary, to make whatever changes she wants in pistol shooting ranges.

Bryce Edwards asks a rhetorical question
Derek Cheng’s article is a quality piece of focused investigative journalism. His theme was picked up and taken further by political commentator Dr Bryce Edwards in his Democracy Project (24 September) who asks what in reality is a rhetorical question:
Is it time for Luxon to sack firearms minister Nicole McKee? (substack.com)
Drilling further down to more questionable or sinister (venal too?)
But is there something more questionable (even sinister, possibly venal) behind the firearms owners (Colfo) that deserves further investigative journalism? The National Rifle Association (NRA) in the United States is instructive.
In its 1967 official history Americans and Their Guns, the NRA stated that it “…is not affiliated with any manufacturer of arms or ammunition or with any jobber or dealer who sells firearms and ammunition.” Very commendable but those days of nearly 60 years ago are long gone.
In 2013 over 50% of NRA funding came from membership subscriptions. By 2022 this proportion had fallen to under 40%. The second largest source of funding came from private contributions and grants.

National Rifle Association benefits US gun industry corporates
The NRA has received tens of millions of dollars from its gun industry ‘corporate partners’. Those who donate $(US)1 million or more to the NRA are inducted into its ‘Golden Ring of Freedom’.
These include Remington Outdoor Company, Smith & Wesson, Beretta USA, Springfield Armory, and Sturm, Ruger & Co.
In 2024 the market size, measured by revenue, of the Guns & Ammunition Manufacturing industry was $(US)15.8 billion.
No surprise then that, as of March 2023, the grand total of NRA monies donated to individuals in the legislature or used in efforts to elect these individuals was over $(US) 27,400,008.
This explains the scandalous indifference and insensitivity of the NRA to the perpetual mass shootings in schools and other public places in the United States.
Tightening gun control affects profit-maximisation by the gun industry and the NRA is there to ensure that this doesn’t happen. Questionable? Yes. Sinister? Yes. Venal? Absolutely.
Gun industry in New Zealand
New Zealand is not the United States. There are about 1.8 million households in New Zealand. About 15% of them have at least one gun in them.
On the one hand, New Zealanders own about 6.5 times as many guns per capita as residents of the United Kingdom and 2.5 times as many as Australians.

New Zealand is not the United States….but!
On the other hand, New Zealand’s gun market in absolute terms is much smaller than the US. It is also smaller in relative terms (Americans own about 3.5 times more gun per capita than New Zealanders do). But nevertheless there is still a market here and a profitable one at that.
Tighter firearms laws decrease the risks (and costs) of firearms deaths and injuries, particularly from mass shootings. This is the experience of studies in 10 countries, including Australia.
In Australia, there were 13 fatal mass shootings from 1979-1996. After the gun law reforms in 1996 there were none until 2018. It is estimated that 16 mass shootings have been prevented in Australia by their law changes.
In response to the terrorist attack on the Christchurch mosque in 2018, legislation was adopted the following year to tighten up our gun laws, including the setting up of a gun registry, to be consistent with countries such as Australia,
Politics and pockets
The Council of Licenced Firearms Owners is, in effect, the New Zealand version of the NRA. The second paragraph on its mission statement on its website says it all:
COLFO was set up in 1996 by a number of interested individuals and groups to combat firearms-related disinformation. COLFO takes a professional approach using sound research to dispel the inaccurate and emotive claims of self-proclaimed anti-gun “experts”.

