ACT chief of staff resigns

Source: Radio New Zealand

Andrew Ketels joined David Seymour’s office in 2017. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

The ACT Party’s chief of staff has announced his resignation, after more than a decade in Parliament.

In a LinkedIn post, Andrew Ketels said he felt “very fortunate” to have worked at Parliament for 12 years, for five ministers, and as ACT’s chief of staff for five years.

“There really is no place like it, but I’m looking forward to making a bit more time for my two boys,” he said.

Ketels said he was “extremely proud” of how far the party had come over the last eight years, “from a party struggling to make the 6pm news and polling below 1% to a caucus of 11 MPs and sitting at the Cabinet table”.

Ketels said he would be finishing up this month “to move on to my next challenge”.

Prior to joining David Seymour’s office in 2017, Ketels had worked for National MPs Louise Upston and Maggie Barry.

Ketels is not the only party chief of staff to step down this year, after the Greens’ Eliza Prestidge-Oldfield resigned in September.

She was replaced by former Green MP Kevin Hague, who started in the role last month.

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Greens say applications for advanced benefit payments ‘skyrocketed’ last year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Minister for Social Development Louise Upston RNZ / Angus Dreaver

The Greens say the number of applications for advanced support being denied has “skyrocketed” during the last year and people are being denied assistance for basic essentials.

But the Minister for Social Development Louise Upston says there’s been no policy change and she’s not concerned because “advances create greater hardship down the track”.

Data provided by the minister shows the number of declined applications for payment advances to help with clothing has doubled and declines for help with electricity costs has more than doubled compared to the quarter ending June 2023.

Advance payments of a benefit is a one-off payment to help pay for essential or emergency costs. MSD can help with costs such as electricity, dental treatment, essential home repairs, glasses, washing machines, car repairs and more.

Between June 2023 and June 2025 there has been an increase in declined applications of:

  • 72% for appliances: 327 applications declined in June 2023 compared to 564 declined in June 2025
  • 91% for bedding: 366 compared to 699
  • 82% for beds: 375 compared to 684
  • 65% for car repairs: 1551 compared to 2556
  • 102% for clothing: 1515 compared to 3060
  • 36% for dental treatment: 1317 compared to 1785
  • 160% for electricity: 300 compared to 780
  • 83% for essential home repairs: 54 compared to 99
  • 52% for fridge/ freezer: 219 compared to 333
  • 86% for furniture: 342 compared to 636

Some of the most common reasons these applications are denied include whether the circumstances could have reasonably been foreseen, the person had already received help for the same or similar need in the past, or that it wasn’t a qualifying need.

The reason advances were declined because circumstances could have been reasonably foreseen, and declined because it was not a qualifying need, have both doubled compared to June 2023.

Upston appeared before the Social Services Committee during Scrutiny Week, where Green MP Ricardo Menendez March asked why the decline for advances for assistance like clothing and electricity had “skyrocketed” under the past financial year.

Green MP Ricardo Menendez March VNP/Louis Collins

He asked whether the minister was “comfortable” with increased unemployment and hardship in communities while decline rates had doubled.

Upston said she was aware there had been an increase in the number of declines, but confirmed there had been no policy change in regards to granting advances.

Her key concern though was the nature of advance payments themselves, because it meant people had less than their benefit in the weeks from then on.

“I’m not sure that benefit advance is necessarily a good idea when people turn up to MSD with challenges.”

Upston said she would be surprised if Menendez March was advocating for a larger number of advances because “that pushes people into more financial hardship in the weeks and months ahead”.

Menendez March said people access advances because they “just simply cannot make ends meet and cover the costs in front of them”. He said advances were one of the few tools to prevent people losing access to electricity, for example.

Upston acknowledged “we’ve got very challenging times,” and “no one around this table would be surprised” there are people who are finding the cost of living challenging at the moment, “which is why it is the primary focus of our government to get it under control.”

“We need to stick with our plan focusing on reducing inflation and reducing the cost of living, but I accept that there will be households who are finding it tough right now.”

Asked by reporters after the Scrutiny Week hearing why there had been an increase in declines, Upston said that was a question for MSD. RNZ has approached MSD for comment.

