Politics πŸ—³οΈ NZ Politics

And to top our week off, last Tuesday, S had a look at her banking app before we went for our normal everyday walk (between 4:30 and 5:30 in the morning depending on if she's working from home or not). And she notices a strange transaction has gone through. Phones the bank and someone says he'll look into it and give her a call back.

We normally don't take a phone with us but this day decided to in case he phoned back. I pick up the garage door remote and then decide I'll wear a jacket because it was pretty cold. Although I usually use the remote to put the door down, S was anxious to get walking as she had a client meeting at work at 8.00AM and she used the inside button to put the garage door down and that's when I realised I'd left the remote on the washing machine.

Phone call to after-hours locksmith who took half an hour to get here and then got a security screen opened in about ten minutes but struggled with a 40 year old front door lock. An hour and 1/2 and just over $400 latter and we were back in the house.

Didn't do a walk that morning. Then, after I dropped S off to the train station and was driving home, got a frantic phone call from her as the auto top up off her HOP card didn't work because the credit card had been cancelled so I drove her to work instead because the bank had frozen her ATM card while looking into the attempted Dubai fraud.
 
Watch our rights erode

I came to realise long ago that almost any change made by local or central government will affect someone's rights.... it depends on whether it affects you positively or negatively as to what you think off it.

You make it so the RMA says you have to apply for a resource consent if you're moving over a certain amount of soil (because that may mean you're changing the amount of rain catchment by increasing the size of your paving/driveway) but it also meant, when the RMA was first enacted, that farmers plowing their paddocks were required by some councils to apply for a RC by overzealous town planners misinterpreting the Act. The RMA was then amended to exclude certain farming activities.
 
Can see this causing more upheaval in Te Pati māori...

Te Pāti Māori: Expelled MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi back in party after winning court case​


Te Pāti Māori MP Mariameno Kapa Kingi who was expelled last year amid party turmoil will be reinstated to the party after a winning a court case arguing the expulsion was unfair.
In a just-released decision, Justice Paul Radich said her suspension was unlawful β€œin the pure sense of that word” and breached β€œkawa”, the party’s protocols.

In a statement, Te Pāti Māori said it respected the court decision and β€œwe will be moving forward with repatriating of Mariameno Kapa-Kingi back into the pāti”.

Previously, the party claimed Kapa-Kingi’s expulsion was prompted by claims she had brought the party into disrepute by misusing funds.

The MP for Te Tai Tokerau took the issue to court, seeking an interim reinstatement claiming the expulsion process breached the party’s constitution.

MP Tākuta Ferris, who represents the South Island electorate Te Tai Tonga, was also expelled over claims of serious misconduct, marking the culmination of months of turmoil and allegations against the party’s leadership which ultimately split the party in two.

The disagreements between different factions of the party spilled out into the public through social media videos, comments to media and the party emailing a raft of documents to members containing serious allegations against Kapa-Kingi’s son, the high-profile activist and former party ally, Eru Kapa-Kingi.

Kapa-Kingi has contested the party’s claims about her conduct. She said she was reluctant to take legal action but was ultimately β€œglad to have had one’s day in court”.

In February, a lawyer for party president John Tamihere revealed the party had offered to redo the vote regarding Kapa-Kingi’s membership prior to the issue going to court.

Davey Salmon, KC, told reporters gathered outside the High Court that the offer was declined.

 
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Oh, dear..... I'm guessing O'Neill hadn't heard of this fund that would provide domestic and commercial solar systems from government funding to councils. Better luck next time Simon.

 
Oh, dear..... I'm guessing O'Neill hadn't heard of this fund that would provide domestic and commercial solar systems from government funding to councils. Better luck next time Simon.

Well, first of all, it's not a fund. That to me implies grants, and it's a lending scheme for deferral of rates, with a bolt on to loan for solar. Hardly the great saviour in the need for us to remove our reliance on fossil fuels

Second, it doesn't exist right now.

Third, once again it's pushing the impact of man made climate change, which successive governments have done nothing about, and this one has tripled down on regressing back to more fossil fuels and tearing down any kind of moves towards getting away from them, again hardly a revolutionary step. In fact it probably guarantees no take up

A progressive government would be subsidising, enforcing all new builds to adopt, building wind, more hydrothermal and investing more without stripping out huge dividends out of the big four generators.
 
A couple of weekends ago, someone tried to use our credit card for an online purchase.... fortunately for us, their transaction for a $110K Rolex in Dubai didn't go through.

