From parliament:
National reckons the finance minister has conceded a leaked proposal to change GST rules will soon be formally announced.
Last week, Nicola Willis, the National Party’s finance spokesperson, revealed allegedly leaked information about Labour’s election year tax policy. It included changes to GST that would see the blanket tax taken off produce. That’s something Grant Robertson has previously criticised as a “boondoggle”, a word that was repeated multiple times in parliament’s debating chamber this afternoon.
Earlier today, Robertson once again refused to comment on Labour’s unannounced tax plan. However, he said it was the “nature of politics” that MPs often had “to deal with things [they] don’t always necessarily 100% back at the start”.
Willis told The Spinoff that was a concession Robertson had been made to swallow a rat. “First he was made to swallow the petrol bandaid rat, then it was that he couldn’t do his fantasy wealth tax, and now he is having to swallow a GST policy that he himself has said will benefit supermarkets most,” Willis said. “The question you have to ask yourselves is: if Chris Hipkins can’t trust advice from his finance minister, then why should New Zealanders trust him with our economy?”
It was incredibly important for a prime minister to be able to trust their finance minister, Willis added, and it now appeared that Hipkins was “willing to completely ignore the long held views” of Robertson. “That’s very troubling and to me it paints a picture of a government in disarray,” she said.
As for whether there could be additional leaks from Labour ending up in the hands of the opposition, Willis said it wouldn’t surprise her. “I’ve no doubt that over the next days and weeks there are going to be more and more leaks coming out,” she said.
Hipkins said that didn’t concern him and he had no evidence to believe there had even been a leak. “Nicola Willis can claim whatever she likes, I’ve not seen any proof that she’s actually got a leak,” he told reporters before heading into the House this afternoon. “I’m not scared of it, I would have thought she might have spent a bit more time on her own policy. By mid-July in 2017 the Labour Party had released an alternative fiscal plan that was very clear about how we would pay for all of the commitments that we’ve made. Nicola Willis has yet to do the same, maybe she should focus on her own policy.”
Labour’s tax plan will be released in the coming weeks.