She said she wasn’t concerned about the increase, and when asked why she wasn’t concerned, repeated that “advances create greater hardship down the track in the weeks and months ahead”.

“It may well have been that they were too lenient in the past, but as I said, there have been no policy changes around any form of hardship.”

Asked whether MSD was taking cues from the government’s rhetoric of getting tougher on beneficiaries, Upston rejected that assumption.

“We are focused on reducing the number of people on job seeker benefit and supporting them into work.”

Menendez March told RNZ under Upston’s watch more people were being declined assistance for “basic essentials.”

“At a time of a cost of living crisis, it’s morally corrupt to run a regime where more people are being declined for assistance.

“Advances are often a last lifeline for people in hardship unable to cover the cost of bills, clothes and bedding which allows them to live dignified lives.”

Government target ‘at risk’

The chief executive of the Ministry of Social Development, Debbie Power, also appeared before MPs for questioning.

NZ First’s Jamie Arbuckle asked whether MSD was on track to meet the government’s goal to reduce Jobseeker numbers to 140,000 by 2030.

Power responded that it was “fair to say” the target was “probably a bit at risk”.

“That’s what you would expect given the economic conditions. But what I can say is we are absolutely committed to ensuring that New Zealanders and our clients get access to jobs as they come up.”

Power said 42 percent of people who came on a benefit last year in New Zealand were “really highly skilled”, so it was important to make sure they get access to jobs in the labour market.

“And when the economy turns making sure our clients are at the front of the queue to take advantage of their economic recovery is something that we are absolutely committed to.”

Power was also asked by Labour’s Priyanca Radhakrishnan whether changes to jobseeker payments for 18 and 19 year olds would get the government closer to that target.

From November next year, young people wanting to get Jobseeker Support or the equivalent Emergency Benefit will have to take a parental income test, to see whether their parents can support them instead of the taxpayer.

Power said she didn’t think that was the “intent” of the policy, but acknowledged MSD was expecting 4000 18 and 19 year olds to be impacted by the change.

National’s Paulo Garcia also asked for an update on the government’s traffic-light warning system, which sets out clear consequences for beneficiaries who fail to meet certain requirements.

Jobseekers will have to reapply for the benefit every six months – instead of annually – and any transgressions will remain on their record for two years, twice as long as they do now.

The law change will also allow new sanctions, such as mandatory community work or money management payment cards.

Power said currently, 98.5 percent – 345,000 people – were in the green setting, meaning “no problems, meeting obligations, all good”.

There are 0.6 percent – 1,953 people – in orange, and 1 percent – 3,189 people – in red. She acknowledged that was a small number of people. Power said what she’d heard from the front line was that staff and clients appreciated the transparency of the colour arrangements to better understand what was expected of them.

In regards to the mandatory community work or money management payment cards – the non-financial sanctions MSD had been able to apply in the last six months since the law came into force – Menendez March asked how many had been applied.

Power said there’d been about “a dozen.”

Menendez March said the minister often spoke about these sanctions as being a “better alternative”, and questioned why only 12 had been applied while financial sanctions had remained the majority.

Power said there was particular criteria in terms of accessing non-financial sanctions, such as being in case management, having dependent children, failing an obligation then attending an appointment with the case manager.

“It significantly reduces the size of people where those sorts of sanctions will apply.

“So it’s a tool that we can use for the right circumstances.”

Menendez March pushed back, asking “if only 12 people have been given a non-financial sanction, does that say that the circumstances are almost never right?”

Power rejected that saying it was because “we’re just starting.”

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Foodbanks warn of closures if government fails to give ongoing funding

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland City missioner Helen Robinson says some foodbanks would close without government funding. RNZ Insight / Sarah Robson

The country’s biggest foodbanks are warning of substantial closures if the government does not provide ongoing funding next year.

The Salvation Army, Auckland City Mission and Food Network are among the organisations that received one-off grants till mid-2026.

They are renewing their call for ongoing government funding as they look ahead to next year.

Salvation Army food security manager Sonya Cameron said planning started now for stocking foodbanks next year and the future was uncertain.

