Lower Taxes, Less Waste,
More Accountability

Championing Value For Money From Every Tax Dollar

Labour’s Capital Gains Talk Signals a Tax Grab Fantasy

The Taxpayers’ Union is pushing back on comments from Labour leader Chris Hipkins, who has hinted that a capital gains tax might be back on the table despite the economy struggling under the weight of existing taxes.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“Labour is recycling a failed idea that New Zealanders have already rejected. A capital gains tax punishes investment, hits small business owners, and makes it even harder for hardworking Kiwis to get ahead.”

“Capital gains taxes are inherently taxes on savings, investments and the very things New Zealand needs to be able to grow the economy. They are inherently an unfair tax - taxing savings and retirement nest eggs over and over again for politicians like Chris Hipkins to flutter."

“If Chris Hipkins is serious about turning the economy around, he should rule out any new taxes. That’s the bare minimum Kiwis should expect right now.”

Wellington Mayoral Candidate Rob Gouldan Banned from Future Taxpayers’ Union Events After Disgraceful Behaviour

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union has today banned minor Wellington mayoral candidate Rob Goulden from all future events hosted by the Union and its affiliated student group, Generation Screwed, following his behaviour at tonight’s sold out Victoria University mayoral debate.

Executive Director Jordan Williams said:

“It’s been reported to me that Mr Goulden was aggressive and rude to our university student coordinators, and treated Taxpayers’ Union staff and volunteers disgustingly. That is totally unacceptable. Thankfully our student volunteers were there to show him the maturity he was lacking."

“We won’t tolerate that kind of behaviour, especially toward young people who care enough to engage in politics. If he tries to attend any of our future events, I have instructed our staff to call the Police” said Williams.

 Taxpayers’ Union Calls Out Green Party’s OIA Hypocrisy

 

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling out the Green Party’s hypocrisy, after it demanded on-board fishing camera footage from private operators continue to be made public under the Official Information Act while not backing reforms to extend transparency to their own MPs’ expenses.

Taxpayers’ Union Spokesman Rhys Hurley said:

“The Greens want footage from private property made public, but won’t even support opening their own books. You can’t demand transparency from others while shielding yourself from public scrutiny.”

“The Green Party of the past demanded greater transparency and accountability. Rather than using the OIA to bash those whose lifestyles they don’t agree with, let’s get back to a party which supports the public’s right to know where their money is going.”

“If any Green MPs believe transparency is still a virtue, they should lead by example and support extending the Official Information Act to Parliament. Open the Books for all, not just political targets.”

REVEALED: Creative NZ's LGNZ Talkfest - Time To Scrap the Arts Bureaucracy

 

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal through an Official Information Act request that Creative New Zealand spent more than $21,958 sponsoring and attending Local Government New Zealand’s SuperLocal 2025 conference.

As a “Silver Sponsor” of the event, CNZ spent $15,000 (excl GST) to a panel titled The Role of Local Government in Building Communities, which focused on arts and cultural investment. Creative NZ also sent four staff and two Arts Council members, with travel, tickets, meals, and sector networking costs adding another $6,958.22.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Creative NZ is the latest agency to chuck money at the never-ending bureaucratic conference circuit. New Zealanders are choosing between food on the table or paying the rent, yet their dollars were spent to wine and dine at LGNZ’s event.”

"Creative NZ’s pointless spend-up just won’t end, and this is just one example. Between chucking taxpayers’ cash into the lobbying merry-go-round and channelling money overseas, where’s the oversight?”

“Creative NZ clearly has more money than sense, and its time to cut the funding. Kiwis don’t need Wellington telling them what to watch, and they certainly don’t need Creative NZ telling councillors how to tell them what to watch.”

REVEALED: Oranga Tamariki Spin Department Hid $765,000 in $2.74 Million Comms Team

 

Only thanks to an anonymous tipper, the New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal through an Official Information Act request that Oranga Tamariki failed to disclose six additional comms staff at a cost of nearly $765,000.

We had previously revealed through the original OIA response, Oranga Tamariki’s supposed 14-man comms team at a cost of $1.97m. These newly found additional roles bring the total yearly salary bill to $2.74 million.

The six additional staff include:
-Manager, Content and Channels
-Advisor, Design
-Senior Advisor, Design
-Senior Web Advisor
-Senior Events and Engagement Advisor
-Social Media & Web Advisor
-Senior Video Content Producer

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Oranga Tamariki’s spin doctors might’ve fallen for their own spin, but this is more than just bad accounting. Oranga Tamariki told us their comms staff cost $1.97 million, but failed to mention a secret second team costing another three-quarters of a million.”

“These staff all report to the same Director of Communications and Media, with their roles covering social media, video production and event promotion. That’s comms work no matter what way you look at it."

”Apparently the Public Service Act doesn’t count these roles as comms-related because they’re “technical enablers”, so Oranga Tamariki didn’t tell us. If that’s the case, and official figures don’t count whole teams, does anyone actually know how many government spin doctors there are?”

“If you’re creating content, managing comms channels, or handling social media you’re working in PR. And if you’re doing it with taxpayers’ money the public has a right to know.”

“If even the OIA can’t get the full truth out of the Wellington Blob, who’s really running the show?” 

Double Dipping Tourist Tax: National’s Mt Cook Diversion

The Taxpayers’ Union is criticising the National Party’s newly-announced ‘foreign visitor charge’ for popular Department of Conservation sites, calling it a distraction from the real economic challenges facing the country.

Taxpayers’ Union Spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“We were expecting a real economic announcement at the conference, a plan to get the country moving. Instead, the Prime Minister’s big idea is to charge backpackers more to visit Mt Cook.”

“It’s just another example of National shifting deckchairs: symbolic, superficial, and totally disconnected from the scale of the economic challenges we’re facing."

“If Labour had proposed this, National would be tearing it to shreds. Instead, they’ve slapped a fresh label on an old idea which won’t fix DOC’s ballooning overheads or inefficient spending .”

“We already have an International Visitor Levy to fund tourism and conservation. Doubling up makes New Zealand look tourist-hostile and it opens the door to charging Kiwis next.”

“The Government should be cutting DOC waste, not taxing trampers at the trailhead.”

Infrastructure Blow Out, Northland Still Waits For Water

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling out the failed $18 million aquifer project in Kaitaia as just the latest example of big budgets, poor planning, and even worse delivery. A pattern confirmed by the New Zealand Infrastructure Commission, which has found the country is spending more than comparable nations while achieving less.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Whether it’s a billion-dollar tunnel or a rural water pipe, the story is always the same: we’re spending too much, and getting far too little.”

“In Kaitaia, locals were promised water resilience. What they got was a failed bore, blown budgets, and a council that never even checked if the plan would work before breaking ground.”

"The Infrastructure Commission’s findings back what taxpayers already know: it’s never been a funding problem, it’s a delivery problem."

“There’s no shortage of money. The shortage is in competence and accountability. Until councils and departments are forced to plan properly and deliver efficiently, we’re going to keep getting stitched up.”

"We need clear infrastructure records of what we own and its condition, enforced cost transparency, and consequences for councils and departments that fail to deliver value."

Rates Cap Supported by Lowest-Rates Mayor

The New Zealand Taxpayers' Union has today welcomed Whanganui Mayor Andrew Tripe's call for rates capping to be introduced in the future.

Taxpayers' Union Local Government Campaigns Manager, Sam Warren, said:

“We’re pleased to see more Mayors coming on board with rates capping, especially as the Cap Rates Now the petition has reached more than 30,000 signatures, calling for an end to excessive rates increases.”

“Achieving the lowest average rates increase, even below inflation, was the result of hard work and careful spending decisions. Mayor Tripe’s efforts set an example for every other mayor in the country.”

“Christchurch Mayor Phil Mauger also voiced his support for a cap on rates rises, who last month joined the Taxpayers’ Union and its supporters outside the LGNZ conference, where its membered councils discussed how they could fight such laws.”

“Well done, Mayor Tripe. Ratepayers across have had a gutsful of soaring rates from their councils, and are looking for leadership on the issue. As the Government presses closer with rates capping laws, we expect to see more mayors get onside with protecting ratepayers.”

𝐓𝐚𝐱𝐩𝐚𝐲𝐞𝐫𝐬’ 𝐔𝐧𝐢𝐨𝐧 𝐋𝐚𝐮𝐧𝐜𝐡𝐞𝐬 𝐂𝐚𝐦𝐩𝐚𝐢𝐠𝐧 𝐀𝐠𝐚𝐢𝐧𝐬𝐭 𝐃𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐲 𝐃𝐞𝐚𝐥 𝐁𝐞𝐭𝐰𝐞𝐞𝐧 𝐁𝐢𝐠 𝐁𝐚𝐧𝐤𝐬, 𝐀𝐍𝐙, 𝐀𝐒𝐁, 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐍𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐥 𝐏𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐲

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union has today launched a major campaign targeting Scott Simpson's Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Amendment Bill, which includes retrospective provisions that would extinguish a live class action brought by tens of thousands of bank customers against ANZ and ASB banks.

The campaign has been launched with National Party’s annual conference attendees being delivered love letters from the Big Banks to recognise their special relationship and bank bailout.

In the coming days, a digital advertising, billboard, and grassroots mobilisation campaign demanding that Finance Minister Nicola Willis and Minister of Consumer Affairs Scott Simpson drop the retrospective clauses from the Bill will be launched.

Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director Jordan Williams said:

“This is a disgraceful case of retrospective lawmaking that undermines the rule of law and destroys trust in New Zealand as a stable place to do business."

"Last month the NZ Herald reported that the Bill is a result of backroom discussions between the Government and the Aussie-owned big banks which excluded the consumer-side parties of the very class action litigation the Bill is intended to extinguish."

"Across the Tasman, the Aussie banks were hauled over the coals for misconduct and dishonest practises. But in Wellington, they are doing deals with the Beehive to be bailed out and 'protected' from consumer class actions. It's perverting the course of justice for tens of thousands."

"Not only does the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Amendment Bill run roughshod over the rule of law, it is specifically designed to bail out the powerful at the expense of ordinary Kiwis.”

“Tens of thousands of Kiwis are part of a live class action over alleged unfair fees. Instead of letting the courts do their job, Nicola Willis and Scott Simpson are stepping in to shut it down with the stroke of a pen. That’s not justice — that’s Parliament playing defence for its mates.”

The Union says the Bill makes a mockery of the Government’s own rhetoric about restoring New Zealand’s reputation as a safe, rules-based place to invest and do business.

“The same Ministers pushing the so-called Regulatory Standards Bill – which rightly warns against retrospective legislation – are now ramming through a bill that does exactly that. That's usually called hypocrisy.”

“When governments change the rules mid-litigation to protect the well connected, it sends a chilling message to investors, consumers, and taxpayers alike: the law in New Zealand is only as stable as the political connections of the people you're up against.”

Williams concluded:

“This campaign isn’t just focused at the Government. It’s to hold to account and expose the disgraceful behaviour of ANZ and ASB banks to undermine their own customers’ rights. This is about not just honesty and integrity and customer disclosures, but New Zealanders having the ability to enforce consumer protection law against the big end of town.”

“Either the Government walks the talk on stable, principled lawmaking, or they admit they’re no better than the last lot. Kiwis deserve better than this grubby stitch-up.”

The social media, digital and advertising campaign launches next week along with some more creative plans to ensure this bill gets the public scrutiny it deserves.

“Watch this space.”

REVEALED: The Report So Secret, You Can't Even Know Its Name

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal in response to an Official Information Act request that KiwiRail and the Minister of Rail have refused to so much as share the name of a Kiwirail briefing about underperforming rail lines.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Transparency is dying, with more and more obstruction and avoidance of true public scrutiny. If the public can’t even know what a document is called, we have a broken freedom of information regime.”

“When the public funds the rail network, they deserve to know what they’re getting for their money. Some redactions might rarely be needed, sure, but that doesn’t justify agencies cold-shouldering taxpayers just to make their own lives easier.”

"The refusal is part of a broader pattern of government agencies increasingly hiding behind vague legal exemptions, while offering no meaningful public interest justification."

“This proves what we’ve been saying for years: the Official Information Act has become a shield, not a window. We need reform and the Ombudsman to put agencies' feet to the fire, to ensure that public scrutiny isn’t treated as optional.” 

Taupō Water Deal Undemocratic and Unaccountable

The Taxpayers’ Union is urging Taupō District Council to reject a proposed cogovernance agreement with Ngāti Tūwharetoa over Lake Taupō and the Upper Waikato River, warning it hands control of major public resources to unelected decision-makers

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“This is more than a consultation framework, it gives real authority over water management to a small group without public oversight. That’s a dangerous precedent.”

“Ratepayers are being signed up to a long-term deal with unknown costs, unclear governance structures, and no opportunity to vote on it.”“Iwi involvement should not come at the expense of democracy. Decisions about public water must remain accountable to the public, not locked away behind closed doors.”

“Taupō‘s councillors need to slow this process down, demand transparency, and consult the public before locking in a deal that changes who’s really in charge of our waterways.”

The Taxpayers’ Union is calling for full disclosure of the agreement’s terms, independent legal advice, and public consultation before any vote is taken.

Taxpayers’ Union welcomes release of council performance metrics

The Taxpayers’ Union has today welcomed Minister Simon Watt’s release of local government performance metrics, enabling greater transparency for council performance.

Taxpayers' Union Local Government Campaigns Manager, Sam Warren, said:

“The release of these metrics has been widely anticipated. More transparency is essential in reining in council decision making.”

“The difficulty for ratepayers to get the full picture on how councils behave has always been a challenge, and many councils have enjoyed hiding behind layers of bureaucracy to prevent better scrutiny from ratepayers.”

“Without better scrutiny, councils have run roughshod particularly in recent years, spending money wastefully, and hiking rates excessively. For too long they’ve pushed their luck, which is why we’re seeing these performance metrics, as well as policies like rates capping on the agenda.”

“While there work to be done and no shortage of areas to reform, today’s release is a step forward in holding councils to account.”