Card cancelled and two new cards issued. One a Debit Card (from Visa) which will be the only card used for online purchases, and it will only every have a few dollars in it which we'll top up through the banking app to make sure there's only enough money in it to cover that transaction. The numbers for the new credit card won't every go on to the internet. Any direct debits like Mercury, NZ Herald, Apple, subscriptions etc. from the credit card have now been transferred over to a cheque account.

When dealing with the banks fraud dept, we were told one thing that all their bank employees are told. If you receive a phone call from someone claiming to be from the bank, ask for them to send through to your phone a message on your banking app that you're talking to someone from the bank.... if it comes through your banking app, then it's a legitimate phone call from your bank.... if they send you a reply via SMS, What'sApp, Messenger etc., it's not your bank.

If they say they don't have access to the bank ID system or your bank doesn't have it, tell them you're busy and for them to phone you back in half an hour. Then phone your bank on their 0800 number... not one given to you by the caller. If it's a legalitmate phone call, it will be noted on your records that someone from the bank had just tried to contact you. Then you've got a choice... you can either wait for the caller to phone you back or the person from the bank you're talking to will send them an email for them to phone you back earlier.

In the famous words of Sergeant Phil Esterhaus, from the '80's cop show Hill Street Blues, "Let's be careful out there."
Did this happen through a phone call?

When I was living in the uk I had four cards at different times get cloned, then the old 1p transaction at 2am. I'd only find out when I go to use the card.

One time I can pin directly to a restaurant in Croatia, that was the only transaction I made so the card would have been cloned there.
 
Well, first of all, it's not a fund. That to me implies grants, and it's a lending scheme for deferral of rates, with a bolt on to loan for solar. Hardly the great saviour in the need for us to remove our reliance on fossil fuels
No. Still, the government, whether you have decided is the right or wrong way to do it (and I think it's the wrong way as I said the other day.... invest in large scale geothermal for the same money), it still doing something and not "obstructing" like Simon said. You do realise that, according to one of the backers of this government scheme, Mike Casey from Rewiring Aotearoa, nearly up to 80% of NZ households would need solar panels just to generate 40% of the countries power needs.

Second, it doesn't exist right now.
And neither does the Greens grant.... but no doubt you'd support that over the Ratepayers Assistance Scheme.
Third, once again it's pushing the impact of man made climate change, which successive governments have done nothing about, and this one has tripled down on regressing back to more fossil fuels and tearing down any kind of moves towards getting away from them, again hardly a revolutionary step. In fact it probably guarantees no take up
Really.... 2000 and 28% of NZ's power was made through fossil fuels. 2025 and 15% of NZ's power was made through fossil fuels. But you say nothing has been done by successive governments. Try again.

Plus, what a friggen hypocritical statement coming from someone who would rather damage the environment with 10 years of coal being used to generate power while the Lake Battery is built than 30 years of LNG production to produce the same emissions.

A progressive government would be subsidising, enforcing all new builds to adopt, building wind, more hydrothermal and investing more without stripping out huge dividends out of the big four generators.
Wrong again.... the government just announced a $200 million capital injection into Genesis energy... the majority of which is going to fund the 136MWp Edgecumbe solar farm and the 271MWp Rangiriri solar farm. And by the way, forget the rhetoric you hear.... the government doesn't strip the generators of dividends... they reinvest profits into new generation and then set a dividend which all their shareholders pay.

From 2010, when the geothermal asset value was $1.4 billion, they have added another $1.4 billion in thermal generation assets up to 2023. Wind assets went from have gone from under $500 mil to $1.0 billion by 2023.

In fact, the four genretailers invested $4.5 billion into new renewable power generation from 2012 to 2023. Over the same period, they paid out $10 billion in dividents.

The much-maligned fast track system now means that there are over 280 commercial renewable projects estimated to produce 44.3GW are planned or already underway, with a heavy focus on solar and geothermal.

But, if you are to be believed, this hasn't and isn't happening. You may not like the speed things are happening.... but it is happening under both this government and previous governments!!!
 
Did this happen through a phone call?

When I was living in the uk I had four cards at different times get cloned, then the old 1p transaction at 2am. I'd only find out when I go to use the card.

One time I can pin directly to a restaurant in Croatia, that was the only transaction I made so the card would have been cloned there.
No, most likely a security breach with a company we'd purchased something from and our credit card details were taken... that started the process.
 
