Act’s David Seymour said just because it’s taking a while to form a new government doesn’t mean a deal won’t be reached.
Speaking to Newstalk ZB, Seymour said going back to the polls again would be a “nuclear option” and he was confident a coalition agreement could be reached in the coming days. “There’s a difference between being slow and being impossible,” Seymour said.
”We’re not quite at a 5 metre scrum mark but we’re well within the 22,” said Seymour, who believed the three parties had “narrowed” what disagreement remained.
Yesterday saw the first face-to-face between between Christopher Luxon, Winston Peters and Seymour (if you haven’t already, read Toby Manhire’s close analysis of that picture). It seems likely the trio will meet again today, though whether in Auckland or Wellington remains unknown.
Talks between the parties carried on into last night, though independent of one another. As the Herald reported, Peters returned to the Pullman Hotel later in the day and was seen emerging again at 8pm. He did not speak to reporters.
Seymour, while acknowledging that “everybody” wanted a quicker deal, said this morning that it was more important to have a government that could go the distance. If the government started to fall apart after two years, nobody would be happy a deal had been reached two days quicker, he said.
“No one of the three has the power to compel the other two to do it in a particular timeframe,” said Seymour, when asked if a deal was a few days away. But he remained confident it could be: “People have been waiting a long time… the rest can be done in that timeframe.”