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  1. Disgrace alright. The Dr making the disclosure knew they’d play that bullshit game and thought he’d headed it off. Wrong!

    Apart from Te Whatu Ora’s leading edge dysfunction, there is also an entrenched pattern of government departments burying shit and pretending the OIA does not apply if it is even vaguely politically embarrassing that has been a hallmark of this and Arderns government. And while I thought Keys government was bad in this area, they’ve been shown up as boys by these professionals!

    Anyway, where’s those surgical waiting list stats, guys? Oh that’s right, they’ve been buried until after the election. Now why is that?

    1. Hallmark of Ardern’s government? It’s the hallmark of any government. Key did it, I am sure Clark’s government did too. They all talk about transparency until they get in power and then find that’s incredibly inconvenient. The additional tragedy is some muppets will start saying it’s something to do with getting rid of DHBs. The same DHBs that casually oversaw hospitals like Middlemore falling apart around them and doing not much about it.

  2. This is our most transparent government ever what are you on about – leadership from the very top to all department heads. But people want them back in so I guess “If You Always Do What You’ve Always Done, You’ll Always Get What You’ve Always Got.”

    1. Right but the fact that they campaigned on being transparent and succeeded very much implies the mob before were very much the opposite of transparent.

  3. This is precisely why the Te Whatu Ora Act has absolutely zero data publishing requirements in it – it’s designed to keep a lid on a collapsing system. Sure, you can complain to the Ombudsman, but they have no real power, when the health law itself doesn’t require the publication of data.

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