No. Still, the government, whether you have decided is the right or wrong way to do it (and I think it's the wrong way as I said the other day.... invest in large scale geothermal for the same money), it still doing something and not "obstructing" like Simon said. You do realise that, according to one of the backers of this government scheme, Mike Casey from Rewiring Aotearoa, nearly up to 80% of NZ households would need solar panels just to generate 40% of the countries power needs.


And neither does the Greens grant.... but no doubt you'd support that over the Ratepayers Assistance Scheme.

Really.... 2000 and 28% of NZ's power was made through fossil fuels. 2025 and 15% of NZ's power was made through fossil fuels. But you say nothing has been done by successive governments. Try again.

Plus, what a friggen hypocritical statement coming from someone who would rather damage the environment with 10 years of coal being used to generate power while the Lake Battery is built than 30 years of LNG production to produce the same emissions.


Wrong again.... the government just announced a $200 million capital injection into Genesis energy... the majority of which is going to fund the 136MWp Edgecumbe solar farm and the 271MWp Rangiriri solar farm. And by the way, forget the rhetoric you hear.... the government doesn't strip the generators of dividends... they reinvest profits into new generation and then set a dividend which all their shareholders pay.

From 2010, when the geothermal asset value was $1.4 billion, they have added another $1.4 billion in thermal generation assets up to 2023. Wind assets went from have gone from under $500 mil to $1.0 billion by 2023.

In fact, the four genretailers invested $4.5 billion into new renewable power generation from 2012 to 2023. Over the same period, they paid out $10 billion in dividents.

The much-maligned fast track system now means that there are over 280 commercial renewable projects estimated to produce 44.3GW are planned or already underway, with a heavy focus on solar and geothermal.

But, if you are to be believed, this hasn't and isn't happening. You may not like the speed things are happening.... but it is happening under both this government and previous governments!!!
I only put the last bit through chatgpt :)

Short answer: the statement mixes some true facts with misleading framing and a few claims that are hard to support. I’ll go through the key parts one by one.

1. β€œThe government just announced a $200m capital injection into Genesis Energy”​

Mostly correct, but the context matters.
  • In 2026, the NZ government agreed to buy about $198 million of new shares in Genesis Energy as part of a $400m equity raise.
  • The reason: to maintain its 51% ownership when the company issued new shares.
So the government didn’t simply β€œgive” Genesis $200m; it participated in a capital raise as a shareholder. If it didn’t, its stake would have been diluted.
The funding is expected to help accelerate investment in renewables and firming capacity (like batteries).

2. β€œMost of the money is going to Edgecumbe and Rangiriri solar farms”​

Partly true but overstated.
Two real projects exist:
  • Edgecumbe Solar Farm – 136 MWp, about $236 m project cost.
  • Rangiriri Solar Farm – 271 MWp, about $487 m project cost.
However:
  • The capital raise funds multiple investments (solar, batteries, debt reduction, etc.), not just those two projects.
  • The projects are primarily funded from Genesis’s balance sheet and financing, not directly from a specific government cheque.
So saying the $200m is β€œmostly going to those farms” is simplified or speculative.

3. β€œThe government doesn’t strip dividends; they reinvest profits and then pay dividends”​

This is misleading.
New Zealand’s major gentailersβ€”
  • Genesis Energy
  • Meridian Energy
  • Mercury NZ
  • Contact Energy
operate like normal listed companies:
  1. The company decides capital spending and investment plans.
  2. The board sets a dividend policy.
  3. Shareholders receive dividends, including the government.
So:
  • The government does receive large dividend payments from these companies.
  • But it does not directly decide operational spendingβ€”that’s done by company boards.
The reality is both happen simultaneously:
  • billions paid in dividends
  • billions invested in generation.

4. β€œ$4.5 b invested in renewables from 2012–2023 vs $10 b dividends”​

This type of comparison circulates often in NZ energy debates, and the broad numbers are plausible, but the argument is misleading without context.
Why:
  1. Dividends go to all shareholders, not just the government.
    • For partially privatised companies, the government owns 51%, not 100%.
  2. Investment isn’t limited to renewables.
    Companies also spend money on:
    • hydro upgrades
    • transmission connections
    • geothermal drilling
    • gas/thermal backup
    • retail operations.
  3. Power companies borrow heavily to build plants.
    Investment isn’t funded only from retained profits.
So comparing dividends vs renewable capex isn’t a meaningful measure of whether companies are investing enough.

