Finley Melville Ives gold gives NZ best haul at Winter X Games

Source: Radio New Zealand

Finley Melville Ives FIS

Just two weeks out from the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, New Zealand has had its best Winter X Games ever, with Finley Melville Ives bagging another gold for the team.

Melville Ives delivered across three jaw-dropping runs to dominate the competition in the men’s ski superpipe at the X Games in Aspen on Monday (NZ time).

His performance brought the total haul by the New Zealand athletes to two gold and four silver.

Melville Ives led from the start scoring 89.33, then improving in his second run to score 93.33, then laying down a fearless run to score a 95.00.

No-one could touch the Wānaka-based athlete who impressed the judges in showcasing both amplitude and difficulty, his last run giving 6m of air in his first trick, a switch right 9. As a rookie last year, he narrowly missed the podium with a fourth-place finish.

Melville Ives won silver at the 2024 Youth Winter Olympics and in March last year was crowned the 2025 FIS Freeski Halfpipe world champion at his debut World Champs. This year he has scored two World Cup podiums, coming first in freeski halfpipe at Buttermilk and second in Calgary.

Melville Ives said conditions were tricky, but the crowd vibe was electric – “It’s been super surreal. I’m just so grateful to have put down these runs in front of all the fans,” Melville Ives said.

The 19-year-old ski star said landing the switch 14, which he’d never done before in competition, was a highlight.

Snow Sports NZ head coach high performance park and pipe Tom Willmott said it was an epic night to wrap up New Zealand’s most successful X Games.

“Fin placed fourth at last year’s X Games and was keen to get on the box this time around. Fin did not have the luxury of a victory lap with the new format, which moves the current leader to second to last in the final run.

“Fin dropped in super-fast and executed a massive switch right 9 landing at the top of the wall into a switch left double 14 into back-to-back 16s and finishing with an allyoop double 9. It was the first time he had landed this combination, and the judges rewarded him with a score of 95.00 and X Games gold.”

Luke Harrold came sixth in the men’s freeski halfpipe.

Also competing today were yesterday’s silver medallist Rocco Jamieson, who narrowly missed the podium in the Men’s Knuckle Huck, finishing in fourth.

Dane Menzies, an X Games rookie, came 11th in snowboard slopestyle.

The Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games will take place from 6-22 February 2026 across iconic Italian alpine venues.

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Over half of government retail crime advisory group resigns

Source: Radio New Zealand

Retail New Zealand Chief executive Carolyn Young. Supplied

  • Three of the five members of the Ministerial Advisory Group for Victims of Retail Crime have resigned in the past month.
  • One of the three, Retail NZ chief executive, has cited the group’s “very unpleasant environment”.
  • The group’s chairman says resignations reflect normal leadership changes
  • Justice Minister says external commitments and job changes behind exodus.
  • The group has faced criticism for its spending.

The chief executive of Retail NZ says she quit a ministerial advisory group because her relationship with its chairman became untenable.

Carolyn Young is one of three business leaders advising the government on how to combat retail crime to have walked away in the past month, leaving just two members to complete the work.

Young’s departure follows that of Foodstuffs North Island senior manager Lindsay Rowles and Michael Hill national retail manager Michael Bell, who quit late last year.

The group is led by Sunny Kaushal, who remains as chairman, with one other member remaining, Hamilton liquor retailer Ash Parmar.

Young said while Kaushal had the confidence of Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith, he was not the right person to chair the group.

In an interview with Checkpoint on Monday, she told Lisa Owen about its “unpleasant environment”.

Goldsmith made the appointments to the group in mid-2024 and they were supposed to be for two years.

Since then, the MAG has faced criticism for its spending, including on catered meetings around New Zealand and for its inner-city Auckland office space.

It has also faced questions about its value for money after it was revealed that Kaushal invoiced more than $230,000 for work in its first 12 months.

Kaushal defends the group’s work, saying it operates under its $1.8 million annual budget, which comes from the proceeds of crime fund.

Sunny Kaushal. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Ministerial advisory groups have been set up to provide expert advice to the government on issues such as aged-care funding and transnational crime.

The retail crime group was created after a sharp spike in crime in the sector. Members are appointed by the government.

‘Very unpleasant environment’

Young said her resignation was a difficult decision. It came after long conversations at the Retail NZ board level.

“We know that our members were really keen for me to stay on the group, but it really became untenable in terms of the relationship with the chair and just some of the ongoing communication that I’ve had from them and himself, really implicating my professionalism and who I am and how I work.

