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National former minister Andrew Bayly standing in a suit in a field, with right arm extended in a grabbing motion. Two colleagues flank him
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OPINIONPoliticsFebruary 24, 2025

When was the last time you ‘held’ your colleague?

National former minister Andrew Bayly standing in a suit in a field, with right arm extended in a grabbing motion. Two colleagues flank him
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Andrew Bayly’s resignation after a staffer altercation is another bleak reminder of the most basic workplace standards, writes Madeleine Chapman.

How are we back here again? Despite the global movements around workplace harassment, bullying and common decency, parliament seems to be the last place to get the memo that if in doubt, don’t touch your colleagues. Andrew Bayly, he of the L-on-the-forehead scandal, has resigned as minister of commerce and consumer affairs, and ACC, after an “animated” discussion with a staffer turned physical.

Bayly held a press conference today in a windy field in Pukekohe, with the sounds of a random man positively guffawing audible in the background. He prefaced his resignation announcement with the important context that he has been “impatient to drive change” in his ministerial portfolios. He then outlined how an “animated discussion” with a staffer had resulted in him “placing” his hand on their upper arm. As a result, Bayly had chosen to resign as a minister.

Placing one’s hand on the upper arm of another person is quite literally something only ever done when awkwardly offering comfort and you’re worried that the person’s not a hugger. It’s not certainly not on the list of things I would expect to happen during an “animated discussion”.

Bayly was immediately asked to be more specific. “I touched their upper arm,” he said, demonstrating by putting his right hand out in what looked, to my HR-untrained eye, like a grab. “So it wasn’t a grab?” asked Jason Walls, his finger firmly placed on the pulse. “It was- I held their arm,” Bayly clarified, demonstrating once again an action that looked eerily like a grab.

National former minister Andrew Bayly standing in a suit in a field, with right arm extended in a grabbing motion. Two colleagues flank him
What is this action called?

Bayly isn’t the only one to fail in having a “lively” discussion with staff that doesn’t turn physical. In 2018, Labour minister Meka Whaitiri stood down from her portfolios after an altercation with a staffer. It was later found “probable” that she “grabbed” and left bruises on a press secretary. And plenty of other ministers have been accused of bullying and verbal abuse. It is worth noting that after a damning 2019 review into parliament’s workplace culture, an update in 2023 determined the culture had “improved significantly“.

Evidently not enough because what are we doing here? Surely “don’t touch your colleagues” is a pretty foolproof north star for MPs? In fact, “don’t touch your colleagues” is a pretty foolproof north star for anyone with colleagues. This is not one of those “people in power and the public eye should have higher standards” moments. This is entry-level stuff.

What is perhaps most concerning is how many politicians seem unable to regulate their emotions enough to not get into physical altercations or resort to some form of bullying.

I joked just the other day that it felt like we were back in 2017 with all the men saying the stupidest things. I also joked about The Spinoff’s niche of wagging a finger at people. I’d barely finished the joke and here I am, finger at the ready (but not touching), to ponder whether it’s too much to ask that our elected leaders show the most basic decency when conducting their work. I’m not sure when you, dear reader, last had a disagreement with someone at your work, but I’d guess (read: hope) that you were not at risk of grabbing, holding, touching, placing your hand on them. It may seem like a reasonably small action as far as physical altercations go but anyone who has that urge when “animated” is a constant risk. Bayly may not know this about himself but the prime minister certainly should.

Bayly will likely continue to argue the difference between a “touch”, a “hold” and a “grab” but once you’re having that argument, you’ve already lost.

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A window with a taped circular emblem displays a sign resembling a gravestone that reads, "RIP USAID 1961-2025." Below it, there are a bouquet of white flowers and yellow flowers. The American flag is reflected faintly in the window.
Tributes are placed beneath the covered seal of USAID at its headquarters in Washington DC on February 7, 2025 (Photo: MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

OPINIONPoliticsFebruary 24, 2025

Who does the shutdown of USAID really hurt?

A window with a taped circular emblem displays a sign resembling a gravestone that reads, "RIP USAID 1961-2025." Below it, there are a bouquet of white flowers and yellow flowers. The American flag is reflected faintly in the window.
Tributes are placed beneath the covered seal of USAID at its headquarters in Washington DC on February 7, 2025 (Photo: MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

International aid serves a number of purposes beyond helping the world’s poor and vulnerable, and Trump’s decision will have implications for every one of us.

The decision by American president Donald Trump to disestablish the USAID – the world’s largest international aid organisation, with an annual budget of over US$40 billion – with the stroke of a pen is being lamented across the world. Spending on international aid might seem unjustified when many Americans are facing a cost of living crisis, but in reality that $40 billion a year in aid pales in comparison to the almost $900 billion the US spends on defence annually. And it is less than 1% of the federal government’s budget. In short, there are other places where belts could be tightened.

The closure of USAID cuts will undoubtedly hurt millions of people, but some of them may not be the ones you expect. As international development specialists, we identify three groups that will likely suffer as a result of this decision.