5. β€œ280 renewable projects producing 44.3 GW planned”​

This is likely referring to projects in the fast-track consent pipeline, but the number is very misleading.
For context:
  • New Zealand’s entire electricity system peak demand is about 7–8 GW.
  • So 44 GW of projects would be several times the country’s total demand.
What that number usually means:
  • it includes all proposed projects, not ones that will definitely be built
  • many are early-stage proposals competing for the same grid capacity
  • historically most never proceed.
So it reflects developer interest, not realistic build-out.

Bottom line​

The statement contains real facts but used rhetorically.
ClaimAccuracy
Government invested ~$200m in Genesisβœ” Mostly true
Edgecumbe & Rangiriri solar projectsβœ” Real projects
Government doesn’t take dividends❌ Misleading
$4.5b renewables vs $10b dividends⚠ True-ish numbers but misleading comparison
44 GW renewable pipeline⚠ Technically possible but unrealistic build outcome

βœ… The key takeaway:
NZ gentailers do invest billions in renewables, but they also pay large dividends to shareholders, including the government. The system is designed to do both at the same time.
 
I only put the last bit through chatgpt :)

Short answer: the statement mixes some true facts with misleading framing and a few claims that are hard to support. I’ll go through the key parts one by one.

1. β€œThe government just announced a $200m capital injection into Genesis Energy”​

Mostly correct, but the context matters.
  • In 2026, the NZ government agreed to buy about $198 million of new shares in Genesis Energy as part of a $400m equity raise.
  • The reason: to maintain its 51% ownership when the company issued new shares.
So the government didn’t simply β€œgive” Genesis $200m; it participated in a capital raise as a shareholder. If it didn’t, its stake would have been diluted.
The funding is expected to help accelerate investment in renewables and firming capacity (like batteries).

2. β€œMost of the money is going to Edgecumbe and Rangiriri solar farms”​

Partly true but overstated.
Two real projects exist:
  • Edgecumbe Solar Farm – 136 MWp, about $236 m project cost.
  • Rangiriri Solar Farm – 271 MWp, about $487 m project cost.
However:
  • The capital raise funds multiple investments (solar, batteries, debt reduction, etc.), not just those two projects.
  • The projects are primarily funded from Genesis’s balance sheet and financing, not directly from a specific government cheque.
So saying the $200m is β€œmostly going to those farms” is simplified or speculative.

3. β€œThe government doesn’t strip dividends; they reinvest profits and then pay dividends”​

This is misleading.
New Zealand’s major gentailersβ€”
  • Genesis Energy
  • Meridian Energy
  • Mercury NZ
  • Contact Energy
operate like normal listed companies:
  1. The company decides capital spending and investment plans.
  2. The board sets a dividend policy.
  3. Shareholders receive dividends, including the government.
So:
  • The government does receive large dividend payments from these companies.
  • But it does not directly decide operational spendingβ€”that’s done by company boards.
The reality is both happen simultaneously:
  • billions paid in dividends
  • billions invested in generation.

4. β€œ$4.5 b invested in renewables from 2012–2023 vs $10 b dividends”​

This type of comparison circulates often in NZ energy debates, and the broad numbers are plausible, but the argument is misleading without context.
Why:
  1. Dividends go to all shareholders, not just the government.
    • For partially privatised companies, the government owns 51%, not 100%.
  2. Investment isn’t limited to renewables.
    Companies also spend money on:
    • hydro upgrades
    • transmission connections
    • geothermal drilling
    • gas/thermal backup
    • retail operations.
  3. Power companies borrow heavily to build plants.
    Investment isn’t funded only from retained profits.
So comparing dividends vs renewable capex isn’t a meaningful measure of whether companies are investing enough.

5. β€œ280 renewable projects producing 44.3 GW planned”​

This is likely referring to projects in the fast-track consent pipeline, but the number is very misleading.
For context:
  • New Zealand’s entire electricity system peak demand is about 7–8 GW.
  • So 44 GW of projects would be several times the country’s total demand.
What that number usually means:
  • it includes all proposed projects, not ones that will definitely be built
  • many are early-stage proposals competing for the same grid capacity
  • historically most never proceed.
So it reflects developer interest, not realistic build-out.

