Watch live: Te Pāti Māori reveals fate of MPs amid turmoil

Source: Radio New Zealand

The press conference will be livestreamed from about 10am at the top of this page. This is a breaking story and will be updated.

Te Pāti Māori is set to reveal an update on the fate of two MPs who have been critical of the party leadership.

The affiliation of the MPs Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi – whose son Eru has also been scathing of party president John Tamihere – to the party has been in question as the stoush has escalated.

Co-leader Rawiri Waititi confirmed last Tuesday the party was considering explusion.

Te Pāti Māori MPs Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. RNZ

Tamihere last week urged them to quit after the National Council voted to suspend Kapa-Kingi over office overspending accusations.

That followed a vote of no confidence in Tamihere from Ferris’ Te Tai Tonga electorate branch, which also called for his immediate resignation.

Tamihere accused them of plotting a coup against the co-leaders and said their behaviour was based on “greed, avarice and entitlement”.

Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The MPs have not been speaking to media but in a statement Kapa-Kingi said she was not going anywhere, and Tamihere did not speak for Te Tai Tokerau.

The council has been examining the party constitution to come to a decision on how it would handle the MPs, who met with the co-leaders last week.

More to come…

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Vital Healthcare takes management in-house

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

Vital Healthcare’s management is going in-house, with a $220 million capital raising to fund the change and position the property trust for near-term development projects.

The parties had reached a conditional agreement to buy out the external managers, Northwest, which had a long-term agreement to manage the trust’s hospitals and medical facilities property portfolio.

“Internalisation marks an important milestone for Vital, positioning the business to deliver stronger and more sustainable returns for Unit Holders,” Vital chair Graham Stuart said.

“By bringing management in-house under a strengthened governance framework, Vital will be well-positioned to unlock future growth, enhance transparency and accountability, and fully align management and investor interests.

“This transaction creates a scalable platform as Vital continues to grow its leadership in healthcare real estate.”

The capital will be raised by way of a $190m underwritten placement of units and a $30m unit purchase plan at a fixed price of $1.95 a unit.

The price per unit represented a 9.5 percent discount to the dividend-adjusted unit closing price of $2.156 on 7 November 2025.

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Internal Affairs tells gambling website 20Bet to stop targeting New Zealanders

Source: Radio New Zealand

The offshore gambling website has been targeting New Zealanders with paid ads promoting online pokies and sports betting. 123rf

The Department of Internal Affairs has given notice to gambling website 20Bet to stop advertising in New Zealand.

The offshore gambling website is registered in Cyprus but has been targeting New Zealanders with paid ads on YouTube promoting online pokies and sports betting.

Promoting overseas gambling is prohibited under the Gambling Act, and sports and racing betting is banned outright unless controlled by TAB.

“The Department is aware of recent advertising by 20Bet on YouTube,” DIA’s director of gambling Vicki Scott told RNZ.

“We have instructed 20Bet to cease these activities. We will continue to monitor the situation and take further action if necessary.”

Copy on 20Bet’s website targets New Zealanders directly and claims that “taking risks is something that Kiwis like doing.”

RNZ has approached 20Bet for comment.

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National to mull asset sales as part of next election, Christopher Luxon says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon says the government will “think about” possible sales of government assets.

While Luxon has ruled out an asset sales this term, he told Morning Report on Monday that governments needed to be able to “recycle” assets.

He said he is up for a conversation on whether there should be sales with the money redeployed to creating new ones.

His comments come after he was questioned about a Treasury Report last week which raised whether the government should sell state assets that are under-performing or no longer needed.

Treasury said there needed to be better asset management, that some assets were under-performing or poorly maintained.

“A formal capital recycling programme may be useful where government reallocates or reinvests capital from existing assets or infrastructure projects into new opportunities or projects to meet policy objectives,” the report said.

Luxon said New Zealand did need need a “more mature conversation” about asset sales.

“Owning everything we own forever is not the right thing to do, I suspect.”

He said governments have huge money tied up in assets and governments needed to refresh or recycle their holdings.

“To be able to sell an asst in order to buy or create a new asset is a good thing. Governments own a lot of stuff – there’s obviously some we must own. But over time you want to cycle assets in and out of a portfolio and that is a good conversation to have.”

Luxon said he suspects National would go into the election with policies in this space.

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Sam Neill ‘honoured’ to receive Screen Legend Award

Source: Radio New Zealand

The award recognises the 78-year-old’s five-decade career, from his breakthrough in Sleeping Dogs and international acclaim in Jane Campion’s Academy Award-winning The Piano and Jurassic Park and its sequels.

