The Regulatory Standards Bill will allow corporations to directly influence NZ law – why are Kiwis such simps for corporations?

How have you allowed you post-covid bitterness, hatred of trans, fury at vaccines and rage at Māori to blind you all to being whores for corporations?

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Experts warn Regulatory Standards Bill threatens future public health laws

Public health experts are worried the government’s proposed Regulatory Standards Bill will act as a disincentive for future law-makers to limit harmful industries.

A group of scholars in health and policy have worked together on a briefing, titled “Regulatory Standards Bill threatens the public interest, public health and Māori rights”. It’s authors are Jonathan Boston, Michael Baker, Andrew Geddis, Carwyn Jones and Geoffrey Palmer.

The Regulatory Standards Bill was introduced to Parliament in May, and is now being considered by the finance and expenditure committee.

It would set up a Regulatory Standards Board to consider how legislation measures up to the principles.

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Let’s be very clear, the Regulatory Referendum Bill is Class War in action…

The Origins: ACT’s Neoliberal Dream

To understand the Regulatory Standards Bill, we must start with ACT. Founded in the 1990s as the ideological successor to Roger Douglas’s Rogernomics project, the ACT Party exists to finish what the Fourth Labour Government started: the total commodification of public life. With its roots in Chicago School economics, ACT idolises the free market, loathes the state (except when protecting capital), and views regulation as an obstacle to “freedom” — defined narrowly as consumer and investor liberty.

In 2009, the National-ACT confidence and supply agreement commissioned a taskforce led by arch-neoliberal Graham Scott to look into “regulatory responsibility.” Its conclusion: regulation should conform to a strict set of principles designed to prevent the state from interfering too much with market activity. This taskforce gave birth to the Regulatory Standards Bill.

Rodney Hide introduced the first version in 2011. It was met with scepticism, even from centrist legal scholars, who warned that the bill would judicialise politics and constitutionalise neoliberalism. While the bill didn’t pass, its zombie-like persistence over the years shows how committed the New Zealand right remains to embedding capitalist ideology in law.

What the Bill Proposes: Rights for Capital, Not People

At first glance, the RSB reads like a list of nice-sounding principles: laws should not be retrospective, should respect property rights, should avoid creating unnecessary costs, and should be clear and accessible. But a closer look reveals its insidiousness.

1. “Property Rights” as Sacred

One of the central tenets of the bill is that laws should not “take or impair property” unless justified. This may sound reasonable, but in practice, it elevates private property above public interest. It would give courts — not the people — the power to decide whether environmental protections, housing controls, or land use laws unduly infringe on property rights. It shifts power from democratically accountable institutions to unelected judges, many of whom are steeped in commercial law and capitalist ideology.

This is a direct threat to mana whenua struggles for land justice. Imagine if land reform legislation, urban rent controls, or even a future law to nationalise fossil fuel companies were struck down because they infringed on “property rights.” The bill constitutionalises the most reactionary legal principle of all: that the right to own and profit from land or capital is inviolable.

2. “No More Than Necessary”

Another clause says that regulation should not impose “obligations, costs, or risks” that are more than “reasonably necessary.” But who decides what’s “necessary”? Under capitalism, this often means what’s necessary for profit. Environmental laws, workplace protections, or rent freezes could all be challenged for being “too costly” to business. The bill invites judicial activism — not in the progressive sense, but as a means of protecting capitalist interests from redistributive policies.

3. Parliamentary Veto in Disguise

The bill would require that every new law be accompanied by a “certification” that it complies with these principles. If it doesn’t, it must be justified — and could be challenged in court. This sets up a system where legislation is no longer judged on its social merit, but on how well it conforms to market logic.

In essence, it’s a regulatory veto wrapped in legal procedure. The aim is to make it politically and legally risky for any future government to pass redistributive or transformative laws.

Embedding Capitalist Ideology into Law

What makes the RSB especially dangerous is not just its content, but its method. It doesn’t ban socialism outright. Instead, it sets up legal roadblocks that make any move toward economic democracy more difficult, expensive, or outright unconstitutional.

This is classic capitalist strategy: not just win political battles, but rig the rules. It’s the same logic behind investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) clauses in trade agreements, which allow corporations to sue states for regulating in the public interest. It’s the logic behind independent central banks, which remove monetary policy from democratic control. And it’s the logic behind “fiscal responsibility” laws that force governments to prioritise debt repayment over social investment.

The RSB is part of this neoliberal constitutionalism. It transforms what should be political questions – Who owns the land? Should rent be controlled? Should fossil fuels be nationalised? – into legal technicalities. It makes revolution, or even reform, illegal by stealth.