“I just didn’t think that was the right thing for me and a professional way to go about things.”

Young said the dairy owners sector group, previously led by Kaushal, had made a personal attack on her.

There were conversations within the MAG about that, which she described as “less than satisfactory”, as well as ongoing communication with Kaushal about engagement work by Young.

“It just felt like it was a continual battle to constantly be able to speak about what retailers are really looking for and how that plays out.

“It wasn’t wasn’t leading to getting good outcomes for retail, and that’s really the key thing that we’re after,” Young said.

“Certainly, it was a very unpleasant environment. It wasn’t a nice place to go and spend an afternoon in a meeting room, that’s for sure.”

She said the group’s effectiveness would be judged in time and, in her view, its key piece of work was about recommendations to strengthen trespass laws.

“But I’m not sure about anything else – whether it’s going to make a significant difference to retail crime and providing protections to retail workers.”

When asked about Kaushal, Young said it was important he was involved with the group.

“I’m not sure that he’s necessarily the right person as the chair, but the minister clearly has confidence in him and isn’t about to make a change – [that] is my understanding.”

On the group’s spending, Young said it was fine so long as it wasn’t out of kilter with other advisory groups.

She said the office space was significant for the group’s small number of people, and she was sure officials would make sure there was good accountability for what was spent.

Rowles and Bell were contacted for comment.

Resignations ‘reflect normal leadership movement’ – chairman

Kaushal said he was at the Indian Republic Day celebration event on Monday, so couldn’t be interviewed.

In a written response to questions from RNZ he said the changes “reflect normal leadership movement in any organisation”.

“Members hold other senior roles and when business demands increase, or people step into new appointments, they sometimes need to step back from external commitments,” he said.

“The work of the MAG continues. We have a busy year of new work ahead.

“The group remains focused on delivering practical, evidence-informed advice to improve safety for retailers and communities.”

He did not answer questions about whether, as chairman, he took any responsibility for the resignations; how the group worked together and if there was any conflict; and what work is in the pipeline for the group this year and if the resignations would affect that.

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith was also unavailable for an interview.

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith. RNZ / Nathan McKinnon

“Due to external commitments and job changes, Carolyn Young, Michael Bell and Lindsay Rowles have recently resigned from the Ministerial Advisory Group,” the minister said in a statement.

“I thank them for their work and wish them well in their next endeavours.

“The MAG has been extremely busy over the last 12 months generating detailed policy proposals, including new citizens’ arrest powers, a shoplifting infringement regime and strengthening trespass laws.

“These were crucial in developing the Crimes Amendment Bill, which passed its first reading in December. We plan to pass this into law before the election.”

Goldsmith said the government was determined to give businesses more options, and to fix the basics in law and order.

“In order to achieve different outcomes, we need to try different things,” he said.

“We are now considering next steps.”

‘Clearly over-catered’

Just before Christmas RNZ revealed criticism of the group for its spending of almost $24,000 on a series of 22 well-catered stakeholder engagement meetings around New Zealand.

Two meetings in Auckland each cost more than $4000, while another cost more than $3000.

Rock melon, goat’s cheese and prosciutto crostini, mini chicken and leek savouries, and $9 bottles of Coke were among menu items around the country.

Kaushal said the meetings were an important part of his mission to fix retail crime in New Zealand.

After a select committee hearing, where the spending at one of the Auckland meetings came under fire, Goldsmith told the NZ Herald the event was “clearly over-catered” and “probably had too many scones”.

Labour MP Duncan Webb was critical of the cost of food at the meetings.

“It just sounds like he’s spending government funding lavishly,” he said.

RNZ has also revealed the Ministry of Justice, which provides back-office support to the group, has leased for it a central Auckland office space for $100,000 a year.

The ministry said the 389-square-metre space was used for meetings, video conferences and boardroom sessions, as well as having room for up to 70-80 people for engagements and events.

In his first year as the group’s chairman Kaushal billed $238,625, at a daily rate of $920.

Chairman of the Ministerial Advisory Group on Transnational, Serious and Organised Crime, Steve Symon, received the same rate, while chief victims adviser Ruth Money is paid $850 for every day worked in the role.

Kaushal can work up to 250 days a year and invoiced for the maximum amount.

Among the staff supporting the group are three principal policy advisers.

RNZ has previously revealed that one position earns $1261 a day for a contract ending next month, another earns $1126 a day on a contract finishing in March, and the third is on $1036 a day on a contract ending in September.