“I am very pleased and proud to be accepting this award amongst my friends and peers,” Sir Sam said.

“I just worked it out that it’s been 53 years in film – that does indeed sound like a lifetime! Thanks to all concerned. Very honoured.”

Fellow award recipient Kightley said Sir Sam was one of those people whose existence helped make others around them and the world a better place.

“He’s done so much for New Zealand and especially the screen industry here. He’s an inspiration to many. I’m stoked to be alive at the same time as him.”

He has also received Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for his performance in the NBC miniseries Merlin (1998) and won a British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Award for Reilly: Ace of Spies (1983).

Beyond acting, Sir Sam is the founder and proprietor of Two Paddocks, a boutique vineyard and winery located in Central Otago.

The winners of this year’s New Zealand Screen Awards will be announced at a ceremony hosted by comedian Pax Assadi, on 21 November at the Viaduct Events Centre, Auckland.

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Employers forking out more for employees in ‘talent-short’ market

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied/ Kenny Eliason

Top shelf employees are expected to cost employers much more to retain and recruit as the economy recovers.

Recruitment consultancy firm Robert Walters said the brain drain to Australia was already sending ripples of concern, particularly in Wellington, which saw its workforce gutted after the last change of government.

Wellington-based Robert Walters associate director Tim Wright said there was a looming talent shortage, as many senior level executives had already relocated to Australia for better pay and conditions.

He said winning them back would not be cheap.

The strong labour market conditions seen in 2022 and 2023 favoured those looking for work, but in the past couple years, it was the other way around.

“And so salaries were going up and up and up. And then that bubble, if you want, almost burst,” he said.

“So as a result, we’re really feeling it, and in Wellington, even more so than in Auckland.”

Latest data for the year ended in March indicates 47,734 migrants left New Zealand for Australia, with New Zealand citizens accounting for 86 percent of the exodus.

“What happens is you lose a lot of that senior level IP (intellectual property), and people below that aren’t capable of taking on what’s left.

“So you find yourself in a talent-short market again, and then organisations starting to fork out more than what they should ideally need to.”

Wright said it would take more than money to attract the best and brightest back to New Zealand, with many competing markets offering much better conditions, such as parental leave packages.

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Prime Minister Christopher Luxon ‘deeply supportive’ of social media ban for under 16s

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. Nick Monro

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is “deeply supportive” of protecting young people by restricting social media use under 16 and will introduce a bill before next year’s election to enable it.

Speaking to Morning Report, the National Party leader said society imposes restrictions on teens in the physical world and should do it in the online space too to keep them safe.

Earlier this year, National MP Catherine Wedd put forward a member’s bill to restrict social media access for under 16s.

The government then picked up the work and said it will introduce a bill raising the age limit for New Zealanders accessing social media to 16.

He told Morning Report’s Ingrid Hipkiss that the Australian model was “of interest” to the government.

From next month, the Australian government can impose fines on social media companies if they fail to prevent people under 16 having accounts on their platforms.

Luxon said the government is looking at the model and other bans with a view to introducing legislation before next year’s election – “or certainly within this term”.

He said Education Minister Erica Stanford is leading the investigation.

Last week, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he was confident the social media age limit would be a success when it comes into force on 10 December, and he believed people would voluntarily comply over time.

Critics had worried that Australian parents would be left to enforce or explain a ban to their children on their own, but the Australian government has said it would put resources into schools and its eSafety Commission for the change.

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Part of Canterbury’s State Highway 73 blocked by serious crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

State Highway 73 in Canterbury is blocked due to a serious crash.

Emergency services were called to the crash involving a ute and a truck between Kirwee and Darfield about 8am on Monday.

Police said there appears to be serious injuries.

The serious crash unit has been advised and the road is expected to be closed for some time.

Motorists are asked to avoid the area or expect delays.

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Praise as government launches plan to combat methamphetamine

Source: Radio New Zealand

Methamphetamine use had increased significantly and meth seized in New Zealand and offshore had increased by 266 percent over the past five years. Supplied / Customs

There’s widespread support for the government’s new action plan to combat methamphetamine use, with the Drug Foundation commending its “health focused interventions”.

A mental wellness provider from northland is also welcoming the news, saying it’s a “fantastic start,” and the Chair of the Ministerial Advisory Group on Transnational and Organised Crime saying it was positive that multiple ministers were involved in order to address the issue in its “totality”.

