All signs pointed to yesterday being the first in-person meeting between the leaders of National, Act and New Zealand First.
Stuff’s Tova O’Brien has broken down how it all played out, but here’s the short version. Christopher Luxon arrived in the capital first and said very little. Then David Seymour arrived and gave the crucial tidbit: “We’re happy to meet anyone anytime, and we’re all in Wellington now, so that’s gotta make it easier.”
Throughout the day it slowly became apparent that wasn’t going to happen. Winston Peters never arrived (his own caucus didn’t know where he was, at first), and 12 hours later both Luxon and Seymour were back at the airport making a late night trip to Auckland. “Not everyone turned up, but hey, what can you do,” Seymour told reporters staked out at Auckland Airport.
Reports slowly emerged that it would actually be today that the three leaders got in a room together, but it would be in Auckland and not Wellington.
RNZ’s Jane Patterson said this morning that both Luxon and Seymour obviously believed Peters was going to turn up yesterday – but the NZ First leader was a “no show”.
“The plan today is to have that meeting and get the three leaders sitting around a table together,” she said. “There’s absolutely positioning and power-playing going on, we are dealing with a very experienced and strategic politician in Winston Peters.”
All the while this is happening, the caretaker Labour government keeps things ticking over. Outgoing trade minister Damien O’Connor has headed to San Francisco to attend Apec in Luxon’s place. The Spinoff’s Toby Manhire takes a look at what the Labour government is and isn’t doing while in caretaker mode.
While it’s a positive move forward to finally have all the leaders together, it’s been reported that this doesn’t mean a new government will be formed imminently. Patterson said it appeared the parties had signed off on common areas, they were now arguing over the wording of the coalition deal.
According to Politik’s Richard Harmon, National’s tax package remains the sticking point and there is reportedly “not yet a consensus on how to go forward”.
Luke Malpass in The Post said it was understood a new government may now not be formed until early next week, while Newshub’s Jenna Lynch reported that both Act and New Zealand First were unhappy with being “low-balled” by National during initial talks. “My sources are telling me not to read into it that a deal was imminent,” added Lynch.
But before any talk of a coalition deal can be put to bed, Peters first has to turn up. Let the games begin (again) – this time in Auckland.