RNZ has also revealed how ministry officials have provided advice to Goldsmith about concerns to do with Kaushal, however, the minister won’t release the information.

‘On a mission’

In December Kaushal said the group had delivered five “legislative-ready major policy papers” – addressing citizens’ arrests, strengthening trespass laws and allowing retailers to use pepper spray to defend themselves.

“I am on a mission. My focus is on the bigger goal, fixing retail crime in New Zealand, which is costing $2.7 billion per year,” he said.

The ministry and the minister’s office refused to release advice and recommendations from the group last year, including about trespass and “personal safety aides”, which included pepper spray.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Government to offer temporary accommodation to storm victims

Source: Radio New Zealand

Repairing storm damage on the East Coast’s SH35, at Taurangakoau Bridge, 25 January 2026. Supplied/ NZTA

The government is standing up its Temporary Accommodation Service to help people displaced by last week’s storms.

The Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment will accept registrations from people in Northland, Coromandel, Bay of Plenty, and Tairāwhiti who have been displaced or expect they may need temporary accommodation.

Associate housing minister Tama Potaka said government agencies will continue to work with councils, communities, and iwi to ensure a seamless transition for people in need to access safe, suitable accommodation, and will continue to provide wrap-around support including social services, mental health support, and financial support.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Te Araroa residents band together to get through the storm

Source: Radio New Zealand

A slip blocking a road near Te Araroa. Te Araroa Civil Defence / supplied

Four days on from a devastating storm, pockets of whānau remain cut off from one another on the East Coast.

The communities were still isolated following widespread flooding and slips, with helicopters delivering supplies.

Te Araroa – one of the worst-hit areas – has just been reconnected to Gisborne via State Highway 35 to the south.

According to local Four Square duty manager Wiremu Henare, the opening of the road – three times a day to allow convoys into the township – could not have come soon enough.

“They let a truck through yesterday, so our supplies are real good at the moment. We were running low on some stuff like bread, eggs, and flour, but we are stocked up again.”

The store has been working alongside Civil Defence to help whānau still cut off.

“We probably supply close to… 20-30 families at the moment, that’s out Horoera ways, East Cape, because they’re trapped at the moment.

“We have a team on the ground that’s got four-wheeler buggies and they go round on low tide and supply families with groceries.”

He said it was a beautiful part of the coast, but the entrance – surrounded by hills – was vulnerable to slips.

They had been pulling some big shifts in the store, he said, with one half of his team still cut off in Hicks Bay.

Emergency management controller Ben Green said while the opening of the highway to Te Araroa was a win, it was a different story further north, with the Hicks Bay area likely to remain physically isolated for another week.

He said about 30-odd houses in nearby Onepoto – evacuated due to the risk of landslide over the weekend – were yet to be given the all-clear.

Hinerupe Marae – the Civil Defence base and welfare centre in Te Araroa. Te Araroa Civil Defence / supplied

Local Civil Defence kaimahi Trudi Ngāwhare said communities on the East Coast were no strangers to extreme weather, but it still took its toll.

“You want to help, you want to get in there and help and do what you can, but all we could do was watch it happen – and that was horrible to be honest, and you really feel for our whānau.

“A few people woke up and… lost everything. And then we hear our Hicks Bay whānau’s cut off, cut off for days.”

She said the level of destruction has been surprising, leaving a nearby mountain range with “open gash wounds”.

With multiple slips in the area, there was “quite a bit of mess,” and Ngāwhare begged people not to go sight-seeing.

Since the torrential rain, Hinerupe Marae – the Civil Defence base and welfare centre in Te Araroa – had been humming, she said, hosting about 30-40 people at any one time.

Helpers at Hinerupe Marae – the Civil Defence base and welfare centre in Te Araroa. Te Araroa Civil Defence / supplied

“A lot of people to feed… even our kitchen crew has been going hard.”

Ngāwhare said the next few days would be more of the same, and responding to where the need was greatest.

“The needs change everyday depending on how long your power’s out, how long your road’s closed.

“Just keeping dynamic, I guess, and we’ll only know what we need as the day rolls on and plan for the next day.”

She said the support from people “all around the motu” had been heard and felt, and wanted to express “huge gratitude” for everyone’s kind words, karakia, and donations.

“We’ll get there.”

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What are New Zealand’s spookiest abadoned ghost towns?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Towns throughout New Zealand have fallen victim to changing economic times over the years. Now, the remnants of some of these once-thriving places are all that remain.

