Mōrena, and welcome to The Bulletin for Monday, June 17.
In today’s edition: A senior Newshub journalist teases his next moves, the prime minister is (finally) en route to Japan, and Fonterra gives its thoughts on the fast track bill. But first, Labour’s Chris Hipkins wants to make National a one-term government. Why Auckland could stand in the way.
The 2026 campaign starts now
On election night last year, one of the most interesting narratives from an otherwise quite unsurprising result was Labour’s performance in Auckland. Early on, it looked as though National was going to unseat Labour in several traditionally red seats. The final results weren’t quite so bad, but nevertheless, Labour was spooked. Mount Roskill, a longtime Labour stronghold, turning blue was perhaps the most damning result, along with Mount Albert being won by Helen White by the slimmest of slim margins (though White, repeatedly, maintained the result was fine). Over the weekend, leader Chris Hipkins addressed party faithful in Wellington. Despite the location of this speech, as the Herald’s Claire Trevett reported, he has renewed his focus on Auckland ahead of 2026, putting last year’s election loss down in part to shedding votes to National in the country’s biggest city.
Why Auckland needs Labour’s attention
Two days after Election 2023, The Spinoff’s Duncan Greive wrote an excellent piece that looked at precisely the problem Hipkins now wants to address. “The punishment inflicted on Labour in Auckland is stunning in its brutality,” wrote Greive. As he explained, the lengthy 2021 Covid lockdown took its toll on the city and many people felt forgotten by the government. “At times it felt like Auckland’s only value was as an economic engine,” said Greive. A day earlier, Newsroom’s Marc Daalder wrote a similar analysis, arguing that while locking down Auckland was the right move from a public health perspective, it was wrong politically. It wasn’t just the lockdown, said Daalder, but the policies (or lack thereof) as well.
Once the votes rolled in, the largest pocket of red in the super city was in South Auckland, but as The Spinoff’s Madeleine Chapman wrote at the time, a closer look at the results there showed things weren’t especially good there either. Voter turnout was down dramatically among the Pacific community, Chapman wrote. It hadn’t helped National, instead people had decided not to vote. Given Labour has traditionally had strong support from the Pacific community, this group should be easy to win back. But, the Pacific Media Network questioned earlier this month whether the Pacific community had still lost trust in Labour. Willie Jackson, for the record, disagreed: “Pasifika is still backing Labour,” he told host William Terite.
A one term government?
With polls showing a lukewarm assessment of the government, even after the budget, Hipkins has made it clear he’s hoping to make the coalition a one-term government. Some polls, notably TVNZ’s in late April, even showed Labour back in the driver’s seat. Last week, Hipkins told Newsroom’s Laura Walters that being in opposition for the past seven months had galvanised his party. “It’s pretty unusual for people to change their minds so soon after an election,” he said of recent poll results. It was a similarly reflective Hipkins that I spoke to for The Spinoff late last year. At the time, I described him as “peaceful and contemplative”, which was almost unsettling after the attack dog seen on the campaign trail. “If you think about it this way,” Hipkins said then, “I’ve always taken the view that… one of the best ways to get a promotion is to do a really good job of the role that you’ve got.” Despite all of this, argued Dan Brunskill for Interest, economic conditions could be very different in 2026 than they are now, something which will help the current government.
Why would voters return to Labour?
It’s all well and good to wait for support to return just because of discontent with the current government. By the time 2026 rolls around, it will have been five years since the last lockdown and voters may be willing to forgive if not forget. Labour MPs have repeatedly argued that’s why National won last year’s election – not because of any grand vision, but because of the amorphous “mood for change”. But policy does need to come into the discussion at some point. Returning to Trevett’s report from yesterday, she said that there was little substance to come out of Hipkins’ speech when it comes to Labour’s vision. “The only firm policy positions Hipkins set out in his speech were to bring back the Fair Pay Agreements Labour had started and to reinstate the pay equity process,” she wrote. And in the Herald this morning, Trevett has written another column on Hipkins, centring on his tour around the country to seek forgiveness from Labour voters for last year’s election result. That can only take him so far in terms of winning back lost support, or gaining new followers.
