I don't know about you guys, but I've actually been enjoying the last 5 weeks of peace from politicking since the election
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The thread centers on New Zealand's upcoming election, primarily debating the economic management and policy differences between the center-left Labour government and center-right National/ACT opposition. Key criticisms target Labour's fiscal stewardship, citing ballooning government expenditure #7#272, housing unaffordability, and unfulfilled promises like KiwiBuild and dental care expansion #16#12. A user #7 highlighted Labour's annual 9% spending growth versus 1.5% under previous governments, arguing this fueled inflation. National's tax-cut policy faced scrutiny over funding gaps and legality, with user #215 questioning Luxon's reliance on "trust me" assurances.
Leadership competence emerged as a critical theme, particularly in later posts. Luxon drew heavy criticism after a contentious interview where he struggled to defend policy details #194#199#211, while Willis faced backlash for her economic credentials. Hipkins garnered fleeting praise for articulation but was ultimately seen as representing poor governmental outcomes #45#119. A trusted user #308 presented expert economic analysis contradicting Treasury optimism. Infrastructure issues—like Wellington's water crisis and the dental school staffing shortage—were cited as examples of systemic mismanagement #235#12. Notable policy debates included road-user charges for EVs #220, immigration impacts on rents #299, and coalition scenarios involving NZ First #182#258. Early fringe discussions on candidates' rugby allegiances gave way to substantive policy critiques, culminating in grim Treasury forecasts discussed in posts #271#304#308. User #168 also revealed concerns about Labour rushing regulatory changes to entrench policies pre-election.
Economic Policies, Housing Crisis, Leadership Competence
Really boringI don't know about you guys, but I've actually been enjoying the last 5 weeks of peace from politicking since the election
No KiwiBuild mobReally boring
No NRL.
Nothing happening on the political scene.
We're out of the cricket
And most importantly no Bruce
That's right Mike.No KiwiBuild mob![]()
The most exciting thing about this week is the idiot Bishop falling off his e scooter on the way to the negotiations.No KiwiBuild mob![]()
Missed the news tonight.So glad the cry babies have screwed pff.
Now they can look in their own backyard![]()
Lets Limbo some more.Missed the news tonight.
Any updates on how the negotiations are progressing.
I heard a political scientist on the radio this last week and he said that publicly, parties on the left of politics say that people should be given the democratic opportunity to "participate in the election process" right up to the last moment. Privately, they don't want it changed as it's historically been the university cities like Wellington and Dunedin where students enroll at the last minute and in South and West Auckland.... which are all fill of seats which generally vote left. Getting rid of Election Day registrations would effect the Greens and Labour party votes more than centre right party votes.I get trying to get as many people as possible to vote.
Election day registration seems to be a huge problem with the results being delayed.
Sorry if you haven't bothered to register until Election day bad luck.
Quite ironic that our Uni students are among last to make up their minds on voting positions when most of our pollies are ex uni studentsI heard a political scientist on the radio this last week and he said that publicly, parties on the left of politics say that people should be given the democratic opportunity to "participate in the election process" right up to the last moment. Privately, they don't want it changed as it's historically been the university cities like Wellington and Dunedin where students enroll at the last minute and in South and West Auckland.... which are all fill of seats which generally vote left. Getting rid of Election Day registrations would effect the Greens and Labour party votes more than centre right party votes.
As Willie Jackson said democracy has changed!I heard a political scientist on the radio this last week and he said that publicly, parties on the left of politics say that people should be given the democratic opportunity to "participate in the election process" right up to the last moment. Privately, they don't want it changed as it's historically been the university cities like Wellington and Dunedin where students enroll at the last minute and in South and West Auckland.... which are all fill of seats which generally vote left. Getting rid of Election Day registrations would affect the Greens and Labour party votes more than centre right party votes.
Hipkins was right about these 2 guys running rings around LuxonWonder which of the 3 is getting bent over the negotiating table this time..
The Wylie old fox, I ran an airline or maybe the Rogernomics throwback.
Oh well could be back to the polls people....
Seems like Luxons opinion is different to the others reading the news.
"Let's take our country back. From me!" -WinnieWe have likely had 3 party coalitions in the past. The usual roadblock is Winston.
If he is this hard to negotiate with when there is only one major party imagine what went on behind the scenes when he had both major parties negotiating with him. More what he would have been willing to ask for or either party willing to give him.
I like MMP in how you can vote for a local MP who may be different to the overall party you'd prefer. Compared to FPP which I recall was vote for you MP which helped the party overall. I might be wrong on that as it was a long time ago and I may have only voted once under that system.
I'm interested to see how things work once Winston is out of the picture and if things work any easier. He could have set a bad example as a lot of the minor parties have some unrealistic bottom lines which wouldn't work in negotiating anywhere else if one side has 30-40% and you have 5%. But politics is it's own beast.