Many of these towns and settlements were associated with some of New Zealand’s earliest industries says Peter Janssen, author of new bookWorth A Detour: Hidden places and Unusual Attractions.

Benhar, just north of Balclutha, was once a centre of New Zealand’s pottery industry, Janssen told RNZ’s Summer Times.

The Hoffman Kiln in Benhar.

Heritage New Zealand.

“New Zealand had a lot of small potteries, and a lot of them were associated with coal because they needed the fuel. And Benhar was very much like that. It had a gold mine, and then it had a small pottery.”

The Benhar pottery, which came to be owned by the McSkimming family, didn’t specialise in fancy pottery, he says, but more practical items like potties, and toilets.

By the 1920s it was the biggest pottery company in New Zealand, says Janssen.

“It was very much a family town, and the McSkimmings ran it. If you were working there, it was compulsory to go to church on Sunday, it was part of your contract. And you had your pay docked a shilling if you were seen smoking.”

The pottery ran until the 1980s, and then a fire in the 1990s left it in ruins, he says.

“There’s still buildings left, and it’s got some beautiful old workers’ cottages, and of course, the McSkimmings house, which was larger and more elaborate. So, it’s a lovely little spot to visit.”

Upstart Press

The gold boom in New Zealand led to many small settlements springing up. Janssen says Welshtown, an abandoned gold town in Central Otago, is a classic example. The ruins of the village pub still remain.

“Just out of Cromwell, you drive up onto the plateau, it’s got this most amazing view over the mountains.

“And it’s got these beautiful stone little cottages and huts, most of them just missing their roofs, in amongst the tussock and down just below the town in a little valley, is a ruined hotel, the Pen Gallies Hotel, which is a good old Welsh name.”

Mansion House on Kawau Island.

Wikicommons

As well as gold, copper was in high demand, and up north, Kawau Island in the Hauraki Gulf was settled by Cornish miners, he says. These men had expertise in mining under the ocean.

“And again, this was another very religious town where it was compulsory to go to church on Sunday, if you were Cornish.”

The workers’ cottages are all gone, but the impressive mansion house remains.

“At its height it had 300 people to 400 people and three little separate villages. And they were all Cornish miners.”

Until rail and roads were fully developed, ports were vital to New Zealand’s transportation system with much of the interior difficult to navigate.

Tokomaru Bay wharf.

wikicommons

Janssen says a network of ports sprang up, most now abandoned, to move goods around the country. Tokomaru Bay on the East Cape is a typical example, he says. By the early 1960s the ports had all closed in the East Cape, once the road went in.

Tokomaru Bay remains as a township with a population of just under 500.

“One of the most intriguing is Tokomaru Bay, north of Tologa Bay, if you go to the north of the bay, it has this area of ruined buildings. There’s a ruined freezing works, there are wool stores, the store managers’ houses.”

The abandoned cemetery at Lyell near Murchison.

Commons

Lyell, a once-thriving gold mining town in the Buller Gorge between Murchison and Inangahua is long gone, but Janssen says its cemetary is worth visiting.

“It’s been a ghost town for a long time and in amongst the bush are these concrete steps or the base of a chimney. But the most amazing thing is this incredible cemetery.

“And you really do feel like you’ve walked into a spooky movie. It has tombstones, but it also has those little iron fences around the graves. It doesn’t matter if it’s summer or raining, it’s even more spooky, it’s got the most atmospheric place you could go to for a ghost town.”

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Stolen turtles slowly make their way home to Hastings park

Source: Radio New Zealand

Three of the red-eared slider turtles stolen from the bird aviary at Cornwall Park in Hastings have been found. Supplied / LDR

Slowly but surely, the seven turtles stolen from Cornwall Park in Hastings are finding their way home.

The red-eared slider turtles were taken after a large square hole was cut in the fence of the Cornwall Park aviary at the beginning of January.

The first turtle was found just days after the theft, sitting on the steps of a dance studio in Hastings.

Community support officer for Hawke’s Bay SPCA, Karen Hacking, said a member of the public called them after finding the turtle in Murdoch Rd.

“We asked them to keep it safe until we arrived,” Hacking said.

“They may be slow, but they can still move, and with a busy road and a nearby park, it was safest to keep the turtle contained.”

She said when the SPCA arrived, the turtle’s shell was very dry.

“We knew about the theft, so we took it back to the Hastings depot, set up an area with water and bought some food. It was obviously hungry, making short work of the food we put in the water.”