“It’s a very high risk. Salvation Army will stay open … but other organisations are even more vulnerable, we’ve already seen a lot of foodbanks close down in the past,” Cameron said.

“I don’t know how many would close down but I suspect it would be substantial.”

She said without ongoing government funding, the Salvation Army would have to reduce the amount of food given out from its 60 foodbanks.

More than half a million New Zealanders rely on foodbanks and food rescue organisations for support.

Sonya Cameron without government funding the Salvation Army would have to reduce the amount of food its foodbanks distribute. SUPPLIED/The Salvation Army

Auckland City missioner Helen Robinson said they provide food every day to people who cannot make ends meet.

“Every year we’re left wondering if we’ll be funded. It’s unsustainable,” she said.

“We need to plan, staff, and stock our foodbanks with confidence. That’s impossible when we’re constantly having to re-justify our existence every year to secure funding.”

Robinson said if government funding stopped, some foodbanks would close doors.

“While we will always be there to support whānau, when other services close, it increases pressure on everyone and ultimately means some whānau who are hungry will not be able to access food.”

The Salvation Army and Auckland City Mission are among food banks and hubs that received one-off government grants this year, for the mission that meant it did not have to reduce the number of food parcels it distributes.

That funding, through the Ministry of Social Development’s Food Secure Communities programme, runs till the end of June 2026.

It was renewed after a collective of foodbanks wrote to Social Development Minister Louise Upston asking for ongoing sustainable funding before the May budget announcement.

Foodbanks started to receive direct government funding in 2020 during the pandemic, and over the following four years more than $200 million was invested in the sector. Since then it had been on a one-off basis only.

Food security funding was extended with one-off grants to 13 providers last year, including the mission, which received a one-off $700,000 from the ministry for food parcels.

Earlier this year, the ministry said it was reviewing the way foodbanks were funded.

Aotearoa Food Rescue Alliance head, Tracey Watene, told Midday Report rescued food is a crucial part of what foodbanks offer.

“If funding drops off, thousands of meals will disappear, millions of kilos of edible kai will be wasted, staff will be lost and services will close,” she said.

“The entire food support network, foodbanks, community groups and food rescue, will be weakened just when New Zealanders need it most.”

The alliance received some MSD funding and had diversified to bolster its books.

“Food rescue isn’t the long term fix but it’s what keeps families fed while we work on those bigger economic and food system challenges. Until we address the route causes we need stable funding to keep whanau well.”

She said it took them time to advocate for annual grants which were needed every year.

“Multi-year funding means stability and stability means more kai reaching more whanau,” Watene said.

“Zero funding means that places close and our community and our whanau are doing it extremely tough at the moment.”

New Zealand Food Network chief executive Gavin Findlay said the lack of a multi-year commitment from government meant providers were left in limbo.

“Christmas is a time when many think about giving, but hunger isn’t seasonal. More than 500,000 New Zealanders rely on foodbanks and food rescue organisations for support.”

He said frontline teams across the country were seeing familiar faces return regularly, including families who were working, budgeting carefully and still unable to afford enough food.

“Food security relies on a whole ecosystem, from national distributors to local foodbanks, food support and food rescue organisations,” Findlay said.

“Our role is to keep that system strong and responsive, including during emergencies. That can be done much more effectively and efficiently when funding is stable and allows everyone to plan ahead.”

He said the pressure on foodbanks had intensified in the last year, especially for those on the lowest incomes.

MSD’s General Manager for Pacific and Community Capability Programmes, Serena Curtis, said the ministry has invested more than $200 million through its Food Secure Communities (FSC) programme since 2020.

“We have always been clear with the sector that funding for the FSC Programme is time-limited.”

Curtis said half of the additional funding was for monitoring and evaluating the impact of the programme.

“This work is underway, and we expect to receive an evaluation report in early 2026,” Curtis said.

The FSC programme has funded the creation and maintenance of national and regional food distribution infrastructure.

“Community food providers are now better connected and can support each other through the national partner organisations we have invested in, such as the New Zealand Food Network, Kore Hiakai Zero Hunger Collective, and the Aotearoa Food Rescue Alliance.”