The party also runs the risk of losing further support to the Greens, perhaps illustrated by the latest Taxpayers’ Union Curia poll that showed that, even after a run of high profile scandals, the party’s result had actually risen. Former MP Peter Dunne made this case in a piece for Newsroom in February, arguing that Labour’s “cosy domination” of the left was under threat from both the Greens and Te Pāti Maori, the latter of which has also stolen the spotlight (for better and for worse) in the months since. In terms of policy, it’s the question of tax that routinely dogs Labour. Max Rashbrooke, writing for The Spinoff earlier in the year, suggested Hipkins could be the one to (successfully) bring the capital gains issue back into the public discourse. Though as an acerbic Hayden Donnell reminded everyone not too long ago, Labour seems to have already forgotten it was in government for six years, and had plenty of chances to do things then.
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Patrick Gower moves to trademark his catchphrase
In three weeks, Newshub will air its final bulletin on Three before shutting down operations. A number of the network’s most high profile broadcasters have already been snapped up by Stuff for its replacement news operation, but one name has been conspicuously absent: Patrick Gower. The Bulletin can reveal that while Gower has been in talks with a number of big media players, he has so far not lined up a new job for after July 5. Instead, he has taken steps to trademark his catchphrase “This is the fucking news” suggesting an independent news product is in the works. That ran into issues with the Intellectual Property Office, Gower told me, as it was deemed “offensive to a significant section of the community”.
Gower reckons most people would be OK with his brand name (“actually I don’t think it offends a significant section of the community, I think a significant section of the community enjoys ‘this is the fucking news’”), but has settled for the sanitised alternative: “THIS IS THE F#$%ING NEWS”. Gower remained coy on what his future plans with the brand could be, but said: “The Newshub empire’s gone down and so has my part in it – so I’ll just create another media empire, [that] was my way of thinking.”
More reading:
Newshub website to shut down alongside end of TV news operation.
There’s a brand new episode of The Fold, with Duncan in conversation with Toby Manhire.
It’s ‘scrutiny week’ – but what does that mean?
It sounds like a weird theme for a week of the Great British Bake Off, but really it’s a very serious business – and happening for the first time. The Post’s Luke Malpass explains what’s going on, as ministers and public servants are set to be “hauled over the coals for hours at a time” by both opposition and backbench MPs in select committees. This is a new initiative, writes Malpass, one that allows for additional grilling of those holding the purse strings. MPs are required to be in Wellington, but parliament won’t be sitting as usual this week. The parliament website has a bit more detail about how we ended up here, while Thomas Coughlan in the Herald has also written about the significance of these new scrutiny weeks.
Meanwhile, prime minister Christopher Luxon has jetted off to Japan – but not as expected. He’s been forced to take a commercial flight after technical issues (again) kept the defence force 757 on the ground in Papua New Guinea for longer than expected, reports Stuff’s Bridie Witton. Media and a business delegation will make it to Tokyo eventually, but not before travelling back to Australia where they will take an Air New Zealand flight.
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Click and Collect
Off the back of our lead story this morning, I recommend this Henry Cooke piece looking at the hypothetical situation in which National won the 2017 election.
For the Sunday Star-Times, Andrea Vance has more on her investigation into the misuse of data claims circling Te Pāti Māori and Manurewa Marae. Vance reports that the whistleblowers that first made the allegations haven’t yet heard from officials involved in the inquiry.
Fonterra has recommendations to improve the proposed fast track bill, but says it doesn’t plan on taking advantage of the process.
Shareholder discontent grows as Fletcher succession saga drags on, reports BusinessDesk’s Rebecca Stevenson (paywalled).
In case you missed it on Friday, MPs from across the spectrum have asked for an inquiry into foreign interference following the release of Stuff’s documentary The Long Game.
I suggest you spare a few minutes to read Duncan Greive’s Sunday Essay for The Spinoff: Remembering Young George, the barber who cut Auckland’s hair forever.
Joel MacManus reports on the messy drama tearing apart Wellington City Council’s left wing in his latest Windbag column. Shanti Mathias explains what the decision to keep agriculture out of the ETS means for our climate commitments. Ahead of season two of The Traitors NZ, Tara Ward reveals the cast. Calum Henderson writes about what he learnt competing in an online jigsaw puzzle competition. And after one year of our weekend feature My Life in TV, Alex Casey reflects on the best things we’ve learned.
That’s it for The Bulletin today, thanks for reading. I’ll be back tomorrow.
Got some feedback about The Bulletin, or anything in the news? Get in touch with me at thebulletin@thespinoff.co.nz.
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