DOC Parking Charges at Pancake Rocks Leaves Kiwis Paying Twice

 

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling out the Department of Conservation for introducing paid parking at Punakaiki’s iconic Pancake Rocks, saying the trial is not 'user pays', but gouging domestic travellers to visit our national parks.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“We already have a tourism levy that’s supposed to fund these exact places, plus additional taxpayer funding on top. So why are Kiwis now being hit with another charge just to park their car?”

“This isn’t about conservation, it’s about treating New Zealanders like walking wallets in their own country. DOC is double-dipping and locals are getting stung.”

"If DOC needs more money, it should look at how it spends its existing revenue. Their headcount exploded by 37 percent between 2017 and 2023, so is punishing families for stopping to admire a view the best option?”

"Scrap the parking charges, cut the backroom bureaucracy and stop punishing people for visiting when they’ve already paid for it."

Councils won’t be fixed with more bureaucracy

Former Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier told to the governance select committee that creating a new department for local government would solve many issues facing councils.

“Boshier is right in his assessment, that local government is not working well enough, but creating more bureaucracy is certainly not the solution.” said Sam Warren, Local Government Campaigns Manager for the Taxpayers’ Union.

“The role of the Ombudsman is to make sure things run smoothly by empowering elected officials in charge, which most will agree has not been done effectively in recent years.”

“As the sector anticipates reforms through the Minister’s ‘Systems Improvements Bill’, there’s real concern that it does not go far enough to see meaningful outcomes.”

“As the Bill takes shape, now is the time to get stuck in and make sure it’s everything it needs to be. Until then, calls from the former Chief Ombudsman to solve a problem with another problem should be seen for what they are; unhelpful.”

Former Minister of Revenue and Medical Doctor Join the New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union Board of Directors

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is pleased to announce the appointment of two new members to its Board of Directors: Hon. Stuart Nash and Dr John Harman. Their combined expertise strengthens the organisation’s leadership as it continues to champion lower taxes, less waste, and more accountability.

Stuart Nash, a former Cabinet Minister of Revenue and Member of Parliament, brings deep experience in public policy and governance. His insights from inside government will add valuable perspective to the Taxpayers’ Union’s advocacy for efficient public spending.

Dr John Harman, a seasoned business leader and healthcare expert, joins the board with decades of experience in management, innovation, and public health. He brings a strong commitment to transparency and performance-driven systems to further the Taxpayers’ Union’s mission.

Ruth Richardson, Chair of the Taxpayers’ Union, said:

"We are thrilled to welcome Stuart and John to the board, giving us a broader mix of representation as well as fresh activism. Their combined expertise in business and government will be instrumental in advancing our mission to give taxpayers a voice and hold decision-makers accountable."

Jordan Williams, Executive Director of the Taxpayers’ Union, added:

“We’re delighted to have Stuart and John on our board. They each bring significant experience and fresh insight to our board, strengthening our fight for accountable government and better value for every taxpayer dollar.”

Are Our Pints Too Pricey? Tamatha Paul Thinks So

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is backing Wellington Central MP Tamatha Paul in calling for cheaper beer, arguing a $5 pint is only possible by cutting alcohol excise taxes.
Taxpayers Union spokesman Rhys Hurley said:
"The price of a pint has increased by a total of 20.6 percent through excise alone in just four years, before even accounting for inflation."
"Not only is this causing further inflation but it is hampering hospitality's recovery from the lows of Covid lockdowns. Many businesses are on their last legs, if they haven't fallen over already."
"Instead of trying to slap more taxes and restrictions on the majority who safely consume alcohol, how about properly targeted interventions on those causing harm?"
"Paul has obviously seen the damage the tax has done to her electorate and the lack of people able to afford and enjoy a night out. It's time for the government to cut the booze tax and stop punishing people for enjoying themself."

REVEALED: $4.3 Million Keep It Real Campaign Logs Off

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal reveal through an Official Information request that the Department of Internal Affairs' Keep It Real Online campaign has cost taxpayers more than $4.3 million (excl. GST) since 2020. Despite the spending, there's little evidence of any measurable real-world impact.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“This is a classic bureaucrat fire-and-forget; spend millions on a slick campaign, then walk away without measuring whether it actually achieved anything.”

“People might remember the ads, but what they don’t know is what the Government spent making them and that they didn’t bother measuring the long-term impact.”

“We’re told the ads reached ‘two-thirds of parents’, but so could Lotto ads. Reach means nothing without results.”

“Government campaigns need clearly defined, auditable targets and measurable outcomes before launch not vague vibes and video views. If ACC can spend millions on a ‘Have a Hmmm’ campaign without showing it changed anything, it’s clear the whole public campaigns system needs a reset."

"When departments can’t show results, Ministers need to pull their funding and heads need to roll.”

Nicola Willis Is Again Fiddling at the Edges While Kiwis Pay the Price

The Taxpayers’ Union is accusing the Government of putting politics ahead of principle after they once again side with big banks, leaving ordinary New Zealanders and small businesses out in the cold.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“This Government is dodging the hard decisions and instead opting for cosmetic fixes that fail to address the real issues facing New Zealand. Whether it’s butter, bank fees or broken lending laws, Nicola Willis seems more interested in media-friendly headlines than making the tough, lasting changes Kiwis actually need.”

“Take the surcharges ban. It sounds good on paper, but it’s just another patch-up job. It doesn’t lower costs; it just pushes them on to small businesses and takes away their agency.”

“Or look at the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act changes. Instead of holding ANZ and ASB accountable for breaking the law, Willis changed the law retrospectively. While changes to the CCCFA were overdue, letting big banks off scot-free after breaking the law is not leadership, it’s cover for corporate wrongdoing.”

“Willis talks about economic responsibility, but where’s the action that actually shifts the dial? New Zealanders need a government focused on real, long-term change, not one fiddling at the edges while the big players get a free pass.”

“Who is standing up for the family-run dairy, the sole trader, or the mum at the checkout? Right now, it certainly isn’t Nicola Willis.”

REVEALED: Stats NZ’s $338,000 Survey Swag Bags

 

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal can reveal through an Official Information request that Stats NZ has spent $338,200 (exc. GST) over the past three years on branded giveaways and incentives such as gift cards, rewarding people for not responding to government surveys the first time.

The items handed out by field staff during household visits include:

  • 7,149 $20 gift cards for $143,000
  • 5,179 coffee mug packs for $52,261.
  • Notepads, pens, and fridge magnets for $93,533.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Statistics NZ have built a rewards scheme for being difficult. Say no to a survey the first time and you get a mug, magnet, or even gift cards.”

“This isn’t Stats NZ’s first time doling out more presents than Santa, with Warriors tickets, fuel vouchers, and food cards in the line-up for the 2023 census."

"This rort for people too lazy to fill out a form or answer the phone is an insult to those New Zealanders doing the right thing.”

“Their job is to collect data, not hand out freebies to people who won’t play ball. Refusing to co-operate with basic legal duties should come with a beefed-up fine, not a swag bag of treats and goodies.”

Willis Fails to Deliver: Taxpayers Still Paying for Bigger Public Service

The Taxpayers’ Union is slamming Finance Minister Nicola Willis for failing to deliver a leaner, more efficient public service, with new figures revealing that the public service is now larger than it was at the 2023 election, despite months of so-called ‘cuts’.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“With a structural deficit still baked into the Government’s books, taxpayers can’t afford a bloated bureaucracy and empty promises.”

“After months of announcements and rhetoric, the public deserves more than just headlines. There are more public servants now than at the 2023 election. Where are the actual reductions? Where are the savings? This isn’t fiscal discipline, it’s business as usual dressed up as reform.”

“If the Government is serious about delivering value for money, it needs to stop spinning and start shrinking the bureaucracy.”

“Nicola Willis was tasked by Christopher Luxon with ‘going for growth’ - but the only thing she’s growing is the very thing she promised to get on top of: the bureaucracy.”

Tauranga’s weak excuses to keep cocktail list a secret 'non-transparent'

The decision to withhold the list of invitees at a $40,000 private cocktail party, organised by Tauranga City Council to farewell its appointed commissioners, has been found unreasonable by the Chief Ombudsman.

Local Government Campaigns Manager for the Taxpayers’ Union, Sam Warren, said:

“At the end of the day, it’s about transparency, and there was none. Its a disgrace.”

“Strategically leaning on vague excuses to withhold information continues to be a big problem with councils, and much more needs to be done to improve access to information in thais space.”

“Ironically, the whole event was a $40,000 knees-up to celebrate former Tauranga commissioner Anne Tolley, who is now the chair of Transparency International – which receives funding from taxpayers. If we’re talking about transparency, how about we look at the financial aid the government throws at these so-called independent institutions?”

"It's a terrible look for Tauranga and its former commissioners. Those days were nothing to celebrate – and trying to keep the list from locals is incredibly crooked."

“Transparency shouldn’t have to be wrestled out of the Council – and now that the commissioners are long-gone, the public deserves much more accountability from the Chief Executive.”

DOC Reshuffle Fails to Deliver for Taxpayers

The Taxpayers’ Union is slamming the Department of Conservation’s latest staffing changes as another weak attempt to dodge real savings, saying the bureaucracy remains overstaffed and under-accountable.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf, said:

“After months of dragging their feet DOC has finally confirmed some actual job losses, but let’s not kid ourselves.”

We said it in May and we’ll say it again: this is optics over substance. DOC’s headcount exploded by 37 percent between 2017 and 2023, so they’re barely scratching the surface with these latest changes.”

“This isn’t bold reform, it’s damage control. Taxpayers were promised savings, not press releases and token trims. Every dollar spent propping up bloated departments is a dollar not spent on frontline conservation work or returning money to the pockets of hardworking New Zealanders.”

“The Government can’t fix the books with PR spin and half-measures. It needs to show some backbone and start cutting where it counts, and that means tackling the bloated back-office beasts like DOC head-on.”

Quigley has no option but to go: Reserve Bank Chair misled public and undermined trust

The Taxpayers’ Union is calling for the resignation of Reserve Bank Chair Neil Quigley, saying his position is now untenable following revelations in the last 24 hours that he misled the public over Adrian Orr’s departure as Governor.

Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director Jordan Williams said:

"This has gone beyond questions about the credibility of the Reserve Bank. It’s now a matter of honesty. Neil Quigley told New Zealanders that Adrian Orr’s departure was purely a personal decision. It now looks clear that was false - it was a negotiated exit in the context of appear to be serious allegations. Dr Quigley knew full well there was a catalogue of behavioural concerns, including some raised by the Minister of Finance, and yet he chose to hide that truth in false statements to the media."

”Documents now show that Quigley was involved in drafting a formal ‘Statement of Concerns’ about the Governor's conduct in late February. Despite this, he continued to brief the media and public in a manner that appear designed to mislead, saying it was “just a personal decision” by Mr Orr to resign.

“Employment law may justify some discretion in what can be disclosed publicly, but it can never justify dishonesty. Dr Quigley appears to have knowingly misled both the media and Parliament. That’s indefensible,” said Williams.

“And the Bank’s hiding behind ‘privacy’ in the context of this matter relating to one of the most important public offices in New Zealand is totally self-serving. Public interest clearly trumps the private interest concerns. And Quigley’s public comments that suggest OIA responses are being prepared by the bank on the basis of what the Dr Quigley “feel[s] the public needed to know” demonstrates a contempt for freedom of information law.

The Taxpayers’ Union says that this mess is also a test for the Public Services Commissioner.

"This goes to the heart of integrity in the public sector and holding public office holders and chairs of public boards to a standard of basic honesty and transparency. If those responsibilities are to mean anything, then it must apply here. Labour should be holding the Minister out to dry.”

“Mr Quigley has failed the most basic test of public leadership: telling the truth. His continued presence at the helm of the Reserve Bank Board undermines public trust. He must resign – or be removed by the Minister.”

NEW POLL: The best (and worst) big-city mayors

 

For the first time since June 2024, Christchurch Mayor Phil Mauger takes the top spot as the country's most popular metropolitan mayor, after a 19-point surge this quarter.

Commenting on this, Taxpayers' Union spokesman James Ross said:

"Christchurch Mayor Phil Mauger backed rates capping, and in that same period surged 19 points to become the most popular big-city mayor. If that's not an endorsement of rates capping, I don't know what is."

"Local body elections are less than three months away. Any candidates looking to boost their appeal might do well to follow Mayor Mauger's example by putting ratepayers' needs front-and-centre."

"Mayor Brown remains steadily well-liked, no doubt thanks to the fourth-lowest rates hikes in the country over the last three years. And even Tory Whanau has seen a boost since announcing she'd step aside - all in all, everyone's a winner this poll."

           

The latest Taxpayers' Union-Curia poll ranks New Zealand's three metro mayors by their net approval, and tracks their approval over time.

The results are based on a series of monthly polls across New Zealand. Because the sample sizes for Auckland, Christchurch, and Wellington are larger, trends are able to be deduced over time.

The full results can be found at www.taxpayers.org.nz/mayors_0725

Mayor Council Net Approval (July 2025)
Wayne Brown Auckland +16
Phil Mauger Christchurch +19
Tory Whanau Wellington City -18

Taxpayers’ Union Endorses Green Party's Local Government Rates Policy

The Taxpayers’ Union is endorsing the Wellington Green Party local candidates’ and independent Wellington Mayoral candidate Alex Baker’s policy to shift local government rates to be solely based on land and not tax capital improvement as part of rates.

Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director Jordan Williams said:

“The Greens are right on this one. Taxing land, rather than housing and development on land, creates the right incentive of avoiding land banking or not putting land to its most productive use, such as housing."

“The current rates regime employed by most councils sees rates as a tax on housing and the very developments that make cities great places to live.”

“The government is currently proposing a series of improvements to local government – including adopting the Taxpayers’ Union’s call for capping rates. Local Government Minister Simon Watts should reach over the aisle and grab this phenomenal policy to realign rates as a tax on land for services provided to a property, rather than operating as a tax on improvement.”

“It is sad to see Ray Chung further disgrace himself by coming out against this policy. We’d urge him to reconsider and put policy ahead of partisanship.”