Aotearoa’s Class War by Other Means

The Regulatory Standards Bill must be understood in the context of Aotearoa’s broader class structure. We live in a settler-colonial capitalist state where wealth is concentrated among a small elite – disproportionately Pākehā – while working-class, Māori, and Pasifika communities struggle under the weight of exploitation, housing precarity, and intergenerational poverty.

In such a context, regulation is one of the few remaining tools communities have to fight back. Whether it’s tenant protections, limits on corporate land use, environmental regulations, or worker rights, regulation is one of the few levers available within capitalist democracy to redistribute power and resources.

The RSB seeks to destroy that lever. It cloaks itself in legal neutrality, but in reality, it is a ruling class weapon designed to foreclose collective action. It represents the judicialisation of class war. One where the capitalist class doesn’t need tanks or cops to crush resistance, just well-written legislation and friendly judges.

The Limits of Parliamentary Critique

It’s important to note that opposition to the RSB has come not just from the left, but from mainstream legal figures and centrists worried about the erosion of parliamentary sovereignty. The New Zealand Law Society, in a rare political statement, warned that the bill would shift power from Parliament to the judiciary, undermining democratic accountability.

But for anarcho-communists, the issue goes deeper than defending Parliament. Parliamentary democracy in a capitalist state is already limited, corrupt, and structurally skewed toward the ruling class. Our concern is not that the RSB undermines Parliament per se, but that it further consolidates capitalist power within the state, making radical transformation through any legal means even harder.

In this sense, the RSB is not an aberration but a logical outcome of a capitalist democracy reaching its authoritarian phase. As global inequality deepens and ecological collapse accelerates, capitalist states are preemptively locking in protections for the wealthy – insulating themselves from the possibility of revolt.

…the Regulatory Referendum Bill is Class War in action!

Firstly, the Consultation time for a law as enormous as the Regulatory Standards Bill had a tiny window open over the holidays, and of the 20 000 submissions, barely .3% agreed with it!

Submitters oppose David Seymour’s regulation law. Why he’s charging forward anyway

David Seymour is intending to turn “up the heat on bad lawmaking” with a new piece of legislation outlining principles of good regulatory practice and establishing a board to keep politicians accountable for any red tape they impose.

A discussion document on the proposal drew significant attention over summer, pulling in more than 20,000 submissions. It coincided, however, with Seymour’scontentious Treaty Principles Bill also being out for public feedback, itself receiving a record number of submissions.

A just-released summary of that feedback found 88% of submitters opposed the bill, with just 0.33% supporting or partially supporting it. The rest didn’t have a clear position.

…only .3% supported out because it is such an egregious abuse of democratic power in favour of corporate power!

David has responded to this by attempting to claim a ‘Bot Army’ had falsified the real numbers…

ACT leader David Seymour suggested ‘bots’ drove ‘fake submissions’ against his Regulatory Standards Bill

ACT leader David Seymour has claimed 99.5 percent of the submissions received on the Regulatory Standards Bill were created using “bots”.

The Ministry for Regulation received approximately 23,000 submissions regarding a discussion document about the bill in January.

Submissions on the bill itself are open until June 23

In summarising the feedback, it found 88 percent of submitters opposed the proposed regulations, and 0.33 percent supported or partially supported them.

But in an interview on this week’s episode of 30 with Guyon Espiner, the newly-appointed deputy prime minister claimed most of the opposing submissions weren’t valid.

“You’re smart enough to know that those 23,000 submissions, 99.5 percent of them, were because somebody figured out how to make a bot make fake submissions that inflated the numbers,” Seymour said.

The figures quoted were “meaningless” and represented nothing more than somebody “running a smart campaign with a bot”.

When asked what evidence Seymour had that the submissions were fake, he said it’s because “we’ve looked at them. Because we know what the contents of them is”.

In a subsequent written statement to RNZ, Seymour said he was referring to “online campaigns” that generate “non-representative samples” that don’t reflect public opinion.

“Any decent journalist would know the online campaigns I was referring to, I suspect the general public certainly will. Any decent journalist would also know that presenting non-representative samples as reflecting public opinion is breaching basic standards of journalism,” the statement said.

“Thankfully I think most Kiwis see right through this, which might reflect RNZ’s declining listenership.”

…ummmm. I submitted against this terrible Bill and I’m not a Bot.

What evidence does David have that Bots were creating fake submissions because using Bot Farms would be incredibly dishonest and an affront to the democratic process…

In a statement, Ministry for Regulation deputy chief executive policy Andrew Royle would not address Seymour’s claims about bots directly.

Royle said the ministry undertook a “robust process” to analyse all of the submissions received.