From July to September this year, MSD provided $32.5m to provide 327,705 food grants.

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Black Ferns set for three-Test showdown vs France at home in 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand celebrate during the Women’s Rugby World Cup third-place match against France, 2025. ADRIAN DENNIS / AFP

The Black Ferns will resume their rivalry with France for a three-Test home series in 2026, as part of the new WXV Global Series.

The series headlines a four-match home schedule between August and the end of October, which includes a Test against Australia where New Zealand will look to retain the O’Reilly Cup.

The Black Ferns, fresh off beating France in the 2025 Women’s Rugby World Cup bronze final, will host the world’s fourth ranked side in Hamilton, Whangārei and Christchurch.

GM Professional Rugby and Performance Chris Lendrum said they were pleased to secure four homes Tests next year.

“There’s a real rivalry between the Black Ferns and France, so hosting them as part of the WXV Global Series is exciting. The Black Ferns have won eight of the last thirteen Tests between these two nations and these teams faced off in the 2021 and 2025 RWC playoffs too, which adds significant intensity to the match-up. 2026 also marks 30 years since these two teams first played against one another, so there is new and old history here that we know fans will get behind and celebrate,” Lendrum said.

The Black Ferns will play 10 test matches in total next year, with three Tests against Pacific rivals in April, which will include the traditional Pac4 fixtures.

As part of the WXV Global Series, the Black Ferns will play six Tests in a home and away format against some of the top 12 teams in the world.

Black Ferns co-captain Kennedy Tukuafu said the side had plenty to prove.

“We have a great mix of Tests here at home and overseas. We’ve always said we want to play as much rugby as possible, so with so many Tests overseas and at home next year we want to make the most of those,” Tukuafu said.

“We look forward to playing in four different venues across the motu (country) to see as many of our incredible fans as possible. For me personally having a Test at home in Hamilton is going to be special, and when we take the field, it will have been two years since the Black Ferns last played there.”

Previously played through March and April, Super Rugby Aupiki will now take place between June and August, with six regular season games and a grand final.

Black Ferns four home Test matches in 2026:

  • Black Ferns v Australia, Saturday 22 August, Go Media Stadium, Auckland
  • Black Ferns v France, Saturday 17 October, FMG Stadium Waikato, Hamilton
  • Black Ferns v France, Saturday 24 October, Semenoff Stadium, Whangārei
  • Black Ferns v France, Saturday 31 October, One NZ Stadium, Christchurch

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Hikers ignoring warning signs and risking lives on Hooker Valley track

Source: Radio New Zealand

Advisory sign for Hooker Valley track. Department of Conservation

Up to 20 people a day are risking their lives venturing into closed areas of a popular Aoraki/Mt Cook National Park track, where construction and explosive work is underway to build a new bridge, the Department of Conservation says.

DOC said staff working on the 189-metre suspension bridge on the Hooker Valley Track had repeatedly seen people ignoring safety barriers and gates and were often downing tools to tell people to leave.

On one occasion staff had to stop a helicopter pouring concrete to tell walkers to go, DOC said.

Signs warning walkers of construction on the Hooker Valley Track. Department of Conservation

DOC Aoraki/Mt Cook operations manager Sally Jones said there were already signs on the track and at White Horse Hill car park warning people not to go past barriers but some people were ignoring them.

“People are taking real risks by climbing fences and in some cases even attempting to cross the Hooker River – its bloody freezing let alone fast and furious,” she said.

“They’re doing this all to get to the closed Hooker Bridge which is not safe.”

Jones said the river bank holding the piles for the old bridge had eroded, further increasing risk of it collapsing.

“People are putting their lives at risk. We all want the new suspension bridge on the Hooker Track open as soon as possible and the construction workers need to be able to get on with the job without having to worry about the public,” she said.

Erosion on the Hooker Valley Track. Supplied/DOC

She said as the upper section of the track was a restricted access site, so trespass notices could be issued.

“We just want visitors to respect the information we are giving them. Staying on tracks in general is important as our environment can be very challenging and we want people to have a safe trip,” she said.