New Plymouth Council dodges accountability following rates blunder

An external review into New Plymouth District Council has revealed a lack of financial reporting knowledge as the cause of its recent rates blunder. Mayor Neil Holdom says he has taken ‘full responsibility’ for the error, but still has no plans to resign.

Sam Warren, Local Government Campaigns Manager for the Taxpayers’ Union, said:

“As far as mistakes go, it’s about as serious as it gets. The mayor taking responsibility is only an empty gesture of faux martyrdom. What it means is that no one will be held accountable for such an expensive blunder.”

“The question needs to be asked, what does it take to be fired in this circus? We deserve better, and ratepayers shouldn’t be on the hook for what seems to be pure ineptitude by council.”

“As councillors sit down to try find more than $3 million in their budget, ratepayers will be asking why more effort wasn’t made to find savings in the first place and reduce the burden of potentially double-digit rates increase. Now is the time for rates capping, not later.”

REVEALED: $218,000 Reo App Free-for-All Across Government

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal through Official Information request that seven government departments and councils have spent $218,012 developing their own separate Māori language and cultural training apps despite the existence of a national Māori Language Commission and multiple taxpayer-funded training programmes already in place.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“We’ve got a Māori Language Commission, we’ve got staff training programmes, we’ve got online learning tools - so why is every agency now building its own apps?”

“This is a perfect example of bureaucratic duplication. Every department wants its own badge, its own brand, its own slice of the cultural competency pie, all funded by the public purse.”

“Some of these apps cost more than $35,000 and reached fewer than 2,000 people. Waikato Regional Council knew other apps already existed before building its own. That’s not helping Māori, it’s just self-indulgence.”

"With this many apps found via tips alone, imagine how many more exist. A centralised, shared platform for the public service instead of this wasteful agency-by-agency approach is needed."

"We don’t need seven apps, we just need one that works." 

Councils Fuel the Cost-of-Living Crisis: Rates Caps Needed Now

 

Responding to Statistics New Zealand’s announcement that annual inflation has climbed to 2.7 percent, Taxpayers’ Union spokesman James Ross said:

“Councils are driving a cost-of-living crisis. The latest figures show annual inflation hitting 2.7 percent, and more inflation pain is on the way next quarter as the latest round of rates hikes kick in.”

“We saw this last year when Statistics NZ confirmed that more than half of the Q3 inflation spike came from council rates alone. That clearly wasn’t a one-off, as ratepayers have been hammered with a 34 percent average rates increase over the past three years.”

“This is a vicious cycle. Councils hike rates, that drives up inflation, which delays interest rate cuts, and households get squeezed from both ends.”

“The message is clear: councils won’t stop unless they’re made to. Capping rates is no longer just a nice idea, it’s essential if we want to get inflation down and take pressure off Kiwi households.”

More Delays, More Waste: Time To Scrap National Ticketing

The Taxpayers’ Union is responding to news the $1.4 billion National Ticketing Solution provider Cubic has had its credit rating dropped, in addition to falling behind targets due to technical complications with the project.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“How many more red flags does the Government need? Instead of choosing proven, off-the-shelf systems already working in cities across Australia and the world, they handed the job to a defence contractor to build something custom.”

“Off-the-shelf systems that accept contactless payments and mobile wallets are already up and running in dozens of cities. They’re cheaper, faster to roll out, and more reliable. There’s no reason we can’t have that here while keeping existing discount cards for students, seniors, and others.”

“Despite plans to throw more than a billion dollars at this white elephant, commuters are still stuck waiting for basic features like tapping on with a bank card. Meanwhile, bureaucrats and consultants continue to cash in.”

“The Government needs to cut its losses. Stop pretending we’re building something world-leading. Keep the discount system, but switch to technology that already works and that people already use every day.”

REVEALED: New Plymouth Attendance Records Expose Gaps on the Council Bench

 

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal through a Local Government Official Information and Meetings Act request that some New Plymouth District councillors have missed dozens of official meetings. Released attendance records show multiple councillors regularly giving no apology at all for absences, despite being paid to represent ratepayers.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Wagging work wouldn’t fly in the private sector, and it shouldn’t when ratepayers are forking out tens of thousands for councillors who don’t even show the respect of apologising for not turning up."

“Local government isn’t just a side-hustle for the lucky few, and the bare minimum ratepayers expect of their elected officials is to show up. If councillors can’t - or won’t - attend the meetings, then they shouldn’t take the pay.”

“This needs to be a wake-up call for restoring basic expectations in local government. Ratepayers need recall elections so they’re not stuck waiting three full years to sling out councillors who won’t do the job they’re paid for.” 

FamilyBoost or Fiscal Blowout? Taxpayer Handouts Shouldn’t Go to the Top Earners

Responding to news that the Government is extending childcare subsidies to families earning up to $229,100 a year, the Taxpayers’ Union is calling the move completely out of touch.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“If you're pulling in nearly double the average household income, you do not need a handout from other working taxpayers to help pay for daycare. The average household income is around $120,000.”

“It’s not often we find ourselves agreeing with the CTU and Craig Renney, but they’re absolutely right to call this out. The Government should be focusing support on families genuinely doing it tough, not those who are objectively well-off by any national measure.”

“The whole point of FamilyBoost was to ease pressure on low- and middle-income families. Creep the threshold high enough and suddenly it’s just free cash for the comfortable.”

“If the Government thinks someone on $229,000 needs help with childcare, maybe they should spend a day living on the median household income instead. When you're earning more than $200k, taxpayers don’t need to be picking up the bill.”

Unacceptable: Blunder to cost New Plymouth ratepayers $3 million

A significant blunder in New Plymouth’s annual plan, described as a ‘typo’, could see ratepayers pay more than $100 this year than initially indicated.

Sam Warren, Local Government Campaigns Manager for the Taxpayers’ Union, said:

“It’s hard to understate how much of a cock-up this is. Ratepayers deserve far better attention to detail as they face even higher rates than already forced on them.”

Released earlier this week, the Rates Dashboard showed an average increase this year of 8.39 percent across the country for the year. New Plymouth’s mistake could push that average up to 8.79 percent, depending on how the council reacts.”

“Rather than add costs on top of their already high rates, Council needs to do right by their ratepayers and search for the savings in the budget. How can the council expect ratepayers to budget when they can't do it themselves?"

"This whole bungle is why we need to Cap Rates Now and get Councils focused on the bottom line. More than 29,000 Kiwis have signed the petition, demanding big change in how our councils are run."

Rates caps can’t wait for councils to fix themselves

 

Commenting on ACT leader David Seymour’s remarks that rates caps should wait until local government costs are under control, Taxpayers’ Union spokesman James Ross said:

“Spiralling rates are one of the biggest drivers of the cost-of-living crisis, with the average bill ballooning 34 percent in just three years. Ratepayers can’t afford to sit around waiting for councils to fix themselves.”

“Local government won’t rein in its own spending until it’s made to. The fact LGNZ is planning a ratepayer-funded campaign to block rates caps tells you everything you need to know.”

“If the Government wants to get costs under control, it should scrap councils’ power of general competence at the same time and get them back to doing the basics well. It’s as simple as that, no excuses needed.”

“Ratepayers are behind Local Government Minister Simon Watts and his plans to have caps in place before Christmas. Over 29,000 New Zealanders have already signed the petition, now is the time to cap rates.”

The Pork Barrel Casino: More Than Half of Provincial Growth Fund Loans at Risk

 

The Taxpayers’ Union is calling out Crown Regional Holdings (formerly the Provincial Growth Fund) after a new report revealed more than 54 percent of its $257 million loan book is at risk of default or impairment and three more recipients have gone into liquidation since the report was finalised.

Taxpayers’ Union Spokesman Rhys Hurley said:

“This isn’t economic development, it’s taxpayer roulette. When more than 54 percent of your loan book is at significant risk, you’re not investing, you’re gambling with taxpayers money.”

“If the chair of this group says that no bank would go near these projects, why is the Government stepping in with its chequebook drawn? The PGF was always about pork barrel politics, picking winners for political convenience, not economic merit.”

“The days of pork barrel politics have gone on too long, it’s time to shut the casino down.”

Local Government New Zealand Hits New Low

Responding outside the Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ)'s Annual General Meeting this morning, where 82 percent of members voted to mount a ratepayer-funded campaign against the Government and the Taxpayers Union's efforts for rates capping legislation, Taxpayers' Union Executive Director, Jordan Williams, said:

"LGNZ are gaslighting ratepayers. So desperate to defend rates having gone up by more than 34 percent over the last three years – two and a half times the level of inflation – they now plan to spend ratepayer money to fight ratepayers."

"This is a middle finger from LGNZ, not just toward ratepayers, but towards Local Government Minister Simon Watts and Prime Minister Christopher Luxon for trying to get the cost of living under control."

"LGNZ is nothing but a left-wing Labour Party political campaign. Any pretence of political neutrality or moral authority has vanished with this vote."

"Tens of thousands of Kiwis have signed the petition to Cap Rates Now."

"At 11am this morning local ratepayers will be protesting LGNZ's decisions outside the Christchurch Convention Centre. Minister for Local Government Simon Watts will be invited to address the crowd."

Council reforms announcement a 'welcome course of travel' - devil is in the details

The Minister for Local Government has today announced plans to refocus councils through the Local Government (System Improvements) Amendment Bill to Parliament.

Sam Warren, Campaigns Manager for Local Government at the Taxpayers’ Union, said:

“The announcement is a welcome the course of travel to improve a desperately broken sector. But the devil is in the details and until we see what’s under the hood, it’s impossible to know how far the Bill actually goes.”

“It’s important the Bill sufficiently reins in councils to  focus on just the basics, and make sure that future rates increases are kept as low as possible for households.”

“Inspiration can be found in the Building Better Councils briefing paper, which sets the bar for true council reform. Policies like rates capping and the removal of general competence from councils are non-negotiable in bringing in effective change to Local Government.”

"Rates are out of control, and Councils have been exposed in the Rates Dashboard that shows how dire the situation is for struggling Kiwis."

“We cannot afford half-measures when rates have soared by more than two-and-a-half times the rate of inflation in just three years. More than 28,000 Kiwis have signed the Cap Rates Now petition in response to these excessive increases, and are demanding to see change in local government."

2025 Rates Dashboard Exposes Out of Control Rates Burden

The Taxpayers’ Union has today launched the 2025 New Zealand Rates Dashboard at RatesDashboard.nz

The Rates Dashboard is for ratepayers to track and compare their council's annual and cumulative rates increases with councils across New Zealand. It shows the average cumulative rates increase over the current three-year council term is an astonishing 34.4 percent – more than two and a half times inflation over the same period. The average for 2025 alone is 8.39 percent.

Local Government Campaigns Manager, Sam Warren, said:

"The dashboard shows that the average Kiwi household now faces a rates bill more than a third higher than just three years ago. Over the same timeframe, inflation has been just 13.7 percent.”

"This year alone, the average rates increase is 7.4 percent - that’s still nearly three times the current 2.5 percent inflation rate." 

"Ratepayers can see how their council compares at RatesDashboard.nz."

“These numbers represent real pain being felt by ratepayers, including reports of ratepayers being forced out of their homes. They show why UK or Australian-style rates capping is so urgently needed. Councils should be forced to keep rates under the level of inflation unless approved by local referenda.”

“More than 28,000 Kiwis have signed the Cap Rates Now petition and looking at the Rates Dashboard, it's no wonder ratepayers are angry and LGNZ know it's in trouble."

NOTES TO EDITORS:

The Taxpayers' Union 2025 Rates Dashboard can be found at RatesDashboard.nz

The top ten highest cumulative rates increases over the current three-year electoral term are:

  • West Coast Regional Council – 65.57%
  • Greater Wellington Regional Council – 54.67%
  • Taranaki Regional Council – 51.02%
  • Queenstown-Lakes District Council – 50.23%
  • Hastings District Council – 48.76%
  • Central Otago District Council – 47.95%
  • Wellington City Council – 47.03%
  • Upper Hutt City Council – 46.92%
  • Gore District Council – 46.60%
  • Otago Regional Council – 45.76%

 
The top ten highest rates increases for 2025 are:

  • Clutha District Council – 16.59%
  • Upper Hutt City Council – 15.78%
  • Hamilton City Council – 15.50%
  • Waipa District Council – 15.50%
  • Hastings District Council – 15.00%
  • Selwyn District Council – 14.20%
  • Grey District Council – 13.73%
  • Queenstown-Lakes District Council – 13.50%
  • Westland District Council – 13.20%
  • Taranaki Regional Council – 12.90%

REVEALED: Oranga Tamariki’s $2 Million PR Team – No One Paid Under $100K

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal, through a Official Information Act request, that Oranga Tamariki is burning through $1.97 million a year on salaries for a 14-person communications team.

Every single one of these staff earn over $100,000.

The team includes media advisors, senior comms managers, and a organisational communications manager.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Oranga Tamariki is drowning in PR while kids fall through the cracks. Nearly $2 million on spin doctors, each on over $100k, is funding not going to social workers, caregivers, or kids in crisis.”

“This isn’t about informing the public, it’s about controlling the narrative. Taxpayers aren’t funding care, they’re funding damage control.”

“A bloated comms team paid at least 30 percent more each than the median wage would be bad enough in a company, but in a government agency meant to protect vulnerable children, it’s obscene.”

“A return to 2017 public service numbers is the only way to stop the Wellington bloat. It was good enough for John Key and Bill English, it’s time for Luxon and Willis to follow their lead.” 

NEW POLL: New Zealand First Surge, National Regain Lead

Good news for the Coalition as they extend their lead over the Centre-Left bloc this month, with National taking back the top spot from Labour in this month's Taxpayers' Union-Curia Poll.

For the first time in a Taxpayers' Union-Curia Poll, New Zealand are the third most supported party, leapfrogging both the Greens and ACT.

The poll, conducted between 02 and 06 July 2025, shows National gain 0.4 points to 33.9 percent, whilst Labour drop 3.2 points to 31.6 percent.

New Zealand First gain 3.7 percent to 9.8 percent, whilst ACT remain unchanged on 9.1 percent. The Greens gain 1.2 points to 9.4 percent, while Te Pāti Māori gain 0.2 points to 3.5 percent.