Does Christopher Luxon want his government to be in this pocket?
It is hardly surprising therefore, notwithstanding significant differences between their two countries firearms laws, that Colfo’s public relations campaign resonates strongly with those of the questionable, sinister and venal NRA.
Tightened gun laws reduce gun industry profits. Is Colfo’s campaigning questionable? Yes. Is it sinister? Perhaps. Is it venal? Yet to be determined.
Regardless is this the pocket that the Government wants to be in or is this another rhetorical question? The answer posed in 2024 should become clear in 2025.
But perhaps the answer is already clearer given today’s latest Derek Cheng scoop in the NZ Herald:
As Associate Justice Minister, Nicole McKee is seeking to further tighten the punitive ‘three strikes’ law and has been caught out reportedly as ‘fibbing’ of the extent of public support she has! Just saying!
Ian Powell was Executive Director of the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists, the professional union representing senior doctors and dentists in New Zealand, for over 30 years, until December 2019. He is now a health systems, labour market, and political commentator living in the small river estuary community of Otaihanga (the place by the tide). First published at Political Bytes
Another excellent factual article from Ian.
Nicole McKee is a dangerous person and if Luxon cannot have the strength of character to rein her in then where is our country going.
She is a proven liar and is promoting a dangerous agenda and should be stopped.
ACT are a bunch of misguided but dangerous far right lunatics promoting foreign agendas that have no place in NZ. They need to be gotten rid of asap.
What a time to have a weak-kneed prime minister. Of course, ACT wouldn’t have attained this prominence if we’d had a stronger PM to start with.
Can you imagine even John Key letting David Seymour run his government for him? The prime minister has no portfolios, nothing to do really. In fact, what is his role? We don’t need him if he cannot keep that rabble rousing party under control.
Every single ACT MP appears to be stronger than Luxon. What a pathetic excuse he is.
If Jacinda had allowed a secondary party to call the shots like this, imagine the howls of indignation from the right. Such withering criticism would have been enough to prompt some response to such an appalling situation. Yet old Luxury Luxon snoozes on appearing to be blissfully unaware of how low he has taken us with his laissez-faire behaviour. Actually, it’s not even laissez-faire, it’s lazy incompetence.
He’s hoping ACT will get all the blame, He’ll be able to slime out from underneath that smelly pile, picking up his knighthood on the way and further devaluing our honours system, even more than key. If they are handed out to the likes of them, who wants one?
Unfortunately John Key gave Act a free ride into parliament by telling voters in Epsom to vote for them instead o Goldsmith.
If this had not happened Act would be virtually non existent and sitting around the 2% mark like TOP.
Yes, it’s Key’s fault and this PM is helpless in managing it.
What is he actually doing? It’s not governing.
Managing has never been his strong point. Hates any whiff of criticism and refuses to listen to it. Total waste of space.
We continue to see ongoing corruption by this government, of which there is no dispute…
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/politics/not-what-its-for-inside-the-ministerial-wrangling-over-raiding-the-tourist-tax-pot-of-gold-to-improve-the-books/ALPIQRFZCJFY7CK42WNHRWA3WM/
In my observation, ordinary firearm users do not need mssa firearms. Leave these for the military, police, and licensed controllers and collectors. Perhaps police could organise occasional gun club meets, where they turn up and allow members to shoot mssa firearms they provide, so those that wish can get their fix. Presumably police have to practice shooting somewhere.
If safety is the main objective, then even pump or lever action repeating firearms could be done away with, leaving perfectly suitable bolt action types. And non detachable magazines limited to 5 rounds that have to be loaded through the breach, would reduce reload speed, making them less feasible in mass shooting scenarios.
There are parts of the world that don’t allow any private firearm ownership, without apparent detriment. Of course you still have to clamp down on illegal firearms already here, or that could be imported. There may be a small number of mssa use cases, but they should not be used to justify availablilty generally. Those that disagree have the option of seeking a referendum, so the whole of society gets a say, rather than loud lobby groups.
I’d give weight to Cahill’s opinion over McKee, and Luxon should be doing likewise. And if Act threatens to walk, then this issue might be important enough for the Greens to lend support til the next election, to maintain the govts majority.
If safety is the overriding concern, then private vehicle ownership would be banned and public transport services improved. No one needs their own car / motorcycle. Saves hundreds of lives and improves the environment. Safer communities together.
Then get rid of the human race then ratty, they are the killers.
Safety IS the primary concern.
How many people are convicted for using a vehicle to deliberately kill compared to those using a gun to deliberately kill?
Live by the gun die by the gun
I am a,Former resident of Aromoana.Gary Holden was a friend of mine and i met David Grey who would later massacre 13 people in cluding Gary Holden and one of his daughters with automatic weapons .If the current Co ltiton government water down current legislation passed by the prevoius government in the aftermath of horrific Mosque massacres in Christchurch from preassure from the gun lobby .Then they will have blood on thier hands .When God forbid another shooting occurs because of access to Automatic weapons .I was never a big fan of John Howard in Australia but he did show leader ship after the Port Aurther Masscre by his ban of automatic weapons .Australia has not had a major firearms incident since the ban If anything NZ needs to stengthen our gun laws furher like Oz to prevent more gun voilence Peter Marra
The Police have blood on their hands with David Gray & Brenton Tarrant already, but they don’t care. It’s easier to blame others, than own their mistakes & failures. The law-abiding are not the problem.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/nz-news/360551155/three-arrested-after-firearms-incident-outside-auckland-restaurant
Must be the Police fault eh ratty.
Were they licenced? No? Did they obtain their firearms legally? No? They are the problem and they are the ones the laws & Police need to focus on, not just harassing the law-abiding.
So David Gray and Brenton Tarrant were law abiding citizens that the police turned into murdering psychopaths?
Geeesh!
they don’t want to mitigate the effects…they just want their machine guns…and yes it is that simple
Why do we need any US ideas like gun culture imported here? It certainly hasn’t worked there, we were fine before. Idiocracy is not a viable model. Seriously I’m done for the day, turning off my phone.