On Sunday, the government announced what Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith called a “comprehensive action plan to combat methamphetamine harm in New Zealand.”

It’s the result of the Prime Minister’s ‘meth sprint team’ made up of the Ministers for Justice, Police, Customs, Courts and Mental Health, who were tasked with tackling the issue.

That came after a drastic rise in consumption of methamphetamine last year. RNZ investigated what community providers needed in response, which was largely more funding for grassroots solutions.

Paul Goldsmith said yesterday methamphetamine was something “we’ve been fighting for 20 years, and it’s been getting worse in the last little while.”

“We know that meth is a scourge on society.”

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith said the government’s plan would help combat an increase in methamphetamine harm in New Zealand. RNZ / Mark Papalii

He pointed to parts of New Zealand who had been particularly affected, like Northland, where “communities have been blighted by meth.”

“Those communities are desperate for us to fight back, and that’s why we’re taking these extra steps to turn up the dial of our response.”

The response included a nationwide media campaign that will launch in the next few months, paid for by the proceeds of crime fund, that will raise awareness about the issue and the drugs harm.

An extra $30m over four years from the Mental Health and Addiction budget will go to front line services, increasing the services available to the hardest-hit communities.

Police will be able to intercept communications and search for electronically stored evidence with new enforcement powers, and an additional anti-money laundering unit will be set up.

It will also see more focus on disrupting supply chains in the Pacific Ocean, with Customs, the GCSB and the Defence Force conducting a series of maritime operations. There would also be consultation on strengthening border security.

Customs Minister Casey Costello said there was “a lot of risk” through South East Asia and South America, “but we are getting intercepts from all over the place.”

“We just had an arrest last weekend at the airport, 30 kilos of meth from citizens from the US trying to bring methamphetamine into the country.

“So it is coming at us from everywhere and we just need to be tighter across all of it.”

RNZ spoke to providers in Northland earlier this year about the spike in consumption.

Rākau Ora managing director Vanessa Kite told RNZ following the announcement she “absolutely” welcomed it.

“I don’t think we’ll ever have enough bloody money, to be honest. But right now it’s a fantastic start.”

She said the need was “huge” in Te Tai Tokerau, and it was “growing in a different way”, with younger people affected and more complex cases presenting.

What was required to tackle it was “long-term” and “sustained” investment, rather than the short term boosts they’d been getting, she said.

Kite welcomed the focus on meth as a social health issue, rather than an enforcement one.

“Prevention is everything,” she said. “We really need to be putting a lot of money into prevention, but also, education, support and connections.”

She suggested what was needed was more detox beds, and residential rehab options. She also wanted to see more focus on lived experience community providers.

“We’re often seen as the first port of call and the priority in meth help, and we’re paid the worst. In fact, many are doing voluntary work.”

Kite said at a community and grassroots level, she believed they had the solutions, “we just need the support to scale them up.”

The Executive Director at the New Zealand Drug Foundation Sarah Helm said she was “particularly pleased” with the health focused interventions.

“It’s good to see some emphasis on health approaches and additional investment that’s being made, because we know we can’t arrest our way out of the issue.”

What’s needed, Helm said, was treatment and assistance both earlier on in somebody’s journey, but also closer and more accessible to their lives.

She said it wasn’t about waiting until somebody’s experiencing the worst harms before they are offered help.

In order for the nationwide campaign to be effective, it would need to focus on destigmatisation, and promote the option of seeking help she said.

“Those communities who already experience the worst methamphetamine harms already know how negative the impact can be.

“So really grounding that campaign in what they’re experiencing and helping them to get information and support quickly will make that as effective as it possibly can be.”

Chair of the Ministerial Advisory Group on Transnational and Organised Crime Steve Symon told RNZ many of the planned actions were consistent with the recommendations made in the MAG’s reports.

Overall, he said the announcement is great, provided it is part of the solution to organised crime, not the whole solution.

“Methamphetamine is certainly an important issue, but it’s a subset of the bigger organized crime issue.”

The focus on health was also welcomed, because “as we’ve said in the reports, we don’t think locking people up is necessarily the solution,” said Symon. The government should be tough on those committing this crime and addressing that, but it wasn’t the only way to deal with it.

Looking at cutting off the supply coming into the country was important too, as well as “working on our customer base”, he said, “working on how many New Zealanders are willing to consume these drugs.”

The coalition government parties had campaigned on being “tough on organised crime” he said, and it was about understanding “what tough means.”