Headline results and more information about the methodology can be found on the Taxpayers' Union's website at www.taxpayers.org.nz/pollnztu_20250710

For the minor parties, TOP is on 1.2 percent (-0.6 points), New Conservatives on 0.5 percent (-0.2 points), and Outdoors and Freedom is on 0.1 percent (-1.0 points).

This month's results are compared to the last Taxpayers' Union-Curia Poll conducted in June 2025, available here at www.taxpayers.org.nz/2025ju_polldatanztu 

The combined projected seats for the Centre-Right of 65 is up 3 seats from last month. The combined seats for the Centre-Left is down 3 seats to 57. On these numbers, the Centre-Right bloc could still form a Government.

National remains on 42 seats again this month, while Labour drops 5 seats to 39. New Zealand First gain 4 seats to 12, while the Greens gain 2 to 12. ACT drops 1 to 11, while Te Pāti Māori remain unchanged on 6 seats.

Cost of Living overtakes the Economy more generally as voters' top issue, rising 3.5 points to 21.6 percent. Economy drops 1.1 points to 19.1 percent and Health is in third place on 13.3 percent (+1.4 points).

Commenting on the results, Taxpayers’ Union Spokesman James Ross said:

“Cost of living is voters’ single biggest concern, and housing costs – particularly council rates – are the biggest contributor to that pressure.”

“With councils slapping ratepayers with, on average, another 8.71 percent rates hike, Shane Jones’ call to scrap regional councils is clearly cutting through.  National Ministers backing rates capping appears to also be shoring up a boost in the centre-right bloc.”

Building Better Councils

Rates are soaring, transparency is declining, and too many councils are distracted from their core tasks. Whether it’s funding vanity projects, hiring communications staff instead of fixing potholes, or embarking on ideological crusades, councils are too often putting their own agendas ahead of the ratepayers they are supposed to serve.

The numbers speak for themselves. Council debt has ballooned in the last decade, and last year alone, average residential rates increased by almost 15 percent across the country. And despite all their spending, public satisfaction with council performance is falling. Infrastructure is failing, planning processes are sluggish. As a result, voter turnout in local elections continues to decline.

New Zealanders deserve better.

The proposed solutions in this paper are not radical, but are intended to reduce waste and improve performance across the sector. Local government should be lean, transparent, and focused. It should deliver high-quality services at a reasonable cost and be held accountable when it doesn’t.

These reforms are a roadmap to achieving that. This is how we build better councils.

Tauranga’s Mayor Needs To Collaborate, Not Amalgamate

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling out Tauranga Mayor Mahé Drysdale for pushing amalgamation across the Bay of Plenty, as combining councils means less local control and higher costs, not more efficiency.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Amalgamation is always sold as a cost-saving silver bullet but the Auckland Super City resulted in the opposite. Bureaucracy grew, accountability reduced, and ratepayers now pay more for less.”

“Local control gets replaced by centralised committees, local voices get drowned out, and local residents lose the ability to hold the ease of holding their representatives accountable. It’s not reform it’s consolidation dressed up as progress.”

"Tauranga residents already face a Crown-appointed commission with no democratic control. Bigger bureaucracies don’t deliver better outcomes, they just get better at wasting money.”

"The real solution is cutting waste, a greater use of shared services and capping rates, not stripping local communities of their say."

Far North double-digit rates increase calls for action on rates capping

The New Zealand Taxpayers' Union is criticising Far North District Council following a 10.95 percent rates increase, just a notch below the 11.3 percent initially proposed.
Taxpayers’ Union Campaigns Manager for Local Government, Sam Warren, said:
“These double-digit rates increases have become the norm across New Zealand, and its unacceptable.”
“We cannot commend the Council for such a piddly tweak to their proposal. What we need is bold action to cut wasteful spending and get back to basics.”
“Excessive rates increases continue to drive the cost of living and households are hurting. People shouldn't have to choose between paying their rates or paying for their groceries.”
“Meanwhile, Local Government New Zealand are planning to mount a ratepayer-funded campaign against rates capping laws, which are used effectively overseas to protect ratepayers."
“The petition to Cap Rates Now has more than 28,000 signatures, and it’s growing every day. Rates capping laws will rein in councils to get them focused on spending money sensibly, and do away with the nice-to-haves.”

‘Another gone, more to follow’ as Waikato Regional Council ditches LGNZ

The Taxpayers’ Union has praised Waikato Regional Council for its decision to withdraw its membership to Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ) citing costs, relevance, and left-leaning politicalisation.

Sam Warren, Local Government Campaigns Manager for the Taxpayers’ Union, said:“Councils have woken up to how disconnected LGNZ are from reality. Their six-figure memberships provide no value to ratepayers and, despite ongoing denial, the organisation has turned out to be little more than a mouthpiece for left-wing politics and activism.”

Last week the Taxpayers’ Union uncovered secret plans from LGNZ to mount a campaign against rates capping - and to pay for it with ratepayer funds. Attacking locals with their own money isn’t just dirty, it’s morally bankrupt.”

"LGNZ's attacks have only sparked more urgency to Cap Rates Now, which has gained more than 28,000 signatures from Kiwis wanting to see councils reined in."

“Waikato Regional is now the eighth council to pull out of LGNZ - and rumours are swirling that more are to come. As the dominos fall, we only ask that the last council to cut its membership with LGNZ remembers to turn off the lights.”

Reserve Bank Holds OCR, But Councils Keep Piling On the Pressure

Commenting on the Reserve Bank’s decision to hold the Official Cash Rate at 3.25 percent, Taxpayers’ Union Spokesman James Ross said:

“Housing is the biggest driver of the cost-of-living crisis, and runaway rates bills are making it worse. Just weeks after councils pushed through hikes averaging 8.71 percent, households are at breaking point.”

“Interest rates are already dragging down economic growth, but the Reserve Bank has little choice but to keep doing damage while rising council rates continue to fuel inflation in the background.”

“This pause in the OCR should be a wake-up call. If the Government is serious about easing cost-of-living pressures it has to cap rates hikes to inflation, starting now.”

Bureaucrats Paid around 30 Percent More Than Kiwis And Still Unhappy

 

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling out the public service after the release of the 2025 Public Service Census, which reveals widespread dissatisfaction among government workers, despite enjoying average salaries of $101,700 - around 30 percent more than the average Kiwi.

According to the census:

  • Only 34 percent of public servants are satisfied with their pay
  • Just 30 percent believe their pay reflects their performance
  • Only 44 percent are confident that public servants get jobs based on merit

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“This is what life in the Wellington bubble looks like - being vastly overpaid and still complaining taxpayers aren’t giving you enough. Ordinary New Zealanders are battling the cost of living while the public service is bloated, overpaid, and still thinks it’s hard done by.”

“Add in the fact less than half believe their colleagues earned their jobs through merit and the Public Service Census should terrify anyone who believes in a capable, cost-effective public service. With still more than 15,000 extra bureaucrats since 2017, Ministers need to dig deep into this census and root out the hangers-on who don’t deserve their bloated salaries.”

“The public service exists to serve the public, not be a plush make-work scheme. Tying bureaucrats’ wages to their performance would finally deliver some value for money, and be a much-needed wake-up call for the Wellington blob.” 

Taxpayers’ Union Applauds Christchurch Mayor Backing Rates Cap

 

The Taxpayers’ Union is welcoming Christchurch Mayor Phil Mauger’s support for the campaign to cap annual council rates increases, and labelling him a 'ratepayer hero'.

Taxpayers’ Union, Investigation Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Councils have been using ratepayers as a bottomless ATM. It’s refreshing to see a mayor finally admit that the current model is broken and something needs to change.”

“Christchurch’s rates have gone up nearly 25% over the past three years far outpacing inflation. Ratepayers aren’t getting 25% more value. They’re getting bloated budgets, pet projects, and everything else no one asked for.”

"Mayor Mauger’s suggestion of a 5% rates cap is a welcome step, but anything above inflation is still a pay cut for ratepayers."

“Councils won’t make tough choices until they’re made to. Rate Caps Now does exactly that.”

"But at a time when LGNZ is planning a sneaky campaign to use ratepayer money to lobby against and undermine Simon Watts' proposal to cap rates, it's refreshing to see that the local government sector still has true leaders who stand on the side of fiscal prudence and affordable rates. A ratepayer hero in the Garden City."

Even Out of Government, Labour Want to Tax You More

Labour leader Chris Hipkins has come out in opposition to rates capping, despite rates bills soaring 43.69 percent since 2022.

Responding to this, Taxpayers’ Union spokesman James Ross said:

“As if trying to rob local control through Three Waters wasn’t bad enough, now Labour are taking another stab at ratepayers by trying to force them to swallow year after year of massive rate hikes. Labour’s obsession with big government and bigger bills clearly hasn’t gone away.”

“Despite years of people doing it tough through a cost-of-living crisis, Hipkins thinks stopping councils from bleeding families dry is a bad idea. But with 28,000 people already backing the Cap Rates Now petition, ratepayers clearly disagree.”

“Rates caps mean councils getting back to doing the basics well: roads, pipes, rubbish. Wasting ratepayers’ hard-earned cash on vanity projects and spin doctors has to stop, and rates caps are the answer.”

Reserve Bank or Wellness Retreat? Staff Racking Up 100 Days Out of Office

Information revealed by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand shows staff are cashing in on generous perks, with some out of the office for nearly 100 days a year while taxpayers foot the bill.

New figures reveal 70 percent of staff work from home at least one day a week. Employees get five weeks’ annual leave, can buy three more at two percent of their salary, and receive 15 days of wellness leave. 

In the last year alone, the Bank spent $535,000 on wellness perks like gym memberships, $58,000 on home office subsidies, and close to $20,000 on morning teas.

Taxpayers’ Union Spokesman James Ross said:

“No wonder staff numbers have blown out 2.5 times since 2018. When they’re barely in the office, racking up perks, and getting nearly 100 days off a year, who wouldn’t want to join the gravy train?”

“The numbers speak for themselves. While staff are off-site, taxpayers are footing the bill for gym memberships, morning teas, and extended holidays.”

“The Reserve Bank has a job to do, and it can’t do that whilst it’s roleplaying as a wellness retreat. It’s no great surprise RBNZ’s failures have seen the economy hit a brick wall.”

“The Government put their foot down in September last year, telling Wellington it’s time to get back to work. RBNZ need to get the memo or find new jobs.”

REVEALED: LGNZ’s secret campaign to attack ratepayers with their own money

The Taxpayers’ Union has uncovered previously secret plans from Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ) to mount a full-scale public campaign against rates capping —paid for with ratepayers’ own money.

“It’s shameless stuff from LGNZ, attacking ratepayers with their own money,” said Sam Warren, Local Government Campaigns Manager for the Taxpayers’ Union.

“Documents provided to the Taxpayers' Union expose that LGNZ is seeking support from councils to fund a nationwide political campaign against rates capping, despite years of excessive rates hikes and overwhelming public support for the measure to limit rate hikes to inflation unless public local referenda are held.”

“A handful of councils have already withdrawn from their expensive memberships due to LGNZ’s politicalisation, and this should be a wakeup call to the rest."

“And just like their actions during the last Government's push for Three Waters, what we’ve found shows their true colours. It’s getting harder to shrug off accusations that LGNZ is anything more than a ratepayer-funded activist group – which LGNZ have called a ‘misconception’."

“More than 27,500 Kiwis have signed the Cap Rates Now petition, and LGNZ are clearly panicked. Kiwis want rates capped, not hijacked to fund yet-more LGNZ self-interested political campaigning."

CODE Gaming Taxpayers as Millions Vanish Without Accountability

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling for urgent reform after the Centre of Digital Excellence (CODE), a government-backed gaming grant scheme, has received millions in public funding.

Despite being started by MBIE and Dunedin City Council, CODE is structured as a limited liability company, meaning it doesn't have to comply with Official Information Act requests.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesman, Rhys Hurley, said:

“Taxpayers have every right to ask where their money is going and whether it’s delivering real value for New Zealand.”

“When millions are being handed out to game developers, that’s money that’s not going to police, teachers, or nurses. We should be backing our frontline services, not speculative projects with little to show for it.”

“This isn’t just about waste, it’s about oversight. CODE is free to operate in the shadows, free from public transparency laws. That means no clear reporting, no independent assessment, and no way for taxpayers to hold them to account.”

“This is exactly why we need full OIA coverage for all publicly funded bodies. If taxpayer money is involved, Kiwis deserve the right to know how it’s being spent.”

Barbara Edmonds Leads Where Government Fails on Policy Scrutiny

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union welcomes reports that Labour’s finance spokesperson, Barbara Edmonds, has offered to support Finance Minister Nicola Willis’ efforts to establish an election policy costing unit.
Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director, Jordan Williams, said:
“Barbara Edmonds is on the right track with her members’ bill. It’s rare for the Taxpayers’ Union to call on the Government to spend money or create new offices, but this has long-term benefits to the taxpayer. We have been calling for this for more than a decade, and run our own pre-election policy costing unit, called the “Bribe-O-Meter” during various election cycles.”
“It’s true that Minister Willis’ proposal for a unit within the Public Service Commission cannot be considered truly independent. Our preference would be for it to be an officer of Parliament, like the Auditor General and the Parliamentary Commissioners.”
“We also favour a full service, Independent Fiscal Institute or Office of Budget Responsibility similar to that in the UK. Its role would be to expose the fiscal cliffs and budget assumptions that the public need clarity on to make informed voting decisions.”
“Governments continually kicking the budget surplus can down the road and running up debt is costing the country. A properly structured Independent Fiscal Institute would provide much greater transparency which promotes more accountability. Greater sunlight will lead to more responsible fiscal management that will deliver long-term savings far in excess of the Institute's cost.”
“Edmonds’ policy is a good recipe as a first step, and we will do everything we can to support this initiative.”