“We sometimes see visitors putting themselves at risk to get that one photo, near a drop-off or way off track. People can also trample over the unique and precious alpine vegetation and don’t seem to notice what they are destroying.”

DOC was installing security cameras to try to keep visitors on track.

Hooker track lookout over Mueller Lake. Department of Conservation

Jones said aerial predator control operations were also due to begin in the park, involving temporary closures of Tasman Valley Road and lower Hooker Track from the first suspension bridge.

“We want to ensure there is minimal disruption to people’s plans. There are plenty of other walks in the park which have spectacular views of Aoraki including Kea Point, Sealy Tarns and lovely nature walks like through Bowen Bush and the Governors Bush walk,” she said.

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Cars torched at popular Invercargill park

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police believe the cars were deliberately torched. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

Police are investigating a fire where four vehicles appeared to be deliberately torched in a popular Invercargill park.

Detective Sergeant John Kean said it was reported in Queens Park in Windsor shortly before 12:30am on Wednesday.

He said no one was injured but it appears four vehicles were set alight.

Police are asking anyone who may have seen anything unusual in the area last night or early this morning to get on touch.

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Police seek information after man stabbed in Wellington car park on Sunday

Source: Radio New Zealand

The incident occurred in a Wellington car park in the early hours of Sunday morning. RNZ / REECE BAKER

Wellington police are appealing for information after a young man was stabbed in the Wellington’s suburb of Te Aro in the early hours of Sunday morning.

Police said the incident happened about 4.10am in a car park between Wakefield Street and Tory Street.

The victim sustained multiple stab wounds to the arm and back and was taken to hospital where he remains in a stable condition.

Detective Senior Sergeant Tim Leitch said the victim’s wounds had the potential to be fatal.

“This could have very easily been a homicide investigation,” he said in a statement.

“What we know is there were a significant number of people in the surrounding area when this happened – we need to hear from these people.”

Leitch urged anyone with footage, or who witnessed the incident, to contact police as soon as possible.

Anyone with information which may assist, is urged to contact police online or by calling 105 and using reference number 251130/5482.

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Notorious criminal charged with historical serious sexual assault

Source: Radio New Zealand

The man has appeared in the Auckland District Court. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

One of the country’s most notorious criminals has been charged with a serious sexual assault from nearly 40 years ago.

The man made his first appearance in the Auckland District Court on Wednesday before Judge Kirsten Lummis where he was granted interim name suppression until March 10.

He entered a not guilty plea through his lawyer.

The man, aged in his 70s, is charged with a serious sexual assault of a woman in Auckland’s Onehunga in 1988.

Detective Inspector Scott Beard confirmed to RNZ police had charged a man over a historical stranger sexual assault in Auckland during the late 1980s.

“An investigation was carried out at the time when the alleged rape occurred in Onehunga on 18 June 1988.

“Enquiries available to detectives at the time were unable to identify the perpetrator.”

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

In May this year the complainant contacted police to review her case.

“This was assigned to an investigator in the Auckland City Adult Sexual Assault Team.”

Police had since charged the man.

Beard was unable to go into the specifics of the 2025 enquiries given court proceedings are under way.

“However, it is pleasing that we can bring this matter to the courts on behalf of the complainant, given there is no statute of limitations on this sort of offending.”

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How crypto price fall could give you a tax refund

Source: Radio New Zealand

The value of cryptocurrencies can be very volatile. In the past year, Bitcoin hit a record high – then fell sharply. CFOTO / NurPhoto via AFP

Investors who have to sell their cryptocurrency for a loss may be able to claim tax back from Inland Revenue (IRD).

IRD has made it clear that people who are trading cryptocurrency should pay tax on their gains.

In July last year IRD signalled it was honing in on people buying and selling crypto who were not declaring their income.

It had identified had 227,000 unique crypto asset users in New Zealand undertaking around 7 million transactions with a value of $7.8 billion.

Last week, accountant Tim Doyle, who specialises in cryptocurrency, told Checkpoint nearly a third of his clients had received letters from IRD calling in tax they owe.

But the value of cryptocurrencies can be very volatile. In the past year, Bitcoin hit a record high – then fell sharply. It is down about 16 percent over the past month.