“Our approach was carefully designed to reflect all submissions in the final analysis, noting there were many similar points made across most of the submissions,” he said.

The ministry’s summary shows its process included a “qualitative” analysis of about 1000 individual submissions. Group submissions and submissions over 10,000 words were read separately. The rest were summarised using AI.

There was nothing in the report about bots or other interference in the submissions process.

…so David has no evidence?

Maybe he should talk to his mates at the Taxpayers’ Union, because they seem to have the details on Bot Farms.

Interestingly

…hmmmm.

The Regulatory Referendum Bill is Class War in action!

It is Property Rights over Human Rights!

ACT have tailored an economic straight jacket that will make it impossible to counter corporate interests ever again.

If this passes, Corporations will be able to stop any environmental or taxation policy they don’t like.

The radical nature of this should terrify every New Zealander. It is a brake pedal for corporate interests and a gag for democratically elected change.

We require regulated capitalism not free market fantasies!

This is a blatant power grab by those fearful climate change will provoke electoral demands they don’t want to pay for!

Why on earth are we placing democratic break peddles on legislation the people have mandated by popular vote?

The Regulatory Standards Bill is an ideological vanity project that will have the real world impact of strangling off the popular will of the people!

Creating a Board of Corporate Warlords to vet all legislation to ensure it doesn’t impact their property rights is so crazy, why would you allow this to happen Kiwi?

Why?

Once upon a time, Kiwis stood on their own two feet on this land, they bowed to no one and I remember those NZers and those Kiwis, but the way post-Covid bitterness burnt us, something changed didn’t it?

Somehow you have all gotten so twisted by the trans debate, by Māori road signs and orange road cones that you have dropped to your knees to kiss corporate arse.

Look at how National, ACT and NZF ram through deregulation policy for their donors interests.

Look at how the Agricultural Industry bought and paid for the environmental policy under this government!

Look at how ACT destroyed 2000 local jobs for school lunches so they could give the multi hundred million dollar contract to a large international transnational.

Look at how the NZ Initiative plus the Atlas Network are pushing the deregulation agenda for National, ACT and NZFs donors interests!

You are willingly being slaves to corporations because fuck that Trans kid right?

You are handing over your personal sovereignty to corporations because Māori is spoken during the weather!

You are agreeing to be a prostitute for corporate profit margins because a vaccine against a once in a century pandemic somehow doesn’t  meet you standards?

Comrades, your enemy isn’t some kid transitioning, it’s not a Māori woman in politics, Māori women in media, Māori women outside walking (we really do have a problem with giving our Māori women comrades crap)

Your enemy isn’t drag queen story time, it’s not environmentalists, it’s not beneficiaries, it’s not state tenants, it’s not renters, it’s not the Treaty.

Your enemy is who it’s always been, the banks, the billionaires, the corporations, the powerful who use social media hate algorithms to warp you into believing their interests are your interests when nothing can be further from the truth!

How have you allowed you post-covid bitterness, hatred of trans, fury at vaccines and rage at Māori to blind you all to being whores for corporations?

Get off your knees Kiwi!

I demand you stand Kiwi!

You bow to no one, especially not the fucking corporations.

Stand Kiwi, stand!

We may have disagreements over social policy, but to be tricked as easily as you have been for corporate interests?

Your rage and anger has been manipulated by the Right and put into empowering the corporations.

What have you allowed your hate to make you Kiwi?

What have you self mutilated yourself into?

 

 

 

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5 COMMENTS

  1. I had a similar idea for reviewing legislation;
    Who does the legislation benefit?
    All legislation must benefit the people and specifically the poor.
    The trouble David has is that we know who he works for the benefit of.
    If David so much as farts we know it’s for the rich.

  2. The Regulatory Standards Bill has sparked significant debate in New Zealand, with critics raising multiple concerns beyond its potential impacts on the Treaty of Waitangi and environmental laws. Here are some key negative implications that New Zealanders should be aware of:

    1. Threat to Parliamentary Sovereignty & Democracy

    The bill could shift power from Parliament to the courts by allowing judges to issue “declarations of inconsistency” against laws that violate its regulatory principles (e.g., property rights, economic freedom).

    This may lead to judicial overreach, where unelected judges can influence or block legislation passed by elected representatives.

    Unlike countries with constitutional bills of rights (e.g., the US or Canada), New Zealand’s system traditionally relies on Parliamentary supremacy, meaning laws are made by MPs, not courts.

    2. Risk to Public Health & Safety Regulations

    Laws protecting public health (e.g., smoking bans, food safety rules, vaccine mandates) could be challenged if deemed too restrictive on businesses or individuals.