Stop the Secrecy: Whānau Ora Probe Shows Why OIA Must Follow the Money

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling for immediate legislative reform to bring all 75% taxpayer-funded organisations, including Whānau Ora commissioning agencies, under the Official Information Act (OIA), following a New Zealand Herald investigation into Pasifika Futures and potential conflicts of interest in the distribution of public funds.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“It’s completely unacceptable that taxpayer-funded bodies like Pasifika Futures can distribute millions of dollars with so little public oversight. The people writing the cheques are the same ones setting the rules and the public is locked out of the room.”

“When taxpayers’ money is handed out behind closed doors to organisations run by friends and family, the least we should expect is the right to ask: why, how, and who made the decision?”

“If you’re spending public money, you must be accountable to the public. That starts with full transparency through being subject to the Official Information Act.”

“If these agencies are confident in their processes, they should have nothing to fear from public scrutiny.”

“It is time for the Government to amend the Official Information Act to cover all organisations receiving substantial public funds and finally bring accountability to the wider public sector.”

Lost $29 million satellite proves space pet projects need to end

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling on all New Zealanders to “check their local lost and found” after the Environmental Defense Fund's taxpayer funded, $29 million dollar satellite had been deemed lost.

Taxpayers’ Union Communications Officer, Alex Emes, said:

“While it is true that the Government misplaces taxpayer money every minute, the fact that $29 million dollars of taxpayer money has just disappeared from the sky is a scary reality of the horrors New Zealand taxpayers face.

“The fact that the purpose of this project was to monitor carbon emissions is truly ironic. After this latest event, the EDF needs to ask themselves how many emissions they have created from putting a satellite in the sky only to have suddenly lost it.

“This proves it’s time for the Government to admit failure and stop funding space pet projects that are of no benefit to New Zealanders.”

Pay Up, Performance Down: Why Are We Still Funding Dud SOEs?

The Taxpayers’ Union is today calling on the Government to privatise State‑Owned Enterprises (SOEs) following Treasury analysis revealing alarming disconnects between executive pay and corporate performance.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“Simeon Brown is right to call out underperforming SOEs, but strongly worded letters won’t fix a broken model. He needs to start selling them.”

“Landcorp’s profits have nearly halved, yet its CEO scored a $927,000 pay day. If that happened in the private sector, there’d be consequences, not $167,000 pay rise.”

“Taxpayers are funding gold-plated salaries for bottom-of-the-table results. It’s indefensible.”

“Even Treasury says partially privatised companies do better because private owners demand accountability. The answer isn’t tighter pay bands – it’s ownership reform.”

“If Minister Brown wants real results, he should stop subsidising failure and start selling these dud SOEs.”

REVEALED: $290k Interisland Probe Reinforces Case to Sell the Ships 

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal, through an Official Information Act request, that the Transport Accident Investigation Commission (TAIC) has already spent $293,024 (exc. GST) investigating the grounding of the Aratere ferry.

The interim report alone cost $34,958 to prepare, including payments to external engineers, psychologists, and advisors. TAIC staff logged 534 hours just to the end of October 2024 with the final report not expected until 2026.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“This is turning into a fiscal shipwreck, with nearly $300,000 already gone and a rudderless aim to keep investigation costs below $450,000 before we even get a final report.”

“Rust-bucket Cook Strait ferries drifting into rocks doesn’t seem to happen in the private sector, and even if it does we’re not stuck with the tab. What will it take for the Government to admit bureaucrats shouldn’t be in charge of these boats.”

“With more and more money overboard keeping Interislander afloat, how long are kiwis expected to keep footing the bill? Minister Peters tinkering with part-privatisation isn’t enough - it’s time to sell the lot before the next disaster lands in taxpayers’ laps.”

Paw-litical Madness: Puppy Penalties Bury Ratepayers in Red Tape

The Taxpayers’ Union is calling out Tasman District Council for treating family pets like major infrastructure projects, after a local dog owner was slapped with a jaw-dropping $1,400 fee for a resource consent just to keep three dogs on his property.

“In Tasman, puppies now need planning permission,” says Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson, Tory Relf.

“Since when did the council decide dogs are a consenting activity? What’s next – building consent for a kennel? LIM reports on Labradors?”

"According to RNZ, the owner was shocked to learn that having more than two dogs on her lifestyle block required a process usually reserved for housing developments or sewage treatment plants."

“We love dogs, but this policy’s gone walkies. A council that thinks someone needs to file paperwork and fork out over a grand just to give a home to a pup needs to have its head checked, preferably by a vet.”

The Taxpayers’ Union is urging Tasman District Council to roll over on this ridiculous regulation.

Part-Privatisation Isn’t Enough: Government Must Offload the Ferry Mess Entirely

The Taxpayers’ Union welcomes the Government’s openness to part-privatising the Interislander ferry service, but says it doesn’t go far enough to reduce the burden on taxpayers or help address New Zealand’s growing public debt.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“The Interislander project has become an expensive fiasco. Costs have ballooned, no ferries have been delivered, and taxpayers are left footing the bill. People are rightly asking: how much more will they be forced to pay before the Government seriously considers alternatives?”

“The whole project should be sold, to prevent another disaster like the scrapped iRex project. Private sector investment would not only inject much-needed capital but also impose commercial discipline. These are multi-billion-dollar decisions – they should be made by commercial operators who have skin in the game, not government officials.”

“With total Crown debt now exceeding $277 billion, New Zealand simply cannot afford to keep borrowing to fund every vanity project. Continuing to do so means higher interest payments, more pressure on public services, and higher taxes down the line.”

“Exploring private sector involvement is a welcome step, but it’s only a first step. To protect taxpayers and restore fiscal responsibility, the Government needs to go further, and fast.”

REVEALED: Invercargill Consultant Bill Tops $7.3 Million

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal under Local Government Official Information and Meetings Act request that Invercargill City Council spent $7,334,394 on consultants and legal services in just three years.

The spending includes fees for everything from strategy consultants and cultural engagement advisers to legal firms and planning experts.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, says:

“Ratepayers are forking out over $7 million to consultants while basic council services remain under pressure. When you need a consultant to tell you how to build a playground or put up signage, something has gone very wrong.”

“This is exactly the sort of out-of-control spending that’s driving up rates and leaving residents worse off. Too often, councils hide this under the vague label of 'expert advice' but the rates bill ends up in the letterbox of every ratepayer.”

“Consultants don’t come cheap but Invercargill ratepayers shouldn’t be treated like an ATM every time council wants to outsource its thinking. The Council needs to be forced to focus on core services through rates capping now."

Taxpayers’ Union calls for rates caps now following today’s 12 percent rates increase in Wellington

Commenting on this, Taxpayers’ Union Local Government Campaigns Manager Sam Warren said:

“There’s no doubt at all we need rates cap, but clearly we can’t afford to wait for another year of double-digit rates hikes.”

“Months and years of dysfunction have come to a crescendo. It’s a crushing decision while locals continue to suffer the heavy cost of poor decisions and planning by out-of-touch councillors.”

“$2.3 million on a light-up toilet block, hundreds of millions on cycleways and the not-so-Golden Mile, and a $563,000 bike rack outside the Mayor’s office have lead to rates soaring 47 percent in just three years.”

“There’s a good reason Tory Whanau received a ‘Lifetime Achievement in Waste’ Award at the annual Taxpayers’ Union Jonesie Awards earlier this year, and at this rate she’s on for a second one.”

“Wellington City Council cannot bring itself to prioritise ratepayers. It’s time to change the law now and force their hand.”

REVEALED: $114,000 Welcome Signs Proposed Next to Existing NZTA Signs — Community Board Must Vote No

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling on the Clifton Community Board today to reject a proposal to spend $113,850 ($99,000 plus GST) of ratepayer money on two “Welcome to Urenui” signs placed next to existing NZTA signage. This will be decided by the board during a vote at 4pm today.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, says:

"Ratepayers shouldn’t be spending more than $100,000 on signage that duplicates what’s already there. These signs are already in front of two existing NZTA town signs, meaning you get welcomed not once, not twice, but three times."

“Public money should be going into core council services, not vanity signage and arts funding disguised as relationship building.”

"Yet this time there’s still the chance for Clifton's locally elected members to do the right thing and vote no."

"There’s still time for Cliftons locally elected members to do the right thing for ratepayers; vote no to $113,850 vanity arts projects and yes to common sense.”

Act Now or Pay Later: Political Cowardice on Super Age Risks Public Services

The Taxpayers’ Union is calling on the Government to urgently raise the age of superannuation eligibility in light of a newly released Treasury briefing warning of deep cuts to core services like health and education unless major spending reforms are undertaken.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

“Kicking the can down the road is not an option. Treasury’s warning is clear – unless we make tough but fair decisions now, future generations will be stuck with worse public services, higher taxes, and an economy strangled by debt.”

"Government expenditure outside superannuation and health is already excessive.  Stronger fiscal consolidation is needed immediately.  Minister Willis’ target of core Crown expenditure not exceeding thirty percent of GDP not only looks unachievable under current policies, it is insufficient."

“The Taxpayers’ Union is urging the Government to begin incrementally lifting the eligibility age to 67 over the coming decade, in line with moves already adopted by comparable nations such as Australia, the UK, and the USA.”

“Raising the super age is one of the most obvious and responsible steps we can take. We are living longer, healthier lives, yet we continue to pay billions more each year in superannuation without any adjustment. It’s unaffordable.”

“It’s time for political courage and long-term thinking. The sooner we act, the fairer and smoother the transition will be. Pretending there isn’t a problem only makes the eventual fix more painful.”

Taxpayers' Union mark passing of Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp

The Taxpayers’ Union has acknowledge the passing of Te Pāti Māori MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp and offer condolences to those close to her.

Jordan Williams, Executive Director of the New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union, said:

“We extend our sincere condolences to the family, friends, and colleagues of Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp. Her passing is a huge loss to all those who knew and worked alongside her.”

"Ms Kemp's family will be in our thoughts."

REVEALED: Tauranga Ratepayers Billed Nearly $70,000 for Bus Stop Artwork

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union can reveal through a Local Government Official Information and Meetings Act request that Tauranga City Council has spent a total of $67,739 on decorative artwork for a single bus stop with $50,000 or 73.8 percent of the cost on design alone.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley, said:

“This is another case of councils treating ratepayers like an open chequebook. Nearly $70,000 on a single piece of bus stop art is absurd.”

“You could buy a new car for what they spent on artwork at a bus stop. Worse still, most of it went on ‘design’ not materials, not installation, but presumably someone sketching it out at a desk.”

"All this comes the same week the Council also celebrated the opening of its brand-new $45 million headquarters, as residents brace for a 9.9 percent rates rise."  

“The pattern is clear: the culture of waste will continue until councils are forced to live within their means. We need Rates Capping Now!"

EXCLUSIVE: Māori immersion school taking all staff to Tahiti for school holiday junket

The Taxpayers' Union can reveal that Te Wharekura o Tauranga Moana is set to take staff to Tahiti this Friday and refuses to answer basic questions to justify the spend.

Taxpayers' Union Executive Director Jordan Williams said:

"Earlier this week we received a tip off that Te Wharekura o Tauranga Moana is taking all its staff to Tahiti for a 'team building' and 'leadership' trip. The school has refused to engage with us, return calls, or answer questions. In fact, since our reaching out yesterday morning the school's phone has literally been off the hook."

“No wonder the Principal is hiding. This is taxpayer-funded tourism, not education.”

"Any justification that this is about team building is a fraud. This school is already a very tight knit community. In fact, it appears many of the teaching staff are actually in the same whanau."

"There is absolutely no excuse for using taxpayer money on an overseas island holiday for school staff.  School operational funds are meant for teaching kids and this is precisely the sort of spending the Auditor General has previously called out as unacceptable."

"There may be some justification for overseas professional development for principals, but that can't possibly extend to all school staff. This looks to be a rort and the fact the school literally won't pick up the phone now they know we are on to them is an 'up yours' to both taxpayers and Tamariki."

"Given the trip isn't for a few days, we call on the Minister of Education to intervene and pull the plug. Every dollar spent on these trips is a dollar not going to classrooms. If the Minister won’t act now, she’s endorsing waste.”

Zero Chargers, Zero Sense: Bin the $170m EV Blunder

The Taxpayers’ Union is calling on the Government to scrap its $170 million EV charger programme, after revelations that no chargers have been installed and the expected environmental benefits are minuscule.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf, said:

“The Government has allocated $170 million for EV chargers and has absolutely nothing to show for it. A year on, not a single charger has been installed. This is a masterclass in waste.”

“Even if it were delivered tomorrow the emissions savings don't even meet the Government’s own threshold for significance, not to mention that under the Emissions Trading Scheme this programme won’t reduce New Zealand’s net emissions by even a gram.”

“There is a fundamental misunderstanding of the ETS by the government. Because of the ETS, any reduction in transport emissions here simply frees up carbon credits for other emitters to emit more. So even if the scheme removed transport emissions entirely, it would still be a waste of money as net emissions would be identical.”

“In other words, the EV chargers are an expensive token gesture. Kiwis can’t afford to throw good money after bad, especially in a cost-of-living crisis.”

“When money is tight, every dollar needs to go towards things that actually make a difference. This programme clearly doesn’t.”

“The Government should cut its losses and scrap the EV charger scheme immediately.”

Archaeologists brought in for Wellington’s $2.3 million light-up toilets

A Local Government Official Information Act request made by the New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union shows a new toilet block is budgeted to cost ratepayers $2.3 million, which includes costs for a light-up exterior and archaeological work.

Taxpayers’ Union Local Government Campaigns Manager Sam Warren said:

“How reckless can Wellington Council be? It's unjustifiable to throw this kind of money around, including for archaeological costs, while a record number of locals are being rated out of their own homes.”

"This build-at-all-costs approach needs to stop. On top of last year’s 16.9 percent rates increase and this year’s proposed 12.2 percent increase, we’re looking at a cumulative 31 increase to average rates in just two years.”

“It’s not hard to see why rates are soaring; Council has clearly lost focus. Toilet blocks don’t need a social license, nor a dig find—they need to be delivered well and affordably.”

“Until rates capping laws are introduced, councils across New Zealand will continue to flush this kind of money away. Not enough pressure exists to keep councils on-task and focused, providing only the basics well.”