“It’s not just building more prisons and locking more people up.

“It’s certainly locking those up who need to be locked up because of the crimes that they’ve committed, but it’s also looking the broader social problem of how our country has been willing to consume twice as much methamphetamine as we did last year.”

Symon suggested being tough on crime could be possible by removing the customer base.

Ultimately though, what was missing was the coordination to pull it all together, “how to be accountable” he said, which was why the MAG had recommended a single minister in charge of responding to organised crime.

But he thought it was possible multiple ministers had come together to look at the issue of meth.

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Papamoa residents call chip seal resurfacing ‘road vandalism’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Papamoa Residents and Ratepayers Association chair Philip Brown says residents living in a number of Papamoa roads do not think they need to be resealed at all. Supplied

“Bloody minded road vandalism.” That’s how many residents in Papamoa have reacted to news their previously asphalted roads are going to be resurfaced in chip seal.

Residents said they would rather their streets had no resealing work and were left as they were.

However, Tauranga City Council said roads were only scheduled for resealing if they were showing early signs of surface deterioration and leaving a road to deteriorate further would result in higher costs.

In October RNZ reported on the surprise many residents had when their roads were resealed with a different surface and a general public preference for asphalt.

Papamoa Residents and Ratepayers Association chair Philip Brown said residents of Santa Monica Drive, Montego Drive, Santa Barbara Drive, Checketts Place, Sovereign Drive and The Gardens Drive were not consulted by the council before discovering their roads were to be resealed this summer. All the roads were going from asphalt to chip seal.

He said the residents did not think there was a need for the resealing to happen at all.

“There is nothing wrong with the roads as they are now,” he said. “They look good, they are quiet, they are just nice stable roads, there are no engineering problems with them, council has never produced an engineering document saying that the roads are having a problem and they are just that well-built .”

Brown said the council should save money and just leave the roads alone.

“We cannot understand why they want to do the chip sealing.”

Tauranga City Council general manager of operations and infrastructure Reneke van Soest said each road was individually inspected before going on the maintenance schedule.

Van Soest said that depending on the condition of each individual site it might be possible to delay treatment for one or two years, but the Papamoa sites that had been selected for resealing were showing early signs of failure.

“If we do not address that deterioration, we risk significant damage to the structural layers beneath the road surface, which would result in greater repair costs and inconvenience for everyone,” she said.

Council said the most cost-effective way of maintaining a road was to intervene before potholes, cracking and other quality issues occur.

“So that we can prevent damage to the underlying road layers. [Road] repairs or rehabilitation are much more expensive maintenance processes, which can be managed by timely resurfacing to waterproof the road foundations,” van Soest said.

One of the issues was that Tauranga had many roads in residential areas that were surfaced in asphalt by subdivision developers. Developers likely know that people prefer asphalt which would be a motivation for using it.

“Those roads are progressively reaching the end of their serviceable surface life and maintenance is becoming a priority,” van Soest said.

The New Zealand Transport Agency funds 51 percent of local roads but for NZTA to co-fund resurfacing in asphalt, councils must show NZTA that asphalt was worth the investment as it was five times more expensive. This case was often unable to be made for suburban streets and so council would have to fund 100 percent of the road renewal if it went with asphalt.

“Using the example of Santa Monica Drive, the cost difference between chip seal and asphalt is almost $400,000.

“If that additional cost is divided by the number of households served by the road, resurfacing with asphalt would require each household to contribute approximately $3000 to make up the funding shortfall,” van Soest said.

The Papamoa Residents and Ratepayers Association had started a survey online of residents and Brown showed some of the feedback to RNZ. It was overwhelmingly against the resealing work.

One resident who had lived on the street for 20 years said they had already written to the council regarding the matter.

“There is nothing wrong with the road, there are far more urgent road resurfacing works that need doing!”

Another questioned how it would affect their children.

“My kids enjoy riding their scooters on our street and have recently purchased a skateboard too. If the street is covered with chipseal then they will lose this area to play outside.”

“I feel that the footpaths need more urgent attention than the road surface,” said one resident.

Brown said asphalt lasted longer so the cost may even out over time. He thought it would last 30-plus years.

NZTA told RNZ the longevity of asphalt was dependent on a range of factors, for example heavy trucks and electric buses would wear the surface much faster than a light vehicle. However, generally they would expect it to it last for approximately 12 years.

Brown said the association had reached out to council to ask them to hold a community meeting next week to work through the issues.

“Continuing on regardless would show a lack of care for the community.”

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