    Workplace safety laws (like those enforced by WorkSafe NZ) might face legal hurdles if companies argue they impose excessive compliance costs.

    3. Harm to Social Welfare & Housing Policies

    Policies aimed at reducing inequality (e.g., rent controls, tenant protections, wealth taxes) could be undermined if they conflict with the bill’s emphasis on property rights and minimal regulation.

    Government housing initiatives (like Kainga Ora developments) might be delayed or struck down if opponents argue they infringe on private property rights.

    4. Increased Cost & Delays Due to Litigation

    The bill could flood courts with lawsuits as businesses, lobby groups, and individuals challenge regulations they dislike.

    Taxpayer money would be spent defending laws in court, diverting funds from essential services.

    5. Undermining Indigenous & Human Rights

    Beyond the Treaty of Waitangi, the bill could weaken protections for other minority groups, such as Pasifika communities or disabled New Zealanders, if policies supporting them are deemed “too restrictive” on others.

    International human rights commitments (e.g., UN declarations on Indigenous rights) may be harder to enforce if they conflict with the bill’s principles.

    6. Economic Uncertainty & Investor Risk

    While the bill claims to promote economic efficiency, constant legal challenges could create business uncertainty, discouraging investment.

    Foreign companies might exploit the bill to challenge NZ regulations (e.g., environmental or labour laws) under investor-state dispute mechanisms in trade agreements.

    7. Potential for Corporate Influence Over Law

    Large corporations and wealthy individuals could use the bill to lobby against regulations that affect their profits (e.g., financial sector rules, environmental restrictions).

    This risks creating a two-tier legal system, where well-funded groups can challenge laws, while average citizens lack the resources to do so.

    8. Conflict with Climate Change & Sustainability Goals
    The bill’s focus on minimizing regulatory burdens could hinder New Zealand’s ability to enforce strong climate policies, such as:

    Carbon pricing mechanisms (e.g., the Emissions Trading Scheme)

    Fossil fuel phase-outs (e.g., offshore oil drilling bans)

    Sustainable farming regulations (e.g., freshwater rules)

    Conclusion: A Risk to NZ’s Progressive Policies?

    The Regulatory Standards Bill, while framed as a way to improve regulation, could have far-reaching negative consequences—from weakening democracy to harming public health, Māori rights, and environmental protections. If passed, it may lead to years of legal battles, slow down progressive reforms, and priorities economic freedoms over collective wellbeing.

    Free Aotearoa

  3. ” The Regulatory Standards Bill will allow corporations to directly influence NZ law – why are Kiwis such simps for corporations? ”
    Start here…
    Stanley Milgram (August 15, 1933 – December 20, 1984) was an American social psychologist known for his controversial experiments on obedience conducted in the 1960s during his professorship at Yale.[2]
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_Milgram
    P.S. ” …why are Kiwis such simps…”
    I don’t think Kiwis are ‘simps’ at all. I think Kiwis get the wrong information from a crooked MSM spurted out by corrupt individuals to hide past crimes and to enable present ones while at the same time looking to the future.
    I think Kiwis are the victims of piss poor information or rather all information which could/should then be used to surgically dissect crooked people in a very public manner.
    We don’t have that. We DO have rnz and that’s like having pubic lice. It’s there, it’s pointless and it achieves nothing except to nurture more lice.
    Let the the regulatory standards Bill go through but the thinking behind that should be that if [it] does ‘ go through’ then politicians should be expected to be chased until caught then they should expect to be put in jail. Instead, currently, all you’ll hear from the public is a beer bottle being opened as footy comes on the tee vee. And do you know what? Fair enough too. But when the game’s over and the beersies are sunk you must act.
    rnz
    Facial recognition technology supported by big name retailers
    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/564201/facial-recognition-technology-supported-by-big-name-retailers
    Let’s start with roger’s wee seymour. I wonder? How fast do you think he can run while screaming?

    • I think you are right about the poor or mis-information kiwis are subjected to.
      We know full well that once people understand the clear implications and dangers of certain legislation, the modification of the ToW for example, kiwis stand up for their rights extremely well.
      Our best people come forward and lead the way when crises like that threaten.

      But, our lives are busy and complicated and it’s not easy to get clear, concise information especially if one relies on social media or msm.

      I blame governments for that. They deliberately muddy the waters and try to confuse simple issues.
      Seymour has been especially trained to do this. He knows all the words to use and how to disseminate his propaganda in the best ways.

      • You got the CoC plan, especially Seymour, in a nutshell Joy. Luxon just spouts corporate jargon speak that if necessary he can U turn on by blaming someone else.

Comments are closed.