Avsnitt
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The Treaty Principals Bill is on its way to the gallows as the select committee came back Friday and suggested it wasn’t getting its support.
It was voted past first reading but it wont get past round two.
What I learned out of it was several things.
1) This country is not up for much of a debate around complex or big ideas. We are myopic in our approach. We hate and we love and middle ground is irrelevant.
There was a venom and aggressiveness to a lot of submissions.
2) From those who submitted that actually knew what they were talking about, as opposed to merely having an opinion, it very quickly became clear there is massive disagreement over interpretation.
These were scholars and lawyers and historians, in other words, "experts". They couldn’t agree.
That to me was the big clue. If the “learned” can't agree, surely that means we need something, legally speaking, to define what we are dealing with.
There is a major case in Christchurch at the moment between Ngai Tahu and the Crown over water rights.
It is in the court because there is nothing definitive in law as to what the Treaty does, and doesn’t, do.
We seem to accept that Parliament is the ultimate court, yet on the Treaty we appear happy to litigate for decade after decade, have a tribunal that is wildly tainted and nothing like a proper court, and each and every time we dabble in this area you and I are picking up the tab.
The other outworking of course is the ongoing grief and angst.
This is a very divided nation. This is not a harmonious nation with an agreed legal stance around the Treaty.
But putting it out to a vote the way Act wanted was a mistake It's too important for that. Pik N Mix democracy never works.
The other thing I learned politically is it should never have seen the light of day if it wasn’t going all the way.
This goes to the Chris Luxon negotiation skills. It should have been either dead before it started, or it got the full treatment.
What we got was a half-baked, deeply divided mess that ended up achieving nothing.
Even those who argue it started the debate are wrong. Because if it's floated for another day we won't carry on where we left off.
We will have to start all over again.
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On the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast for Monday the 7th of April, how will our share market react today after we dealt with the worldwide tariffs from the U.S?
The amount of rubbish we are buying from the likes of Temu appears to be stabilising.
Andrew Saville and Jason Pine talk the super rugby weekend and Liam Lawson's first race back at Racing Bulls.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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The Australian is next month and the polls are showing Albanese's Labor out in front.
Opposition leader Peter Dutton is scrapping his scheme that meant Canberra civil servants couldn't work from home if he was elected, after it was criticised by Labor.
Anthony Albanese has said anyone with solar power will get $4000 towards the cost of a battery. But what's the catch?
Australian Correspondent Steve Price talks to Mike Hosking about everything that's happened in the lead up to the election.
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The stock market has seen the biggest daily fall since the Covid-19 period, as a result of Donald Trump's tariffs announced last week.
Beijing responded with its own retaliatory tariffs, which caused the S&P 500 to fall another 6%.
Craigs Investment Partners Director Mark Lister says it's a historic fall.
"It's pretty rare for things to fall as much as that in a two-day period."
Lister talks to Mike Hosking about where New Zealand sits in the aftermath.
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Christopher Luxon says he has no regrets about the Treaty Principles Bill.
Parliament's Justice Committee has recommended the bill not proceed when it returns to the House, after public submissions were overwhelmingly opposed to it.
The Prime Minister says it's time for the debate to end.
He told Mike Hosking allowing the bill to proceed to committee stage, but refusing to support it any further, is the right approach.
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Shopping habits have shifted - cheap goods were up by 33% last year, which is more than double across 5 years.
Kiwibank says spending on websites like Temu and Shine have stabilised at a high level.
First Retail Group Managing Director Chris Wilkinson says price is the biggest driver for people deciding where to spend their money.
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Recently retired Chair of the Parole Board, Sir Ron Young, is saying short sentences may be doing more harm than good.
"We can't do anything about the crime that someone's committed who's already in prison," he said. "We can try and do something about the crimes that they could commit by reducing reoffending, and that's putting huge effort into rehabilitation."
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The United States is reacting to Donald Trump's tariffs, with people turning out in their thousands to protest across the country.
The markets have been in 'meltdown' since US President Cannounced global tariffs.
Trump has returned to the White House after three days away, and tomorrow he will meet with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
US Correspondent Richard Arnold talks to Mike Hosking about the fallout.