Cook Islands Shouldn’t Get Automatic NZ Privileges if Foreign Policy Splits, say Kiwis

A new nationwide poll commissioned by the New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union shows New Zealanders do not believe the Cook Islands should continue to enjoy automatic access to New Zealand citizenship, healthcare, and education if its government pursues a foreign policy contrary to New Zealand’s – or fails to even consult Wellington. 60.5% of decided respondents oppose Cook Islanders retaining automatic access.
Across all respondents, just 30% of respondents supported Cook Islanders retaining automatic access to New Zealand entitlements under such circumstances. 46% were opposed, and 24% were unsure.
Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:
“Direct funding of the Cooks has been in the media in recent days, but it is a drop in the bucket compared to the taxpayer-funded entitlements given to Cook Islanders such as health, education, and the New Zealand passport."
“If the Cook Islands Government isn’t going to act in New Zealand’s best interests, or even bother to consult with us on foreign affairs, it raises the obvious question of whether Kiwi taxpayers should continue to give Cook Islanders the free lunch.”
“This is a strong message from taxpayers. The results show that the public expects alignment on foreign affairs in exchange for the privileges and responsibilities that come with New Zealand citizenship. From a taxpayer perspective, that is not an unreasonable expectation.”
The poll was conducted by Curia Market Research between 7–9 June 2025 and sampled 1,000 eligible and likely voters across New Zealand. The margin of error is ±3.1%. The full results are available at www.taxpayers.org.nz/cooks_poll

25,000 Back a Rates Cap But Government Delay Lets Councils Keep Spending

The Taxpayers’ Union is urging the Government to fast-track legislation to cap council rate hikes, following new figures from Stats NZ showing runaway local government spendingand the risk of even higher rates next year if action isn’t taken now.

Sam Warren, Local Government Campaigns Manager, said:

“Council spending is out of control and ratepayers are picking up the bill. This new data shows exactly why we need a rates cap now, not later.”

"Total council spending rose 7.6 percent to $18.41 billion compared to March 2024, yet employee costs have jumped 9.9 percent and interest payments soared 16.3 percent. It’s clear councils aren’t exercising financial discipline."

“More than 25,000 Kiwis have backed our petition to cap rates to inflation. The public gets it – and the Government is starting to as well.”

“The PM backed a rates cap on Newstalk ZB this morning, but the current timeline delays legislation until at least 2026, meaning councils can raise rates unchecked for another full year."

"Let's remember, the previous Local Government Minister, Simeon Brown, resolved to pass rates capping into legislation this year."

“Any later is too late. Councils are locking in bloated budgets right now. If we wait, ratepayers will keep getting hammered and blame will lie at the feet of councils and the Government.”

"The Government must act to Cap Rates Now and stop the spiral.”

PM's intervention to kill Simon Watts' Ute Tax 2.0 welcomed by taxpayers

The Taxpayers’ Union is welcoming the Prime Minister’s intervention to rule out the Inland Revenue Department’s proposal to apply Fringe Benefit Tax (FBT) to all utes worth $80,000 or more and other work vehicles — a plan directed by Climate Change and Revenue Minister Simon Watts.

In response to media comment issued by the Prime Minister's Office last night, Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director Jordan Williams said:

“Simon Watts was pushing a new Ute Tax, without his Cabinet colleagues or the public even knowing. Had it gone ahead, farmers and tradies would have been slammed with thousands of dollars in additional tax each year – not just once like Labour’s Ute Tax, but every year.”

“The documents are crystal clear. IRD was instructed by Minister Watts to proceed with and consult with the tax industry on the implementation of a new FBT regime that would capture work vehicles, regardless of how they’re actually used. This was a massive tax hike by stealth.”

"As far as we can tell, the Revenue Minister didn't consult with any taxpayer, business, or farming groups, despite work having been done on this for nearly a year. Had he bothered to engage, the unfairness and political risk would have been obvious. That lapse saw the Government facing backlash because it was tax boffins who blew the whistle and it took everyone by surprise. Minister Watts should learn the lesson."

“Within hours of our campaign launch yesterday, the National Party was in damage control. Within six hours, the PM’s team overruled Watts and confirmed the policy would not proceed.”

The Taxpayers’ Union yesterday revealed documents showing that IRD had been working on changes to remove the logbook exemption for work vehicles and impose FBT on the assumed private use of double cab utes. According to IRD’s own estimates, the tax grab would have cost farmers, tradies and other ute owners $100 million per year.

“We give credit to the Prime Minister and his office for stepping in quickly and pulling the handbreak.” says Mr Williams.

“This is a clear win for taxpayers and proof that grassroots pressure works. We thank the thousands of Kiwis who used our online tool to email National MPs and demand the Ute Tax 2.0 be scrapped."

ENDS

Taxpayers’ Union Slams National’s “Ute Tax 2.0” As Even Worse than Labour’s Original

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is calling on the National Party's leadership to rule out Simon Watts' proposed changes to the Fringe Benefit Tax (FBT) regime that amount to a new, harsher version of Labour’s infamous “Ute Tax”.

Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director Jordan Williams says, “National campaigned against Labour’s Ute Tax. More than 38,000 ute owners signed our petition to scrap it. Now, astonishingly, the National Party’s own Climate Change Minister has been caught out instructing IRD officials to bring in a ute tax of his own — and it’s even worse than Labour's.”

According to Inland Revenue Ministerial briefing documents obtained by the Taxpayers' Union, Minister Simon Watts has instructed officials to develop new FBT rules that would result in ute-owning farmers and tradies being taxed annually — not just once, as under Labour’s version.

“Labour’s Ute Tax maxed out at a one-off $5,175 when buying a new ute. Simon Watts’ proposal would see some work vehicle owners stung with more than $8,000 in tax every single year,” says Williams.

“Under current rules, if a ute is used almost entirely for work, a logbook can be kept to ensure FBT doesn’t apply. But Minister Watts wants to abolish that option and instead slap a flat tax on every work vehicle worth $80,000 or more — even if it barely leaves the farm.”

Williams continued, “Let’s be clear: this is not about fairness or simplification. This is a calculated, $100 million-a-year tax grab that targets the very people who keep our economy running — farmers, tradies, and rural New Zealanders. It’s Labour’s Ute Tax, but this time it’s blue.”

“National MPs were just at Fieldays bragging about scrapping Labour’s Ute Tax. Either they’re being sneaky or they have no idea what their own Minister is doing behind the scenes. If this change proceeds, we will not be pulling punches in calling out the betrayal.”

“The National Party must rule out this outrageous tax on work vehicles. New Zealanders didn’t vote for this. It's essential the National Party leadership overrules the Climate Change Minister.”

New Zealanders should not have to wait yet another year for Rates Capping

The Taxpayers’ Union is welcoming Local Government Minister Simon Watts’ commitment to rates capping made last night in Wellington but is urging him to expedite the policy. The Union warns that continued delays will undermine public confidence and emboldening opponents of reform such as Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ).

Taxpayers’ Union Local Government Campaigns Manager, Sam Warren, said:

“More than 25,000 New Zealanders have already signed the Taxpayers’ Union’s Cap Rates Now petition. It’s time for Watts to listen – now, not later.”

“Only opening for consultation at the end of this year is simply not good enough. Polling shows that Kiwis are losing trust in National to tackle the cost-of-living crisis and with this slow response, we can see why. A primary driver of the cost of living is out of control rates, which have increased on average by more than a third since 2022.”

“The timeframe announced by Watts also means that voters are going into the local elections in October blind to what rates could or could not be, undermining local democracy. LGNZ know this, which is why they have been throwing sand in the gears to try and delay the policy.”

“Minister Watts is complicating what should be a straightforward fix. The policy work can and should be done within months, not dragged out to suit the bureaucrats and lobby groups like LGNZ who benefit from the status quo.”

Minister Watts Silent Again as Taxpayer Data-Grab Replaces Census

The Taxpayers’ Union is slamming IRD and Statistics NZ after the Government announced it’s scrapping the Census and replacing it with a mass data-harvest from across government departments without public consent.

IRD will share sensitive personal data like income and benefit details that must be linkable back to individual taxpayers to be usable by Statistics NZ.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesman James Ross said:

“Big Brother is back with IRD’s latest taxpayer data lolly-scramble. There’s zero excuse for leaking sensitive income and benefit data, and covering for Stats NZ’s Census failure last time around doesn’t come close to justifying it.”

“After previously leaking more than 250,000 taxpayers’ unencrypted details to foreign tech giants, Revenue Minister Simon Watts is back for round two. This time, it’s every taxpayer’s identifiable data on the line.”

“Taxpayers aren’t being asked, and they haven’t consented. Just like with IRD’s custom audiences scandal, there are huge ethical concerns being swept under the rug in the hope no one notices. Not to mention possible legal breaches of the Tax Administration Act.”

“Minister Watts’ silence while his department repeatedly throws Kiwis under the bus speaks volumes. His job is to represent taxpayers, not sell them out to make life easier for bureaucrats.”

The Taxpayers’ Union is calling for the plan to be scrapped.

The economy is growing, but so too are the headwinds

“Today’s Statistics NZ release of GDP growth of 0.8% for the first quarter of 2025 is welcome,” says Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf.

“However, recent domestic economic indicators are showing a marked slowdown in the economy, with the BNZ describing the economy as ‘hitting a Q2 brick wall.’ Concerns about rising inflation are growing, which may slow the pace of further easing of monetary conditions.”

“The Government cannot rely on the Reserve Bank to reduce the official cash rate at a pace that will further stimulate the economy. The Government must change its fiscal stance by reducing expenditure. Whilst reprioritising expenditure may provide value, it is difficult to understand how further subsidies for movie moguls is a good use of scarce taxpayers’ funds. The Government must look harder at the programmes it is funding and delete those that provide little value.”

"Budget 2024 was a missed opportunity for growth; Budget 2025 looks wholly irresponsible."

“Alarm bells should be ringing”: Trust in Wellington Council plummets in new survey

Damning results from Wellington's annual survey has been released show major declines in trust and confidence in how the City is being run.

“Alarm bells should be ringing. What has long been suspected has now been confirmed: Wellington residents have lost faith in Council.” said Sam Warren, Local Government Campaigns Manager for the Taxpayers’ Union.

“Concerns have been raised over Council spending and lack of priorities. And, off the back of successive rate hikes, not one councillor can act surprised by the results. A rethink is desperately needed on how the City is being managed.”

“Delays and secrecy surrounding the survey’s full release also needs to be scrutinised. Councillors should have had access to this months ago, which would have better guided the City's Long-Term Plan.”

“Wellington doesn’t trust its own Council, and why should they? The last year alone has been a basket case of chaos and fingers-in-ears, as unpopular policies are rammed through extraordinary cost to ratepayers."

“Wellington is fast-becoming unliveable. It's a prime example of why rates capping is needed, so as to make the city more affordable, and keep Council focused on the basics.”

Still No Ticket to Ride: Time’s Up for Motu Move Money Pit

The Taxpayers’ Union is calling for the complete scrapping of the “Motu Move” National Ticketing Solution following confirmation that the project is ‘not on track’ and under external review.
“This scheme has gone from late and over budget to totally unworkable,” says Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf. “It’s costing $650 per Kiwi household for a system that still doesn’t exist and has no clear delivery date.”
“The Government admits the project is also plagued by governance dysfunction. Taxpayers shouldn’t be footing the bill for bureaucratic power struggles between public transport agencies.”
“The Government should adopt a simpler, proven, lower-cost solution already used overseas: contactless payments with bank cards and smartphones.”
“We don’t need to spend over a billion dollars trying to reinvent the wheel. Just let people tap and go.”
“Enough is enough. Cut the losses and bin it.”

Farmers Back Rates Capping Campaign, Time For Minister Watts To Act

The New Zealand Taxpayers' Union is welcoming Federated Farmers’ call for voters to back candidates this October who commit to capping rates hikes at inflation.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesman James Ross said:

“Rates bills went up 15 percent on average last year. Farmers just like everyone else are being fleeced by a local government sector more focused on vanity projects and bureaucratic bloat than getting the basics right.”

“The pressure is building. More than 15,000 Kiwis have already signed the Taxpayers' Union's petition to cap rates at inflation, and now Federated Farmers have joined the call.”

“Ratepayers are saying no to year after year of double-digit rates hikes. Minister Watts needs to act, put a lid on rates bills, and knock some common sense back into local government."

The Taxpayers’ Union’s Cap Rates Now petition is available at CapRatesNow.nz

Green Party’s Fiscal Fantasy Would Bankrupt New Zealand

The Taxpayers’ Union is slamming the Green Party’s so-called “Fiscal Strategy 2025” as reckless and would saddle New Zealanders with crippling debt, soaring taxes, and zero accountability.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesman James Ross says:

“This isn’t a fiscal strategy, it’s an economic suicide note. The Greens are proposing to throw out decades of responsible financial management in favour of fantasy experiments based on unlimited borrowing and spending.’”

"The Greens propose blowing out debt to 90% of GDP - more than double current limits and gutting the Public Finance Act and the fiscal responsibility rules that protected New Zealand during crises."

"Under the Green Party's plan, there's no limit to how much taxpayers would be expected to cough up."

"Kiwi households live within their means. The idea that Government can ignore debt and call every spending spree an ‘investment’ is delusional."

“This is North Korean economics wrapped in greenwashing. We don’t need more bureaucracy, we need restraint and respect for taxpayers’ money.”

"Government and opposition parties must reject the Greens’ proposal outright and reaffirm their commitment to prudent fiscal management and debt discipline."

Taxpayer Victory: Heritage Handbrake Lifted by Minister Bishop

The Taxpayers’ Union is celebrating a major win for taxpayers following Minister Chris Bishop’s decision to allow councils to de-list heritage buildings faster, including for Wellington’s derelict Gordon Wilson Flats.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf, said:

We’ve long said that heritage rules are being abused by bureaucrats and activists to block development and dump costs on the public.

“Minister Bishop’s decision shows he's listening to the concerns of taxpayers and ratepayers, not just NIMBIES and heritage lobbyists."

“Wellington and the rest of the country desperately needs more homes, not decaying concrete monuments.”