She said it seemed really social, responding to voices.

“Most turtles are shy and will retreat into their shells around humans, so that fact stood out to us and made us think it was most likely one of the stolen ones.”

The Cornwall Park aviary keeper visited the next day.

“He believed it was one from the aviary so it went back and by all accounts settled in well.”

A second turtle was dropped off at a Napier pet shop by a member of the public who also called Hastings District Council.

A council spokesperson said once it was confirmed to be one of the missing turtles, it was returned to the aviary.

“It was hungry but otherwise in good health.”

The third was returned by a Hawke’s Bay resident.

The council is also investigating a sighting of a turtle at Anderson Park in Napier.

The spokesperson said people had offered to gift turtles to the aviary.

“However, the pond is only large enough for a maximum of 14 turtles, so we are keeping the space for the return of those who have lived there all of their lives.”

Hacking said anyone thinking about getting a turtle as a pet should do their research.

“Just like any other pet, they need food and shelter. Turtles can live for a long time, and take just as much care as any other animal.”

Red-eared slider turtles can live for up to 50 years in captivity and grow to around 35cm in shell length.

At the time of the theft, a council spokesperson said it was vital the turtles were kept in a cool area with water.

“They should not be released into the wild as they are unlikely to survive and can cause harm to local ecosystems. They can prey on fish, aquatic plants, kōura and insects, as well as small birds such as ducklings, displace nesting wetland birds and degrade water quality.”

Four turtles are still missing.

A police spokesperson said at the time they’d received a burglary report that suggested the turtles had been stolen from the Hastings District Council-owned aviary sometime between midnight 2 January and 6am 3 January.

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

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Farmers frustrated by Canterbury’s recent bad weather

Source: Radio New Zealand

David Birkett

Canterbury arable farmers are facing millions of dollars of losses after a third big hail storm hit parts of the region on Friday.

Crops have been destroyed, while others have gone to seed due to ongoing wet weather making them unusable.

Federated Farmers Arable chair David Birkett who grows crops like wheat, barley and vegetable seeds in Leeston just south of Christchurch said growers should be harvesting but are sitting on their hands.

“We should be in the thick of harvest but we are sitting here waiting for the weather to improve, since Christmas we’ve gone from a typical hot, dry Canterbury summer to really wet weather with plenty of hail storms coming through.

“Normally we’d have three or four a year but we’ve had about 12 so far this year already, three being really hard-hitting ones which have wiped out entire crops.”

Birkett said the hail was very localised – one grower could have lost everything while next door was totally fine.

“Some hail damage has wiped out entire fields, which is devastating for the growers because for some it’s the second or third season where they’ve lost crops, so cash flow is getting tight.

He said the cost of the hail storms this year had totalled $10 million in Canterbury alone.

“The frustrating thing is that the crop was looking really good this season and now some of it’s not usable.”

The point was that growers had already spent all the money on the crop, so when it was ruined they lost all that income, he said.

Another arable farmer RNZ spoke to said the losses were putting a lot of strain on finances.

“It’s not just the hail, the ongoing wet weather means we can’t harvest and the quality of the crop is going down. My milling wheat won’t make the quality grade, so I will have to sell it as feed wheat for the dairy industry, so I’ll lose about $100 a tonne.”

Birkett said there was no rain in the forecast this week, but temperatures remained low, so it could take a week for the crops to dry out enough to be harvested.

“While other parts of the ag sector like dairy and sheep and beef farmers are doing well, arable farmers are really struggling.”

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Tennis: NZ’s Erin Routliffe knocked out of Australian Open

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s Erin Routliffe and her doubles partner Asia Muhammad. Joshua Devenie / www.photosport.nz

New Zealand’s top doubles player, Erin Routliffe, has had her Australian Open come to an end in the third round.

The Kiwi doubles star, and her partner Asia Muhammad, were upset by Ena Shibahara of Japan and Russian veteran Vera Zvonareva 7-5, 6-3, 6-1.

Breaks were traded in the fourth and fifth games of the first set before the sixth seeds led 5-4, only to drop the next three games in a row and the set 7-5.

In the second set, Routliffe and Muhammad gained the only break in the fourth game on Shibahara’s serve and kept the lead as the American rounded out the set 6-3.

However, the third set was a struggle for the Kiwi and American combination in their first Slam together.

Muhammad was broken in the second game and Routliffe in the fourth as Zvonareva and Shibahara raced through the set and match 6-1.