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The world is reacting to the tariffs announced by US President Donald Trump over the weekend.
The Dow is down 2,231 points and the biggest names in tech have been hit hard.
Apple is down 16% in two days.
Greg Smith of Devon Funds Management talks to Mike Hosking about the fallout.
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Here was a headline to mark the day: "We aren't ready, the next pandemic is coming."
In that line of paranoia is everything that was wrong with the five year anniversary, if that’s the right word, of our first lockdown for Covid.
As two commissions have, or continue, to wade through any number of submissions, it's all a waste of time.
There are those who are determined to forecast doom and, as such, would do exactly the same next time as they did five years ago.
I noted Ashley Bloomfield popped up for a chat. He told us the bird flu is a worry, and he should have listened more. What's that actually mean? Listen more?
Does it lead to anything? Of course not. It’s a sop.
The epidemiologists who flooded our living rooms would unquestionably be no different in Covid 2.0 than they were with the original.
In fact, if anything should have come out of 2020 and lockdown it should have been we don’t mark anniversaries. We shouldn’t be allowed to interview either Hipkins, Bloomfield, or Ardern about Covid ever again. Hearing them whine is bad for your health. It is triggering.
One Covid report is already out. It was a reflection, ironically, of the Covid response itself, limited in its scope. It was a stitch up designed to look like a report.
You’ve had a bit of a look at how we handled it. But the terms of reference were very much designed not to illicit anything too dramatic.
Part two is being driven by the new Government, aghast at part one's scandalous limitations. They're working away feverishly as we speak.
But it doesn’t matter what it says. Nothing will come of it.
As I've said from day one, luck is your pre-determining factor.
Get a government of competence and you stand a chance. Get some interlopers the way we did, and you're done for.
If I learned anything, it is that warnings about doom from the likes of Bloomfield mean little, or nothing.
If any Government here ever tries half the stuff they did again, from the pulpit of truth to vaccine mandates, to lockdowns for spurious reasons, the reaction would be vastly different.
And you don't need a commission of inquiry to figure that out.
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At the end of each week, Mike Hosking takes you through the big-ticket items and lets you know what he makes of it all.
The Māori Party: 1/10
They get a '1' because they are legitimately there because of votes, and that’s democracy. As for the rest of the performance, they are a joke and an embarrassment to this country.
The Greens: 2/10
They get a '2' and not a '1' only because they get more support in the polls. But the prospect of Labour letting them round a Cabinet table? Book my ticket out.
Trump: 3/10
One better than the Greens because to counter tariffs of others is not free trade, but it is understandable. As for the rest, he's mental.
The Warriors: 7/10
Because three in a row is three in a row. And two more points this weekend, which on the Mike Hosking scoresheet, is four in a row.
The America's Cup: 4/10
I never thought it was going to held here so I wasn’t surprised, or disappointed. Although, in the spirit of being open for business, I would have liked to have seen a bit more enthusiasm from the Government. Pleading poverty is a poor man's game, not a go getter's.
The jobs report: 2/10
Saddest story of the week for me. To have over half the country regretting their career is a study in lack of planning, or lack of action, or lack of living life to the full.
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The irony was not lost on me this week as two things job related happened.
The first was the survey that suggested over half of us regret our career choice.
That struck me as profoundly sad. Say whatever you want about work and work-life balance, but a lot of hours are spent in a lifetime grafting. Virtually everyone, at least at the start, has to work.
Everyone of course should work because it's good for you. But to have a lifetime of regret is to not have really lived at all, or at least not to your full potential.
Juxtaposing that was the surprise, to me anyway, that I had been here at Newstalk ZB for 25 years.
A smaller surprise was on the same day, April 1st, Morning Report at Radio New Zealand was marking 50 years. I spent a short stint at Morning Report in moderately, although ultimately, I think, successful circumstances.
Without word of a lie I have loved every day, of every week, of every month, of every year. Not just at Newstalk ZB, but the 44 years I have been in this game.
Of course I had bad days. I had bad employers, I had ropy times and I've been sacked twice by morons, but I've never regretted picking doing what I do.