The first and most obvious group affected are the millions of recipients of forms of USAID globally. These are among the world’s poorest and most vulnerable. In Afghanistan, for example, where some families are so desperate they will sell a child in order to get some money to feed the rest of the family, the US has contributed more than US$3.7bn in humanitarian aid since the return of the Taliban, much through UN and other international organisations. The freeze on funds could leave nine million people with no access to healthcare and it has already shut down a major midwifery programme – mothers and babies will die.  

We are sickened and appalled at the hypocrisy in the world’s richest man freezing international aid flows from the world’s largest economy to millions of the world’s most vulnerable and poorest. This is what Elon Musk, Donald Trump’s austerity hatchet man, has done, shuttering the doors and the accounts of USAID, recalling all of its overseas employees, escorting more than 60 senior staff off the premises and sending thousands of its employees home on leave. USAID money contributes about a fifth to all of global development programmes that uplift or protect basic food, shelter, health and education of the world’s poorest families.

Aside from Musk’s more outlandish and hysterical claims about USAID being a “criminal organisation” (it is clearly not), “rotten to the core”, and that it supports terrorism (no, although the case of Afghanistan is complex), we could certainly list weaknesses and inefficiencies of USAID – as we could for any large aid programmes. The White House’s cherry-picked list of projects and programmes it objects to (while stunningly incorrect in several cases) still amounted to less than 0.01% of the USAID budget. But despite claims to the contrary, no large-scale abuse or fraud has been unearthed to date. Thus we suggest care is needed before “throwing out the baby/ies) with the bathwater”.

 

USAID does a huge amount of good globally through thousands of projects, large and small. There has been an immediate stop to some very good programmes in our region, from funding to build adaptive capacity for climate change, and the training and livelihood support for poultry farmers in the Eastern Highlands province of Papua New Guinea. In health there has been significant work across the Pacific with TB, malaria and HIV health programmes, and a polio vaccination programme in PNG that has immunised 3.1 million children and got on top of a major outbreak of the disease.

 The disestablishment of USAID is, as the American journalist Nicholas Kristof summarised pointedly, a case of “the world’s richest men take on the world’s poorest children”.

A second group that will be hurting are American citizens who have lost aid-related jobs and business. Tens of thousands of US citizens work as aid professionals, contractors or suppliers to USAID and its many programmes. The largest amount of donor funds are typically spent “at home”. In the US’s case, one estimate by a congressional research report was that two-thirds of US foreign assistance funds in 2018 were expended on US-based entities. Their generous donations of food aid to the World Food Programme come from purchasing vast quantities of grain from the Midwest: in 2024 the USAID spent $70m on commodities from Minnesota vendors alone.  As the Washington Post headline put it, “Gutting USAID threatens billions of dollars for US farms, businesses”. 

Our third identified group is… everyone else, including you! International aid serves a number of purposes beyond helping the world’s poor and vulnerable, and humanitarian support after natural disasters. Aid is an important source of “soft diplomacy” for donor countries. Among Pacific Island states, USAID had been ramping up its efforts to counter what the Biden regime saw as the significant threat of Chinese influence extending and deepening across the region. Aid funding has been used to counter China’s growing influence globally. Geopolitics has always shaped the focus and direction of international aid – it is never purely about helping the poor and most vulnerable – and to drop the ball in such a spectacular fashion has strategically opened up opportunity for others in various parts of the world, as well as increasing the need for defence spending. This potentially heightens the prospects for “hard diplomacy” and conflict such as we have seen in Ukraine and Gaza. 

Linked to this, the decision to eliminate a government agency by executive order undermines the rule of law in the United States, which in turn reduces the credibility of the US in international eyes. If the US can arbitrarily and immediately rip up bilateral contracts and agreements with countries, then so surely can these partner countries? This follows on from other Trump-instigated withdrawals of global agreements and arrangements – the Paris climate accord and the WHO – and taken together, we lose any sense of security that comes from an already eroding “global compact”.

And, finally, international aid connects us with the world. A former USAID director noted, “For much of the world population … the work of USAID makes up the primary (and often only) contact with the United States.”  Aid is relational, it builds, works off and succeeds because of relationships as an enduring two-way thing, not as a momentary, monetary one-way transaction. Through aid programmes and the hundreds of thousands of people working in the aid sector, people in the US – and in Aotearoa New Zealand – are connected to people in Panama and Samoa. We learn about each other’s perspectives. We are part of the humanitarian project that believes in doing our part to alleviate suffering and maintain human dignity. Aid helps us turn to each other as global neighbours, knowing who to approach and how to approach each other, especially when we need to talk to our neighbours. Such as when we worry about access to the Panama Canal, or when we feel embarrassed about running a navy ship aground in someone’s backyard.

If the aid budget is cut back in the world’s richest countries, we become ignorant of other communities’ lives. And if we do not want to know how our neighbours live and feel, we also become insignificant in their eyes. 

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