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Hi Friend,
The breaking news re Andrew Coster / McSkimming's cover-up:
another golden handshake must be ruled out.
Last night,
the Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) dropped its report on
the Police cover up of the allegations related to disgraced former
Commissioner, Jevon McSkimmings.
As an
organisation whose primary purpose is accountability of government, I
can't think of a report in the last decade more damning of such a
senior public official.
The IPCA
conclude that former Police Commissioner Andrew Coster "attempted
to influence the nature and extent of the original IPCA investigation
and the timeframe for its completion. Those attempts were perceived by
some others within Police as designed to bring the investigation to a
rapid and premature conclusion so as not to intersect with the
Commissioner appointment process and jeopardise Mr McSkimming’s
prospects of being appointed as the next Commissioner of Police,
notwithstanding the seriousness of the allegations being
made."
The former
Police Commissioner also put in place a protocol to keep the Police
Minister in the dark, ensuring communications intended for the
Minister/his office were instead routed to him.
Put simply,
New Zealand's former top cop tried to bury sexual allegations related
to his mate, and second-in-command. Instead of ensuring a proper
investigation, he allowed the Police to prosecute the victim for
online harassment of McSkimmings!
He was
once labelled 'Cuddles Coster' - 'Creepy Coster' seems more
apt.
Regular
readers will recall that in order to move Coster on from the Police,
the Government moved him sideways last November to a very well paid
role, CEO of the Social Investment Agency (he's on roughly the same as
the Prime Minister's salary).
Despite the
damning report, Coster has not resigned. He's digging in and is on
'garden leave', i.e. full pay.
This is the
way it goes in the public service - as we saw with the former Reserve
Bank Governor, Adrian Orr – no one gets sacked in Wellington, without
a negotiated taxpayer-funded "golden handshake".
We
say, enough is enough. We are calling on the Public Service
Commissioner to publicly rule out a costly parachute for
Coster (see our media release here: Brian
Roche looking like a fool for every minute Creepy Coster remains on
the public teat)
My
prediction is that this will be a fast-moving story, and it is one the
Taxpayers' Union will be keeping a very close eye on.
In the
meantime, here are the links to the IPCA's own damning words: the
full 135 page explosive report is downloadable here, and the IPCA's
shorter summary is here.
On to
more positive matters...
We've
celebrated another Taxpayer Victory, and this one has been a long time
coming...
Taxpayer Victory: health research funding
responsibility to be taken away from the Health Research
Council 💉🥳

Friend, you
might recall that last year, your humble Taxpayers' Union got into a
little bit of controversy for calling
out some of the most ridiculous Health Research Council
stories.
Among the
"science" grants we called out were the $377,550 for "Healing
with Māori Music"; $150,000 for "Building
room for equity: Culture centred design of hospital waiting
rooms"; $150,000 for "Health
Promotion Interventions for Pacific men in a Barbershop" and the
following grant, that we're still trying to figure
out...
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Hapai te hauora: Breathing your ancestors into
life
"Hāpai
te hauora’ as ‘breathing your ancestors into life’, captures the
breadth & connections of a generation – rangatahi Māori–a
generation moving forward together. This proposal builds on an HRC
funded project (18/651) exploring the ways rangatahi Māori make sense
of & live hāpai te hauora through navigating journeys of hauora
& wellbeing."
Approved funding: $649,992
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More
recently, we highlighted the hundreds of thousands of
"science" money being shuffled by the Health Research
Council to "exploring the narratives of the
water" and "the use of te reo in Otago
University".
The
wheels of Government move slowly Friend, but at long
last, the Health Research Council is having its wings
clipped.
Minister
for Science, Innovation, and Technology Dr
Shane Reti has announced an in-principle decision has also been
made to transfer health research funding from the Health Research
Council to a new (and, we understand, narrower in scope)
Research Funding NZ.
With every
health and research dollar being precious, it's good to finally see
some progress. We look forward to reviewing the next set of grant
approvals...
$6.3 million on taxpayer-funded restaurant
reviewers 🍽️💸⭐️
Tourism
subsidies are always one of the more questionable line items of
government spending.
Now our
nation's tourism bureaucrats are spending
$6.3 million to bring the Michelin Guide to New Zealand, leaving
taxpayers to foot the bill for a lavish subsidy to high-end
restaurants.

Tourism New
Zealand claims the guide could attract tens of thousands of
international visitors, but relying on people hopping on long-haul
flights for a fancy meal is not responsible spending.
This comes
only a few months after increases to the International Visitor levy on
international visitors made holidays here less affordable.
I
was on the huddle on Thursday, and even my good (left wing) friend,
Ali Jones, agreed it's a poor use of money.
 If Ministers genuinely want to
support tourism and hospitality, there are better ways to do it.
Practical measures, like capping rates for businesses, would help the
whole industry instead of lining the pockets of a couple of fine
dining establishments.
The
economic consensus appears to be that most of the extra dollars spent
at the newly minted Michelin Star restaurants are going to come from
money that would otherwise have been spent in New Zealand anyway. In
layman's terms, it's reallocating the cake, not necessarily growing
it.
NEW POLL: Centre-Right back ahead, Labour biggest
party, Seymour surges 🚀
The
first poll since Labour's Capital Gains Tax announcement is out, and
it's encouraging news for the Government.
November's
Taxpayers' Union-Curia Poll has the Centre-Right bloc able to
form a Government with the "CGT ripple" seeing Labour grow its vote
slightly, but all at the expense of the Greens.
Let's dive
in:

Labour
holds on to its spot as the largest party, gaining 2.1 points to 33.3
percent, while the Greens are down 2.8 points to 9.2
percent.
The other
big party, National, is also up. They rise 0.6 points to 30.2 percent.
New Zealand
First is down 1.5 points to 9.1 percent. ACT is up 2.0 points to 8.6
percent, while Te Pāti Māori is down 1.1 points to just 3.3
percent.

