OPINION
This is a transcript of Audrey Young’s politics newsletter. To sign up for this newsletter or Friday’s subscriber-only Premium Politics Briefing, click here, choose your preferences and save. For a step-by-step guide, click here.
Welcome to the Politics Briefing. The Government needs to have a Plan B when it comes to Karen Chhour’s summons to appear before the Waitangi Tribunal. If the judge rules tomorrow that the summons was lawful and that it stands, the minister cannot ignore it without being liable for a criminal conviction and a fine of up to $1000.
Of course, she would not be so daft as to ignore such a ruling because that would go against legal advice and, presumably, political advice from the Prime Minister and her Act Party leader. Ministers, after all, are required to uphold the law even if they disagree with it.
If Chhour loses and the summons stands, the most obvious thing to do would be to negotiate a way for the minister to address the tribunal through a written statement – which is what she should have done at the outset and which many ministers have done previously. Crown Law argued in the High Court that the summons was unlawful because it breached comity – the principle of mutual respect and restraint – and that it was not necessary or relevant because the Cabinet papers and other evidence given to the tribunal answered its questions.
In my view, it was unfortunate that the Waitangi Tribunal took a high-handed tone at the beginning of its urgent inquiry into section 7AA of the Oranga Tamariki Act. And Crown Law threatened a judicial review early on in the process as well. So it turned into pistols at dawn yesterday and a judicial review in the High Court that may well affirm the powers of the tribunal to do what it did.
If Crown Law wins, and the summons is set aside, it would still be appropriate for Chhour to send her own written statement to the tribunal. To restore comity, triumphalism should be avoided. If Crown Law loses, it could also go to the Court of Appeal, and, no doubt, the tribunal’s powers will be reviewed before long as part of the overall review of the tribunal this term. Its willingness to confront the Government could result in the loss of such powers in the future.
By the way, several mentions were made in yesterday’s hearings about the criticism NZ First’s Shane Jones and Act leader David Seymour had levelled at the Waitangi Tribunal when they called it a “star chamber” and suggested it should be abolished, respectively. Crown Law concluded its case by saying that Prime Minister Christopher Luxon had “corrected” the breach of comity in describing such comments as “ill-considered”. Moments later, Newshub ran a story of Seymour standing by his comments.
Three Strikes reboot
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Meanwhile, Act Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee and Luxon announced that Cabinet had given the go-ahead to introduce a revised Three Strikes bill. The plan as outlined by McKee will be a much more reasonable law than the previous one – with the qualifying threshold changed in terms of qualifying sentences, mental health considerations and more discretion and guidelines given to judges. The infamous Fitzgerald case would not have qualified under the proposed new regime.
Quote unquote
“I can tell you she had twinkling eyes and behind them is a huge amount of intelligence. She was no-nonsense and very impressive” – Finance Minister Nicola Willis on meeting US Treasury Secretary and former Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen. (Newstalk ZB)
Micro quiz
The Solicitor-General led the Crown’s case in the High Court’s judicial review of the Waitangi Tribunal summons to Karen Chhour. Who is the Solicitor-General – and, for 10 more points, who was the previous one? (Answers below.)
Brickbat
To the Department of Internal Affairs for proposing cuts to jobs centred on detecting child exploitation, money laundering and countering violent extremism. They are kidding, surely?
Bouquet
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Goes to Auditor-General John Ryan for his practical submission on how the fast-track infrastructure bill could be more transparent and better address perceived conflicts of interests of the three ministers with extensive powers.
Latest political news and views
Three Strikes: The Government has announced it will reinstate a revised Three Strikes law.
Analysis – Three Strikes: Will the Government’s Three Strikes legislation reduce crime? Derek Cheng looks at the evidence.
Fast-track bill: Auditor-General John Ryan has expressed concerns about the Government’s fast-track consenting bill.
Opinion – fast-track bill: The fast-track consenting bill is becoming a problem for the Government, writes Claire Trevett.
Opinion – Waitangi Tribunal v Karen Chhour: Audrey Young outlines the issues and the key players.
Waitangi Tribunal v Karen Chhour: The Government and Waitangi Tribunal have clashed in the Wellington High Court.
Explainer – police pay: Adam Pearce explains how police pay arbitration works, why it’s happening now and what happens next.
Loan rules: Cabinet has agreed to remove pages of regulations under the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act.
Analysis – social investment 2.0: Derek Young looks at the Government’s plan to target society’s most vulnerable from an early age.
Public sector cuts: More than 100 roles are set to be cut from the New Zealand Customs Service and Department of Internal Affairs.
Public sector cuts: Oranga Tamariki has confirmed it is working with two consultancy agencies on its restructure and cost-saving proposal.
Budget pledge: The Government has vowed that critical services will see a funding boost in this year’s Budget.
The Front Page – Southeast Asia trip: Fran O’Sullivan assesses Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s performance on his mission to Southeast Asia.
Stay with us at nzherald.co.nz for breaking news, analysis and in-depth features. We also have extensive coverage of Anzac Day on Thursday.
Quiz answer: Una Jagose is the Solicitor-General and she replaced Michael Heron.
Audrey Young is the New Zealand Herald’s senior political correspondent. She was named Political Journalist of the Year at the Voyager Media Awards in 2023, 2020 and 2018.
For more political news and views, listen to On the Tiles, the Herald’s politics podcast.