Deloitte cryptocurrency expert Ian Fay said anyone who bought at the peak of the market and then had to sell could claim a loss in their tax return.

People were taxed on the proceeds minus the cost of the asset and if the cost was more than the sale proceeds, it would count as a loss. “If you bought a few months ago hoping to make a quick buck and need the money you might have to liquidate, and could have a loss.”

But he said it would only be people who sold their assets at a lower price than they paid for them that could claim the loss. People who had suffered a drop in the value of their portfolio but not liquidated might feel worse off but had not generated a loss for tax purposes.

People who bought a few years ago and sold today would pay tax on the proceeds, even if the gain was not as large as it might have been a few months ago.

Many crypto investors held their assets for a long time, he said, and were used to the swings in value. “It goes up, it comes down. It’s still a very volatile asset class.”

Fay said it was important to note that more people were investing in cryptocurrency funds, which were taxed differently. International exchange-traded cryptocurrency funds would usually be taxed under the foreign investment fund (FIF) rules, not as personal property.

Fay said Inland Revenue had dispelled a myth that people could hold on to their assets for a long time to avoid tax on capital gains. Because bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies did not offer income, it determined that people who bought them were doing so with the intention of selling them eventually, so the gains would usually be taxable.

He said some people might think their crypto trading was flying under the radar but Inland Revenue had increased access to data that would enable it to identify transactions.

Even transactions between different cryptocurrencies could generate gains that needed to be taxed, he said.

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Iwi file urgent Waitangi Tribunal inquiry over education Treaty changes

Source: Radio New Zealand

Veteran Māori broadcaster Waihoroi Shortland. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Northland iwi Ngāti Hine and hapū Te Kapotai are calling for an urgent Waitangi Tribunal inquiry after the government removed school boards’ legal obligations to give effect to Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

The claimants say the amendments to the Education and Training Act 2020, and the reset of the New Zealand Curriculum – Te Mātaiaho, undermine Māori rangatiratanga, partnership, and equity in education.

A statement of claim was filed on 19 November 2025 on behalf of Te Kapotai (Wai 1464/1546) and Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Hine (Wai 682/49), alongside a joint application for urgency.

The claimants argue the legislative and curriculum changes are inconsistent with Te Tiriti o Waitangi and cause “significant and irreversible prejudice” to Māori including:

  • Schools being unable to uphold treaty guarantees of tino rangatiratanga and partnership.
  • Unilateral Crown decision-making affecting Māori children and their whānau.
  • Immediate damage to the Treaty relationship between Māori and the Crown.
  • Loss of cultural safety, erosion of kaupapa Māori foundations, and disproportionate harm to tamariki Māori.
  • Unequal access between Māori children to te reo Māori, tikanga, and mātauranga across schools.
  • Increased resourcing burdens on the sector and school boards to adapt to the changes.

Claims submitted to the Tribunal state that the legislative and curriculum changes remove, weaken and deprioritise Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

Veteran Māori broadcaster Waihoroi Shortland said that the legislative changes amounted to a modern re-enactment of the Treaty Principles Bill “by stealth,” effectively eliminating Te Tiriti from the statute book.

He argued the Crown’s actions form part of a “long pattern of removing Māori nationhood from law and policy.”

Kara George said the Crown had failed to engage with hapū, creating “culturally unsafe, assimilationist educational environments” and affecting tamariki Māori language, identity, and well-being.

Tumuaki Maia Cooper said the changes had led to burnout for kaiako, removed kaupapa Māori foundations from school practice, and eroded equity settings for tamariki Māori.

Educator and grandparent Arona Tipene said the changes were destabilising for Māori whānau and kaiako, led to a loss of cultural safety in schools, and disproportionately affected Māori children who rely on Te Tiriti obligations for protection of their identity, belonging, and well-being.

She said the removal of these foundations could cause permanent harm to current and future generations.

The claimants argued there is no alternative remedy for these breaches of Te Tiriti, and that urgent Tribunal intervention is required before the amendment comes into force in November 2026.

The Tribunal has directed the Crown and other interested parties to respond by Wednesday, 3 December.

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