WAATEA NEWS COLUMN: Government quietly strangles off Treaty references
The Government’s desire to quietly strangle off Treaty references is a realisation on behalf of NZF and National that Māori bashing…

The Government’s desire to quietly strangle off Treaty references is a realisation on behalf of NZF and National that Māori bashing…

A Marxist, A Government Cabinet Minister, a Green MP, a Newspaper columnist and 2 business journalists all walk into…

Sean Plunket has said far worse than this, which is why the BSA complaint feels less like principle and more like bureaucratic theatre with a funding problem underneath.

Fuel prices explode, storms keep coming, and once again Māori communities are left to fend for themselves. Debbie Ngarewa-Packer joins 1-on-1 in 10 for a hard look at who pays when government planning collapses.

Fuel crisis. Political shake-ups. Election 2026 looming. This week’s Te Kaupapa doesn’t hold back.

When disaster hits, it’s not politicians on the frontline — it’s marae. The question is why we’re still not funding them like it.

A war spirals, storms hit harder, and fuel prices keep climbing — so where’s the leadership? This week’s Bradbury Group pulls no punches as politicians and commentators clash over who’s really paying the price.

Kill the watchdog — and what exactly replaces it? That’s the question no one serious is answering.

If you bankroll the fight, should you also pay the bill when it collapses?

Fuel shortages. Rising costs. Global war. Hipkins says we’re not ready — and that should worry everyone.