A key reason for standing down Michael Wood as transport minister was the fact he had told the Cabinet Office his shares in Auckland Airport would be sold, but then they weren’t, Chris Hipkins has said.
On his way to question time in parliament this afternoon, soon after he announced Wood would be losing his portfolio, the prime minister told media, “One of the challenges is that the Cabinet Office had been advised by [Wood] on a number of occasions that he was divested himself of the shares and that clearly hasn’t happened. That is quite a material issue.”
Explaining the error, Wood said, “So I started the process of selling the shares last year, basically came across a hitch which is that I needed information back from the share register that didn’t arrive, I think because they had an old email address and, in the reality of the fairly busy life that I have, I didn’t get back to it.
“Now, that’s not an excuse, that’s the honest answer.”
He felt Hipkins’ decision was “the appropriate one”, said Wood. “I accept it with good grace, I made a mistake here, I accept that, that’s on me and the appropriate thing that I do now is to fix that.”
He would be completing the sale of his airport shares in the coming days, said Wood.
On whether there was a way back in for Wood, Hipkins said, “I don’t think the transgression is one that is so significant that he should lose his job altogether, but clearly he does need to take the time to get it right.”
He hadn’t offered to stand down from the transport portfolio, said Wood, but he and Hipkins had had a “constructive discussion” during which the prime minister set out “clear expectations” about what Wood must do.
Wood said he was “enormously disappointed” to have to let go of the portfolio, and hoped he would be returned the transport portfolio after the shares were sold.
Meanwhile, Hipkins and acting transport minister Kieran McAnulty have faced questions in the house over the controversy. Asked by National leader Christopher Luxon why Wood had retained his Auckland issues portfolio when the council was actively considering selling its shares in the airport, Hipkins responded that Wood would have no role in conversations about that.
To a suggestion that Hipkins waited for his ministers to be “caught out publicly before reluctantly taking action”, the prime minister said, “I completely reject that.”