On
these numbers, the Centre-Right bloc would hold 62 seats to the
Centre-Left bloc's 60, meaning the Government is back in
front.

David
Seymour's team will be watching this poll closely. After a stint as
Acting Prime Minister last month (while Luxon was off-shore) and
having to respond to Labour's inflation capital gains tax, Seymour's net
favourability has surged 16 points and now sits at a (not quite as
dire) -11 percent.
Luxon's net
favourability is on -10 percent (+4 points), Hipkins is on -2 percent
(nc), and Peters on +2 percent (+5 points).
More
information about the poll, including Preferred Prime Minister
numbers, is available over on our website.
MFAT spends five days figuring out what to do
with Winston Peters’ Mongolian horse 🐎

Ever had a
horse to house? Last week, our investigations team uncovered that the
Ministry
of Foreign Affairs and Trade spent five days debating how to handle
Winston Peters’ gift from Mongolia: a horse named
Stamina.
Thanks to a
tip off and subsequent Official Information Act (OIA) responses (which
can be read here and here),
we now know that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade spent a
solid five days on what can only be described as a game of “What
do we do with this horse?”
An email
chain involving 14 MFAT officials reveals a whole lot of
back-and-forth on issues like what to name the horse (eventually
landing on Stamina), how similar gifts had been previously handled,
and just generally what to do with this unusual diplomatic gift.
It’s an
impressive display of the burden of bureaucracy in action. Spending
five days working on what to do with Stamina doesn't exactly scream
Government efficiency to us!
Police breath tests: Allegations of a costly
systemic rot 🚔

RNZ
recently broke the story that more than 100 police officers are under
investigation for falsifying 30,000 breath‑tests.
And
now we've learned that more
than 100 of the officers currently remain on duty. This begs the
question, where is the accountability for falsifying
data?
The Police
force exceeded its annual testing target by nearly a million tests,
but it now appears some officers manipulated the numbers to hit
performance goals. This exposes a system that prioritises appearances
over accountability.
We say
Ministers and senior police leadership must take action to restore
trust, enforce consequences, and fix the culture that allowed this
dishonesty to happen.
And
with today's news (see top of email), isn't that
true?!
Auckland's Supercity: A decade without a serious
review 🔍🤨️

Can you
believe the Auckland Council and the Supercity model have been
operating for over a decade?
Yet
despite billions flowing through rates and development levies, there’s
never been a full, independent review into whether the supercity
delivers value for ratepayers.
Longtime
Taxpayers' Union expert advisory, Phil Barry, has been crunching the
numbers on the Super City. His
latest analysis highlights how the governance framework remains
bloated, opaque, and untested against real outcomes. From
sprawling committees to overlapping council-controlled organisations,
it creates layers of bureaucracy that cost everyday Aucklanders both
time and money.
With other parts of the country considering
amalgamation, it is important to understand whether Auckland's
supercity has actually delivered for ratepayers before others follow
and amalgamate.
Phil's
report should be a call to arms to ensure the Government commissions
the post-implementation review ratepayers were promised when the Super
City was introduced.
Stephen Rowe: Leading AI Politics and global
youth movements 🎤🇺🇸

Last week,
our university campus group Generation Screwed met with Stephen Rowe,
who was over from the US being hosted by the Taxpayers' Union. Stephen
has extensive experience in leveraging AI and technology to mobilise
pro-freedom organisations and make political engagement more
effective.
Over the years, he has worked closely with
centre-right activists, including the late Charlie Kirk, who hired
Stephen as just the third Turning Point USA employee way back
when.
Creating a
first-class opportunity to learn from someone who knows how to
transform ideas into action and grow a movement that matters… all
while throwing in a Lord of the Rings reference or two.
Stephen featured on Sunday’s
Q+A with Jack Tame, discussing AI in Politics and his experience
working with Charlie Kirk.
Stephen
was also interviewed and featured on page two of the Weekend Post,
and sat
down for a (very entertaining!) podcast with Taxpayers' Union
supporter (and Sunday Star Times columnist) Damien
Grant.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTVDH7-UdwU
Taxpayer Talk – Jamie Beaton on how to
fix New Zealand's failing education system 📚

For
this week's episode of Taxpayer Talk, I sit down with Jamie
Beaton, the co-founder of Crimson Education and one of New Zealand’s
most high-profile entrepreneurs. Hailing from Auckland, Jamie
has turned his ambition into a global platform, helping students gain
access to elite universities while showing the world what Kiwi talent
can achieve.
Jamie
didn’t shy away from the politics of entrepreneurship either,
highlighting how burdensome regulation and high taxes can stifle young
people trying to make their mark. Jamie argued the government should
focus on empowering ambitious individuals, rather than penalising
success, stressing the importance of nurturing local talent to compete
on a global stage.
For
Generation Screwed and other young Kiwis looking to turn ideas into
action, Jamie’s experience and advice offer a blueprint: ambition,
persistence, and smart risk-taking. His story is proof that
New Zealanders can play at the highest level internationally if given
the right opportunities and support.
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 Jordan
Williams Executive Director New Zealand
Taxpayers’ Union.
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PS. The victory over the Health Research
Council is a big win for taxpayers, but you know that we can’t stop
here. We’re
building up our reserves for election 2026 to ensure we can continue
holding the government (and opposition parties!) accountable. If you
want to see more wins like this, please donate to our fighting fund
today.
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