“This is real leadership that puts taxpayers ahead of ideology. We applaud Minister Bishop for cutting the red tape.”

Taxpayers Slugged for $400k Boutique Snails

The Taxpayers’ Union has revealed through an Official Information Act request that the Department of Conservation (DOC) has spent $411,875 on the endangered southern Powelliphanta augusta snails.

Following the collapse of Solid Energy, DOC took over responsibility for the captive snails, with additional habitat restoration projects now costing more than $1 million.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator Rhys Hurley said:

“These snails have been in captivity since 2006. DOC has killed over 800 by accident, yet they’re still planning to spend millions and another five years till they'll all be fully released.”

“There have been multiple proposals for this programme, but instead DOC has bred over 4,000 snails in fridges in Hokitika and is now figuring out how to slow the breeding down as facilities hit capacity.”

“Taxpayers aren’t opposed to conservation, but the lack of substance in this scheme shows the ridiculousness of the system. It drains DOC funding away from other species, is unaccountable, and refuses to acknowledge success.”

“This is conservation at its most expensive and least effective. It's time to take the snails out of the fridge and make the hard decisions on protecting our native species.”

REVEALED: MBIE’s $137k iPhone Fiasco

The Taxpayers’ Union can reveal through an Official Information Act response that the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) has lost or had stolen 280 taxpayer-funded iPhones and iPads over the last three financial years.

With 258 missing iPhones and 22 iPads, that is almost two devices going missing every single week. Based on MBIE’s estimates, the average replacement cost per device is $490, putting the bill at $137,200.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator, Rhys Hurley said:

“You’d think the Ministry in charge of economic development might have a handle on keeping track of its own gear. Two lost iPhones a week is either shockingly poor management or a sign of a department that simply doesn’t care that taxpayers are footing the bill.”

“Worse still, these figures dont include lost laptops. They are the most expensive devices, so this $137,000 is just the tip of the growing iceberg.”

“These government agencies need stricter internal accountability for missing equipment, full transparency on the real cost of lost laptops, and clearer consequences for departments that treat public property like it's disposable.”

“While households across the country are cutting back, MBIE is running a revolving door for lost iPhones. Taxpayers deserve better.”

Luxon’s Common-Sense Sick Leave Reform Can’t Come Soon Enough

The Taxpayers’ Union is backing Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s comments on reining in pandemic-era sick leave rules.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf says: “The current system is fundamentally unfair, costly, and out of touch with economic reality - especially for the taxpayers footing the bill.”

“Sick leave entitlements disproportionately favour part-time workers, some of whom can claim the same leave as full-timers despite working a fraction of the hours. That’s simply not fair, particularly when those jobs are taxpayer-funded.”

“New Zealand’s already dire productivity is being hammered by skyrocketing absenteeism at huge public cost.”

Nationally, absences jumped from 7.3 million in 2022 to 10 million in 2023. In the public service alone, the average number of sick/domestic leave days rose more than 26 percentsince the introduction of the amended legislation, adding up to 648,347 lost workdays last year - all paid for by the taxpayer.

“And now, according to Southern Cross, staff are increasingly treating paid sick leave as a no-questions-asked entitlement, even when they’re not genuinely unwell,” Relf says.

“New Zealand is already near the bottom of the OECD for productivity. We can’t fix that if we’re asking taxpayers to pay more and get less.”

“Luxon’s idea would be a much-needed reset. Fairer rules, fewer lost days, and better value for event cent of taxpayers' money being spent.”

Taxpayers’ Union Backs ACT on Ditching Council Climate Theatratrics

The Taxpayers’ Union has welcomed ACT’s announcement that its local candidates will oppose council-level emissions policies, calling it a needed step to rein in wasteful spending and refocus councils on core services. 

Taxpayers’ Union spokesman James Ross said:

“Under the Emissions Trading Scheme, emissions are already capped nationally. Local climate plans don’t cut a single gram of net emissions - they just burn through ratepayers’ money for no environmental gain.”

“Rates were hiked 15 percent on average last year. The last thing cash-strapped ratepayers need is councils wasting money on ineffective, virtue-signalling red tape and climate strategies.”

“Councils should stick to their knitting and focus on delivering what they can actually control: roads, pipes and rubbish. If they won’t get back to basics, then ratepayers are right to go one step further and demand tools like rates capping to force them to.”

NEW POLL: Labour Becomes Largest Party, Economy Top Concern

Bad news for National in the latest Taxpayers' Union-Curia Poll as Labour would now be the largest party in Parliament, gaining three seats to 44. The Coalition would still just about cling on to power on these numbers.

The poll, conducted between 07 and 09 June shows National drop 1.1 points on last month to 33.5 percent, while Labour are up 1.6 points to 34.8 percent.

ACT is down 0.4 points to 9.1 percent, whilst the Greens are down 0.9 points to 8.2 percent. New Zealand First also drops 1.3 points to 6.1 percent, while Te Pāti Māori is down 0.6 points to 3.3 percent. 

Headline results and more information about the methodology can be found on the Taxpayers' Union's website at www.taxpayers.org.nz/2025ju_polldatanztu

For the minor parties, TOP is on 1.8 percent (+1.3 point), Outdoors and Freedom is on 1.1 percent (+0.7 points), New Conservatives are on 0.7 percent (+0.7 points) and Vision NZ on 0.6 percent (+0.2 points).

This month's results are compared to the last Taxpayers' Union-Curia Poll conducted in May 2025, available here at www.taxpayers.org.nz/polling_may07_2025tucur 

The combined projected seats for the Centre-Right of 62 is down 1 seat from last month. The combined seats for the Centre-Left is up 2 seats to 60. On these numbers, the Centre-Right bloc could still form a Government.

National remains on 42 seats again this month, whilst Labour is up 3 seats to 44. ACT is unchanged on 12 seats, whilst the Greens are down 1 seat to 10. New Zealand First drops 1 seat to 8 seats, while Te Pāti Māori remains on 6. 

For the first time since October 2024, Cost of Living has been replaced as voters' top issue.

The Economy more generally is the most important issue to voters at 20.2 percent (+3.7 points), followed by the Cost of Living at 18.1 percent (-8.3 points), Health at 11.9 percent (-5.0 points) and Employment at 5.8 percent.

Commenting on the results, Taxpayers’ Union Spokesman James Ross said:

"Labour taking the lead and growing concern over the economy should be a worrying sign for the Government in the first Taxpayers' Union-Curia poll since the Budget. Voters are losing faith in the managed decline on offer."

"With inflation finally under heel, cost of living has slipped off the top spot for the first time in over three years. But lower interest rates don't make a sound economy on their own."

"The so-called Growth Budget's only pro-growth policy offered a 1 percent boost to GDP over 20 years, spiralling debt and no credible pathway back to surplus."

"Growth wins votes, stagnation doesn't."

REVEALED: Public Service Grows. More Bureaucrats, More Waste

The latest Public Service Commission workforce data shows an uptick in public service employees since December 2024. As of 31 March 2025, there were 63,238 full-time equivalent (FTE) staff in the public service, reflecting a 0.4% increase from December 2024 and 15,987 more staff than the 47,251 reported in 2017.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator Rhys Hurley said:

“Today’s growth figures are alarming. This uptick in bureaucrats doesn’t mean better services, just more taxpayer money on an already bloated sector.”

“Time and time again, we’ve seen public service delivery getting worse, while unions cry foul at the thought of trimming backroom staff.”

“Bureaucratic bloat already saw a nearly 40% growth over the six years of the previous Labour government. Even with a slight decrease from the peak of 65,699 in December 2023, these numbers represent just a drop in the ocean.”

“Minister Willis cannot allow backroom staff numbers to continue rising when true efficiency hasn’t been achieved. It’s time for the Government to deliver on its promise of cutting wasteful spending by optimising the public service.”

Taxpayer Talk: Sir Bill English on the Future of Superannuation and the Public Service

It’s seven years since Sir Bill English left politics but the former Prime Minister and long serving Finance Minister is still a keen follower of the political landscape and how the economic outlook for the country can be improved.

In conversation with Peter Williams for the latest Taxpayer Talk podcast, Sir Bill maintains that the political battle over National Superannuation has been won and governments will have to pay a universal pension  to every senior citizen for the foreseeable future. But as he did when in government, Sir Bill believes that the age of eligibility must be raised from 65. He also has some harsh words on the performance of public servants and notes that many government organisations should be much better managed.

A politician for nearly 30 years, Sir Bill now has the luxury of watching government from the sidelines and much of what he sees really frustrates him.

Orr Resigned Over Funding Disagreement Despite Massive Boost

The Taxpayers’ Union is calling out Adrian Orr’s resignation as nothing more than a sulk over funding disagreements, despite a significant increase in funding over and above the previous five-year agreement.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesman James Ross said:

“Orr resigned because he didn’t quite get all of the massive funding increase he was pushing for, but how much bloat would be enough? Even a small amount of financial self-control was too much to handle for the Governor.”

“The Reserve Bank’s funding agreement was still 21% higher than the last five-year deal, and 139% higher than the one before that. With staff numbers blowing out by 2.5x since 2018, is anyone surprised RBNZ always seems to be running out of taxpayers’ cash?”

“If the Governor - or any other departmental head - can’t control costs, they need to resign. Hopefully the next Reserve Bank Governor can show more respect for taxpayers.”

All Talk, No Action: Willis Fails to Tackle Bloated Public Sector Wage Bill

The Taxpayers’ Union is challenging Nicola Willis to stick to her promise and rein in the public sector wage bill after Public Sector Commission figures reveal that public sector workers were almost twice as likely to receive a salary increase as those in the private sector in the first quarter of 2025.

"Nicola Willis promised to get the public sector wage bill under control, but the data shows that she has failed to do so," said Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf.

“In just three months, 20 percent of public sector workers received a pay rise, compared to only 11 percent in the private sector. Why do bureaucrats keep getting pay hikes when taxpayers aren’t seeing the same?”

“With the average bureaucrat’s salary now topping $101,000 and continuing to climb, the trend is clear: public sector spending remains out of control.”

"Willis’ promise to curb public sector wage inflation is looking more like a broken vow. With one in five public sector workers getting a pay rise in just the last quarter, it’s clear this government is not taking control of spending."

"New Zealanders deserve a government that keeps its promises and manages taxpayers’ money responsibly. It's time for Nicola Willis to take action, slash the bureaucratic wage bill, and stop making empty promises."

Join the campaign to Cap Rates Now

We are officially launching our "Cap Rates Now!" campaign, to rein in New Zealand's out-of-control councils.

We're using this week's National Fieldays to call on Local Government Minister Simon Watts to introduce Australian and UK-style rates caps to limit annual rate increases to inflation.

We're demanding a rates cap - now! We need your support – sign the petition ✍️

Across the country, the story is the same: double-digit rate hikes, councils are driving up the costs of living.

Meanwhile, ballooning staff numbers and vanity project spending see councils delivering fewer core services.

Local Government New Zealand (the lobbyists for council bureaucrats) are in Simon Watts' ear. They want to keep councils unrestrained.

I need you to take 20 seconds today to sign the petition.

With Auckland’s new property values out yesterday, many homeowners are about to be slapped with massive rate hikes. Napier ratepayers are facing a hike of 20 percent, along with Gore, Upper Hutt, Hastings... The list goes on and on. 

It’s time to put a lid on it: Cap Rates Now!

Rates cap legislation would limit annual rates increases to inflation – unless a council can get approval from local ratepayers through a local referendum.

💥 Since 2022, average council rates have gone up 34% in New Zealand, compared to 14% in the UK and just 8% in Australia.

💥 A majority of Kiwis want the choice – polling shows that nearly two-thirds support referenda for big rate hikes.

💥 Meanwhile, council spending keeps ballooning – but not on core infrastructure. Our research shows that the money is going on bloated bureaucracies (staff costs) and non-core (i.e. vanity) projects.

If you agree, enough is enough, sign the Rates Cap Now petition at RatesCapNow.nz

Under our proposal, councils can still fund important projects – they’ll just have to justify the cost and get community backing. It’s about accountability, transparency, and putting ratepayers first.

The campaign is about protecting households, restoring trust in local government, and stopping councils from treating ratepayers like bottomless wallets.

If councils really need to spend more, they can just ask. That’s democracy.

But without a cap, nothing will change. The bills will keep piling up.

So let's build up the pressure . Let’s Cap Rates Now!

New Campaign Launched to tell Government to Cap Rates Now

The Taxpayers' Union is launching a new nationwide campaign calling for Local Government Minister Simon Watts to 'Cap Rates Now' and adopt CPI-level limitations on councils hiking rates. The launch of the Cap Rates Now campaign coincides with the opening of National Fieldays and the release of Auckland Council's new property valuations.

We're calling on ratepayers across New Zealand to join us in asking Mr Watts to Cap Rates Now by signing the petition at CapRatesNow.nz.

"Council rates are out of control. Until they are capped, councils have little incentive to focus on core services and providing good quality infrastructure," said Taxpayers' Union Local Government Campaign Manager Sam Warren.

A March 2024 Taxpayers' Union-Curia poll found that nearly two-thirds of New Zealanders supported referendums for rates increases beyond inflation. and less than one quarter opposed. There was majority support for referendums in all gender and age groups.

"For years, skyrocketing rates have been a major driver of inflation and the cost of living crisis. Rates have increased 34 percent in New Zealand since 2022, compared to only 14 percent in the UK and 8 percent in Australia. Enough is enough."

"Rates caps are common in Australia and the United Kingdom, and last year even Prime Minister Luxon appeared to be fan," said Warren.

"Behind the scenes, we know that council officials, and their lobby group, LGNZ, have been trying to strong arm Simon Watts and lobby against this common-sense policy. Local Mayors try to claim local government is underfunded, but when you look at the numbers, the dramatic increases in rates revenue have been wasted on nice-to-haves and staff costs, rather than core capital infrastructure investment," said Warren.

"That's why we're calling on ratepayers to join us in our call to Cap Rates Now."

"In special circumstances with a good reason to increase rates over-and-above inflation, councils should seek the public mandate via referenda. That is the sensible compromise for LGNZ, who have been spending ratepayer money to lobby against rates capping."