It was a case of winding back the clock for the 41-year-old Zvonareva.

Zvonareva peaked at No. 2 in the singles rankings in 2010, the same year she finished runner-up at Wimbledon and the US Open.

Zvonareva made a low-key comeback at the ITF W100 in Dubai in December, marking her first professional tournament since June 2024.

Routliffe and her mixed doubles partner, Andre Goransson of Sweden, were knocked out of the tournament yesterday.

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Obama’s former speechwriter says Trump’s actions are all about his legacy

Source: Radio New Zealand

America has pulled out of the World Health Organisation as Donald Trump continues to reshape the world order.

It comes as he threatens to slap Canada with a 100 percent tariff if it does a trade deal with China and as NATO still reels from his demands to take Greenland.

Barack Obama’s former speechwriter and host of the podcast Pod Save America Jon Favreau, told RNZ that Trump’s actions were now driven by a desire to leave a legacy.

Favreau told Midday Report’s Guyon Espiner that he had been surprised by how easily Trump had disrupted the world order, as very few people stood up to him.

“I think the framers of the Constitution, the one thing they didn’t really count on was this sort of extreme polarisation and the idea that one party would just decide to give up on providing any kind of check on the president’s power,” he said.

“I think if we were to ascribe some kind of strategy to Trump – and again, I hesitate to do that – I do think he’s someone who he wants to dominate other people. He wants more land, more money, more everything.

“You can tell now he’s sort of looking for this legacy, and he believes his legacy is, how much territory he has and, how many people can be made to respect him and bow down to him.

“It’s not dissimilar to other authoritarian leaders, both around the world right now and throughout history. It is the same mindset that also becomes a political programme, whether it is conscious or not.”

Favreau also said he was concerned that the Five Eyes intelligence sharing network – which New Zealand is part of – was at risk under Trump’s second term in power.

This White House handout photo shows US President Barack Obama meeting with Director of Speechwriting Jon Favreau in the Oval Office of the White House to review a speech, on April 14, 2009. PETE SOUZA / AFP / WHITE HOUSE

However, he believed that within US agencies, there were people who were not beholden to Trump.

“I think that once you get a couple levels down in the administration and the federal government here, you still have career people.

“I think especially in the intelligence agencies and the Defence Department and the State Department, if they haven’t been purged yet, who are professionals.

“I do worry about… we have a national intelligence director and a CIA director and a secretary of state… who are all very, very loyal to Trump and would never cross him. But I do think once you get a couple levels down, you do have people who are still more loyal to the Constitution and the global order than they are to the personal whims of one president.”

US President Donald Trump. Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images via CNN Newsource

Regarding the 2026 mid-term elections in the United States, Favreau was confident they were not under threat.

“I think they will happen, partly because in our system, the federal government does not run or control the elections. They are controlled by the states that they’re in.

“But my concern is less that the midterm elections won’t happen. It is that the midterm elections do happen. It is a polarised environment. We have close elections here already. And if control of the House or control of the Senate comes down to a couple districts or a state or two where it’s very close, then you see the federal government potentially stepping in and trying to say, the vote was rigged or this or that.

“So I worry more about what happens after the election than whether the election occurs. I think that if the Democrats do win the House, then Trump never passes another law again. So that is one way to check his power.

“I also think they can start to not just hold hearings, but and subpoena Trump officials to come testify, but also subpoena documents. So I think that could check his power and hold the Trump administration accountable in some way.”

If the Democrats win the Senate, Favreau said, they could prevent the President from nominating and confirming more judges.

“You can slow him down, I think, in the midterms if Democrats are successful in the midterms. And I actually do think that is, it’s quite meaningful and quite necessary. So, but I don’t think it’s a cure-all. I think that comes in 2028. And we have to win that election for sure.”

Favreau’s podcast, Pod Save America, reaches more than 1.5 million listeners per episode on average.

He said the conversational format was what attracted audiences.

“You have more time. There’s more time for nuance and subtlety, and to sort of dissect complex issues and to have sort of complex views on different issues.”

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Person dies in ‘serious’ Whangārei crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police say one person died at the scene of the crash. RNZ

One person has died in what police are calling a “serious” crash in Oakleigh, Whangārei.

Emergency services were called to the scene on State Highway 1 at 2:20pm on Saturday.

Police said one person died at the scene, while three others were taken to hospital – two in serious condition and one in moderate condition.

Enquiries into the crash are ongoing.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand