The shock pay equity reform, a curious social media ban bill, and the lessons of Australia and the Trump effect.
An overhaul of the pay equity process has been whisked through parliament under urgency in little over 24 hours. The changes, which tighten the criteria for making a claim for workers in female-dominated sectors and summarily halt 33 existing claims in the pipeline, have prompted a major backlash, in part for their substance and in part for the decision to push the reform through without the usual consultation under a select committee process or regulatory impact statement.
In a new episode of our politics podcast Gone By Lunchtime, Annabelle Lee-Mather, Ben Thomas and Toby Manhire discuss the unexpected announcement, the rationale for urgency, and whether it’s too cynical to suspect the urgency might in truth be motivated by a a tricky budget a fortnight away, with suggestions these changes could save $10 billion over four years. And what of the response – is National risking the gains it has made among women voters?
Also on the pod: at around the same time the pay equity changes were announced, Christopher Luxon was enthusiastically backing another bill that would follow Australia in banning social media for under-16s. This wasn’t government legislation, however, but a member’s bill. What is with the surge in these bills as mechanisms for party campaigning? What is the polling telling politicians about young people and social media? And does Luxon know he’s the prime minister?
Plus: Australians have returned Labor and Albanese to power in what is being called a “bloodbath”, hot on the heels of Mark Carney’s big comeback in Canada. How big is the Trump effect, is it good news for the left or good news for incumbents, and how might New Zealand politicians look to seize upon the Trumpy moment?
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