Third Strike You’re Out: Time to Scrap National Ticketing System

The Taxpayers’ Union is slamming the NZTA for the third missed launch target in nine months for their “Motu Move” National Ticketing System.

Taxpayers’ Union Communications Officer, Alex Emes, said:

“If taxpayers’ are on the hook for an unneeded program to the tune of $650 per household, the least they expect is for the program to be launched on time.”

“All around the world, you can pay public transport fare with contactless debit and credit cards. Creating a National Ticketing system is just another useless political vanity project.”

“If the government really wanted to make things easier, it should move towards the simpler and more cost-efficient option of having transport providers offer a contactless option.”

“Everyone knows: three strikes and you’re out. NZTA’s time with their National Ticketing System vanity project is up. The government needs to can this disastrous program before it ends up inevitably costing taxpayers more.”

 

Wellington's Anti-Business Rates Must Go

In order to protect local business, commercial rates must be cut, the Taxpayers’ Union says in response to new reports that Wellington businesses are being hit with rates nearly twice as high as other cities.

“Wellington’s rating system is anti-growth, anti-business, and out of step with the rest of the country,” says spokesperson Tory Relf. “A small business here pays almost double what Aucklanders do. It’s a disgrace. ”

“The Council charges businesses nearly four times the rate of residents. This extraordinary differential is a deliberate attempt to mask how high the overall rates burden has become in order to cover wasteful Council spending.”

“This isn’t fairness, it’s daylight robbery. Other cities support business while Wellington bleeds it dry and the result is empty shops, lost jobs, and a dying city centre.”

Officials advised lowering the rate differential last year yet Councillors refused.

“Even their own staff warned them. But they doubled down on failure,” Relf said.

“Anyone who walks around the city centre can see the effect this is having. If the Council wants to revive Wellington, it must stop treating businesses like the enemy. Cut the rates now, before it’s too late.”

 

Tick Tock: Taxpayers' Union Refreshes Debt Clock to Show Full Government Borrowing

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union has today updated its online Debt Clock to reflect Total Crown Borrowings, replacing the previously used measure of Net Core Crown Debt.

The change comes after concerns that Net Core Crown Debt understates the true burden of government borrowing by excluding the ballooning liabilities of Crown entities and State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs).

Tory Relf, a spokeswoman for the Taxpayers’ Union, says:

“The Debt Clock needs to tell taxpayers the truth. The Net Core Crown Debt figure the Government likes to use conveniently leaves out tens of billions borrowed by Kāinga Ora, KiwiRail, and other Crown agencies. But whether it's borrowed by a Minister or one of their appointees to a Board, the taxpayer is still ultimately responsible.”

“Total Crown Borrowings is the most honest, transparent number. It reflects the full mortgage on the country – and the interest taxpayers are actually paying.”

According to Budget 2025 forecasts, Total Crown Borrowings are set to rise from $250.9 billion this year to $354.2 billion by 2029 – a blowout of more than $100 billion, or $49,160 per household.

“This Government has promised restraint but is still on track to add nearly $50,000 of debt for every household in the country over just five years. That’s not fiscal responsibility – it’s economic vandalism,” says Relf.

The Union says the updated Debt Clock – now updated with the figures released with last week’s Budget – gives taxpayers a more accurate understanding of New Zealand’s worsening fiscal position, and the real cost of government overspending.

“Politicians can play games with accounting tricks. But our Debt Clock won’t.” says Relf. 

“Tick tock.”

The updated clock is now live at www.DebtClock.nz.

A review of the pros and cons of using Net Core Crown Debt (the old measure): Core Crown Borrowings (a cleaner gross measure); and Total Crown Borrowings (the new measure) is available at www.taxpayers.org.nz/debt_clock_update_2025

Why We’re Switching the Debt Clock to ‘Total Crown Borrowings’

Debt Clock logo
Since its launch, the New Zealand Debt Clock has highlighted the burden of government debt in real time. We’ve always aimed to present this figure in a way that's meaningful, honest, and easy for taxpayers to understand.

In recent years, we’ve used Net Core Crown Debt – a figure often referenced in government fiscal targets. But we’re making a change. From today, the Debt Clock will display Total Crown Borrowings. We’ve just updated it to reflect the Treasury’s latest Econmic and Fiscal Update published with the Budget last week.

Why the Change?

There’s no single perfect measure of government debt. Like with any financial statement, different figures tell different parts of the story. But our job is to make sure taxpayers know the full picture – and Net Core Crown Debt has too many blind spots.

Let’s break down the options:

1. Net Core Crown Debt (the old measure)

Pros:

  • Used in official Government fiscal targets.
  • Gives a picture of the Government’s “net” position after liquid financial assets (like investments) are offset.

Cons:

  • Opaque and prone to manipulation – depends on how the Government chooses to count "liquid assets".
  • Doesn’t reflect the actual amount of money borrowed – or what interest taxpayers are paying.
  • Excludes major government debt from Crown entities and SOEs like Kāinga Ora and KiwiRail — even though these debts are taxpayer-backed and directed by Ministers.
  • Misleadingly low – paints a rosier picture than reality.

2. Core Crown Borrowings (a cleaner gross measure)

Pros:

  • Represents the actual amount the core Government has borrowed.
  • Ties directly to interest expenses – gives a more realistic picture of fiscal stress.
  • Easier to compare to household debt (i.e., people don’t talk about their “net mortgage” – they talk about what they owe).

Cons:

  • Still ignores massive Crown Entity and SOE borrowings (e.g. Kainga Ora, KiwiRail etc).
  • Doesn’t reflect the full taxpayer liability across government.

3. Total Crown Borrowings (the new measure)

Pros:

  • The most comprehensive measure of government debt – includes Crown entities, SOEs, and the lot.
  • Can’t be gamed or disguised behind balance sheet footnotes.
  • Reflects what taxpayers are ultimately on the hook for – whether debt is incurred by Ministers or their appointees to SOE boards.
  • Aligns with international best practice for transparency.

Cons:

  • Ministers have less direct day-to-day control over Crown entities and SOEs.

Why It Matters

Treasury’s Budget 2025 papers forecast Total Borrowings to rise from $250.9 billion in 2024 to $354.2 billion by 2029 – an increase of more than $100 billion – or $49,160 per household! – in just five years.

That’s real money, incurring real interest, to be paid by real taxpayers.

The bottom line is this: you can’t hide from interest payments. Whether it’s the core Crown or Kainga Ora borrowing the money, it’s the New Zealand taxpayer left footing the bill. And our Debt Clock should reflect that.

Conclusion

We’re switching to Total Borrowings because it gives the clearest, most honest picture of the Government’s debt. It includes everything – the full mortgage on the country.

We want a number that can’t be gamed. A number that is anchored in reality – tied to actual interest payments. And a number that reflects the total risk to taxpayers.

Politicians may try to hide behind accounting tricks. But our Debt Clock won’t.

Tick Tock, Tock Tock…

$23 Million Registry Flop: Another Costly Cock-Up at Internal Affairs

The Taxpayers’ Union is slamming the Department of Internal Affairs for wasting nearly $23 million of taxpayer money on a failed IT upgrade for the Births, Deaths and Marriages registry — a project that’s now been abandoned with nothing to show for it.

“Time and again, government departments dive headfirst into flashy IT projects, only to blow the budget, miss deadlines, and quietly pull the plug, with taxpayers left holding the bill,” said Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf.

“This isn’t just general bureaucratic waste, it’s a chronic failure in how the public service delivers IT,” Relf said. “Whether it’s Internal Affairs now or MFAT’s $33 million cloud project last year, the story is always the same: massive overspending, scope creep, no accountability, and zero results.”

"IT projects have become some of the worst offenders in the public sector when it comes to fiscal irresponsibility. Yet officials keep launching these bloated projects without the capability to manage them and taxpayers are forced to pick up the tab,” said Relf.

“Every time a department fails like this, they get a second chance — but taxpayers don’t get their money back. Writing off tens of millions and calling it a ‘lesson learned’ isn’t good enough. This cycle of failure must end.”

Hon Ruth Richardson Appointed Chair of the Taxpayers' Union

The New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is pleased to announce the appointment of Hon Ruth Richardson as Chair of its Board of Directors.
A former Minister of Finance, and internationally respected expert in public finance, Ruth Richardson brings unparalleled experience to the role at a time when New Zealand faces significant fiscal challenges.
Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director Jordan Williams says:
“Ruth Richardson is the personification of fiscal responsibility. Her track record of driving fiscal discipline and structural reform is unmatched in New Zealand’s modern political history. In the face of mounting public debt and economic uncertainty, who better to chair the Taxpayers' Union?”
Ruth Richardson served as New Zealand’s 37th Minister of Finance from 1990 to 1993. She was the principal architect of the country’s second wave of economic reform, introducing the Fiscal Responsibility Act 1994, which is widely regarded as setting international best practice and remains a cornerstone of New Zealand’s economic framework.
Since leaving Parliament in 1994, Ms. Richardson has advised governments, international agencies, and think tanks around the world on strategies designed to achieve good governance and the development of high-quality policy frameworks.
Ms. Richardson says:
“The role of the Taxpayers’ Union is to champion the cause of fiscal responsibility which requires debt to be reduced to prudent levels and public spending to be reined in. Accountability for the wise and effective use of taxpayer resources is imperative. There must be no tolerance for waste and an insistence that there be a demonstrable link between public expenditure choices and the achievement of the intended results. New Zealand has strayed far from the responsible stewardship of public finances and the Taxpayers’ Union means to be a loud but constructive voice calling for urgent course correction. As a lifetime activist in these causes, being Chair of the Taxpayers’ Union sits well with my DNA.”
In recognition of her service as a Member of Parliament and contributions to governance, Ms. Richardson was appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2025 King's Birthday Honours.
The Taxpayers’ Union also wishes to extend its sincere thanks to outgoing Chair, Laurence Kubiak, for his steady leadership and generous service over recent years. Mr Williams says:
"A former CEO of the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research and seasoned public affairs professional, Laurie brought a rare combination of economic acumen, regulatory insight, and good humour to the role. His mentorship, strategic guidance, and willingness to roll up his sleeves have left a lasting mark on the organisation. We are deeply grateful for his contribution."
The Taxpayers’ Union is New Zealand’s largest taxpayer pressure group, with around 200,000 subscribed supporters. The Union is politically independent and funded by more than 22,000 individual donors.

REVEALED: DOC’s $157,000 Payout to EDS Eco-Lobbyists

The Taxpayers’ Union can reveal through an Official Information Act response that the Environmental Defence Society (EDS) received $157,000 from the Department of Conservation in the 2023/24 financial year to produce two reports at $560.71 per page.

This follows earlier revelations that payment to the EDS had been made of $377,743 from the Ministry for the Environment, totalling more than half a million dollars in total taxpayer funding to the group since 2023.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator Rhys Hurley said:

“It’s utterly unacceptable that the public are forced to bankroll lobbyists, especially those like the Environmental Defence Society which dedicate their resources to driving up costs to the taxpayer through expensive legal challenges at every turn.”

“DOC’s staff ballooned by 37 percent between 2017 and 2023, and even then they’ve been outsourcing research to activist groups. Why are taxpayers paying twice to get stuck with lobby groups’ own spin?”

“From environmental lobbyists to politically-aligned unions, these groups should have to prove they have widespread public support by raising their own funds rather than relying on handouts. This isn’t environmental stewardship - it’s taxpayer-funded political activism.”

Taxpayers back Minister Brown’s tough questions, now its time to finish the job

Responding to Minister Simeon Brown’s demands for underperforming SOEs like NZ Post and Pāmu to lift their game, Taxpayers’ Union Spokesman James Ross said:

“Minister Brown is absolutely right to ask why SOEs like NZ Post and Pāmu are failing to deliver basic commercial returns, proving that government ownership doesn’t guarantee results. If a household had assets that drained their coffers, they’d ask whether it was time to sell them. The Government should do the same.”

“Each household in New Zealand owns $275,000 worth in public assets, but instead of earning us returns, they actually cost us. Valued at more than $570 billion, the Crown’s portfolio should be working for taxpayers, not the other way around.”

“Past asset sales improved service quality, boosted performance, and paid down debt. It’s time we stop subsidising commercial mediocrity and sell the things we once wanted but no longer need, while keeping the things we truly value.”

REVEALED: Lights, Camera, Waste: Rotorua’s $94k Mayoral Ad

The Taxpayers’ Union can reveal through a Local Government Official Information and Meetings Act request that Rotorua Lakes Council—via its Council Controlled Organisation, RotoruaNZ—forked out $93,985 on a television campaign featuring Mayor Tania Tapsell.

The ‘Robe Trip’ campaign, targeting luxury-seeking Auckland couples, cost $42,784 to produce and a further $51,201 to broadcast.

Taxpayers’ Union Investigations Coordinator Rhys Hurley said:

“RotoruaNZ may claim no general rates were used in this production. Yet the targeted business rate means local business already struggling to keep doors open are forced to foot the bill.”

“The campaign was subject to no fewer than 15 rounds of meetings between the agency, Council board, and Mayor’s office.”

“For a city battling infrastructure issues and crime, the time and money spent on this puff piece shows how warped Council priorities have become."

“This campaign might be dressed in a robe, but it’s ratepayer exploitation, plain and simple. RotoruaNZ should be focusing on delivering value, not puff pieces for the Mayor’s profile.”

Avatar Spending is Fantasy Economics

The Taxpayers’ Union is questioning why millions more in public money is being dangled in front of Hollywood to bring the next Avatar sequel premiere to Wellington.
Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf says: “This is fantasy economics. Who’s actually booking a flight to New Zealand because of Avatar? Taxpayers are being forced to bankroll a billionaire’s movie franchise with little to show for it.”
“New Zealanders are tightening their belts while the government throws millions at red carpets and celebrity parties. It’s glitz for the few, paid for by you.”
“The idea of handing out even more subsidies for red carpets and celebrity fanfare is absurd when Treasury calculate less that 1 percent return on investment. The Government needs to scrap the Hollywood handouts.”

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