Which is a small miracle, given I have never really been able to tell anyone with any clarity why I picked this game in the first place, other than it seemed appealing.
I had no mentors or people I knew in media. As a kid I listened to the radio and thought that sounds fun. As it turns out, I was right.
The other small saviour has been the fact that not only didn’t I regret it, it worked out moderately well in terms of gainful employment, because at no stage in the past four decades have I been able to conjure up an alternative.
I literally cannot think of anything else I would want to do.
I would like to think though, and this goes to the survey, that if it hadn't gone well or I did regret it, I would have done something about it.
Because life's big lesson is life is short. And if you aren't rolling with it, you are fighting it.
And that’s no fun and it wears you out.
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All eyes are on Japan this weekend as Liam Lawson races for the first time since his demotion from Red Bull Racing.
The Kiwi driver has lost his seat in the Formula 1 team two races into the season, being replaced with Yuki Tsunoda for the Japanese Grand Prix.
Former Williams Team Manager Peter Windsor told Mike Hosking the problem with motorsport and F1 today is that it's very data driven.
He says everything is done according to data and telemetry overlays from the driver in the other car, and there’s just too much information.
“Liam's a very natural racing driver, and he just needs to be allowed to get out there and race.”
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On the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast for Friday 4th of April, we get the reaction both from New Zealand and around the world to Trump’s “sweeping” tariffs.
A lot of eyes will be on F1 this weekend as Liam Lawson hops back behind the wheel of the Racing Bulls car, and former Williams team manager Peter Windsor offers his thoughts.
Kate Hawkesby and Tim Wilson discuss 25 years of Mike on ZB and compulsory Shakespeare in school as they Wrap the Week.
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Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff announcement is being described as a shockingly radical shift in policy.
The US President announced 10% tariffs on almost all goods entering the US, including from New Zealand.
Many countries face much higher tariffs, including China with a combined 54% levy.
Former US Department of Treasury Economist Brad Setser told Mike Hosking it’s a fundamental break in the US’ post-WWII international economic policy approach and is an enormous political and economic risk.
He believes the magnitude of the tariff increase does threaten to push the US into a recession.
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The Health Minister's confident two of the Government targets will improve this year.
Health New Zealand data shows child vaccinations, cancer treatment times, and ED stay lengths have improved, but wait times for elective treatments and first specialist assessments have lengthened.
Simeon Brown told Mike Hosking the wait times are of particular concern.
He says the targets are in place to highlight these issues, and more money is being allocated to facilitate.
Brown told Hosking the elective boost aims to ease the situation by outsourcing electives to the private sector, and $50 million has been allocated to the boost.
The Health Minister also says problems at Gisborne and Nelson hospitals are being addressed.
Gisborne's facing critical staff shortages, while senior staff have spoken out with concerns about the level of care in Nelson.
Health New Zealand staff are now in Nelson, putting a plan together with local clinicians, while in Gisborne, jobs are being recruited for.
Brown says there are challenges at both hospitals, and solutions are on the way.
He says some unions are trying to make a lot of noise and is asking them to work with Health New Zealand.
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The Trade Minister is playing down New Zealand's chances of getting an exemption to Donald Trump's 10% tariffs.
The Trump administration says it's imposing the tariffs in response to our 20% tariff on US goods.
Todd McClay says our average tariff on US goods is actually less than 2%, and the 20% figure appears to be based on the trade balance between our countries last year.
He told Mike Hosking we may be able to correct their record, but we probably won't be able to change their minds.
McClay says even if New Zealand officials can make their case to the US counterparts, the minimum base rate for tariffs remains at 10%.
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Phil Goff is standing by his comments about US President Donald Trump as he arrives back in New Zealand.
The former High Commissioner to the UK was sacked from his role after questioning whether Trump understood history.
Goff says Trump's treatment of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy prompted the question.
He told Mike Hosking the comments weren't made flippantly.
Goff says he thought about them seriously and wanted to know why the Trump administration was appeasing Russia.
He also acknowledges his comments were risky, but didn’t expect to be fired for them.
Goff says he thought the comments were close to the line, without crossing it.
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- Visa fler