Bottom line​

The statement contains real facts but used rhetorically.
ClaimAccuracy
Government invested ~$200m in Genesisβœ” Mostly true
Edgecumbe & Rangiriri solar projectsβœ” Real projects
Government doesn’t take dividends❌ Misleading
$4.5b renewables vs $10b dividends⚠ True-ish numbers but misleading comparison
44 GW renewable pipeline⚠ Technically possible but unrealistic build outcome

βœ… The key takeaway:
NZ gentailers do invest billions in renewables, but they also pay large dividends to shareholders, including the government. The system is designed to do both at the same time.
The first backs up my statement that the government and the genretailers are investing in renewables.... a capital injection into a genretailer is still putting money into renewables... which you said they weren't because they were "tearing down any kind of moves towards getting away from them"

1773167767662.webp

So much crap from CRAP GTP.... the government can't strip a company through dividends... they don't set the dividends. Just in the same way I don't strip money from Mercury for the small holding I have in the company... I just receive the payout.

More crap - our peak usage is 7-8 GWH... that's at a moment in time... the 44.4 GWH is the power usage those pipeline projects will produce in a year... not in one moment in time. Our current usage is around 40,000 GWH for a 12 month period. 7-8GWH wouldn’t even supply half the annual power needs to Picton.... let alone the whole country.

This is an absolute crap statement....
  • New Zealand’s entire electricity system peak demand is about 7–8 GW.
  • So 44 GW of projects would be several times the country’s total demand.

Oh, well better luck next time.
 
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When companies give loans to shareholders, of course it should be taxed in just the same way dividends or income is taxed. Massive loophole which needs to be closed!!!, NZ First not liking it because it may effect too many of their donors and ACT not liking it because they think it’s β€œdouble taxation”.

When a company β€œloans” money to a shareholder, it’s not taxed as they treat that loan as an expense reducing their tax bill. When/if it’s repaid, the company only pay tax on the interest (if any) they receive…. yet they put the whole loaned amount as a deduction.

For example, a business makes a $1,000,000 net profit for the year. The sole director who is also the sole shareholder then decides the business should β€œloan” $500,000 at 1% to himself. That means the companies taxable income has just decreased to $500,000.

He uses the $500,000 as a 50% deposit for a $1 million investment property. The rent covers the mortgage, rates and other expenses. In 15 years, the investment property has doubled in value and he sells it, repaying the $250,000 on the mortgage to the bank and the $500,000 (plus $80,000 compounded interest) to the company. He walks away with just under $1.2 mil.

Even though the company used the whole $500,000 as a tax deduction, the repayment of the $500,000 isn’t counted as income and it only has to pay tax on the $80,000 compounded interest.

In other words, there is no double taxation…. just the shareholder getting untaxed income and the business writing off an expense which isn’t taxed when repaid.

 
When companies give loans to shareholders, of course it should be taxed in just the same way dividends or income is taxed. Massive loophole which needs to be closed!!!, NZ First not liking it because it may effect too many of their donors and ACT not liking it because they think it’s β€œdouble taxation”.

When a company β€œloans” money to a shareholder, it’s not taxed as they treat that loan as an expense reducing their tax bill. When/if it’s repaid, the company only pay tax on the interest (if any) they receive…. yet they put the whole loaned amount as a deduction.

For example, a business makes a $1,000,000 net profit for the year. The sole director who is also the sole shareholder then decides the business should β€œloan” $500,000 at 1% to himself. That means the companies taxable income has just decreased to $500,000.

He uses the $500,000 as a 50% deposit for a $1 million investment property. The rent covers the mortgage, rates and other expenses. In 15 years, the investment property has doubled in value and he sells it, repaying the $250,000 on the mortgage to the bank and the $500,000 (plus $80,000 compounded interest) to the company. He walks away with just under $1.2 mil.

Even though the company used the whole $500,000 as a tax deduction, the repayment of the $500,000 isn’t counted as income and it only has to pay tax on the $80,000 compounded interest.

In other words, there is no double taxation…. just the shareholder getting untaxed income and the business writing off an expense which isn’t taxed when repaid.

Can’t see a problem myself.

Poor business owner will probably die 10 years younger from the extra stress supporting bludgers playing PlayStation all day πŸ˜‰
 
Can’t see a problem myself.

Poor business owner will probably die 10 years younger from the extra stress supporting bludgers playing PlayStation all day πŸ˜‰
I suspect a lot of Waikato farmers who have beach houses have used company loans like this to purchase them. Pay yourself $25,000 in wages and take out a "loan" for the rest of the money year's "income". No due diligence or credit check necessary when you're lending to yourself.
 
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