Despite a deteriorating economic outlook and inconvenient calculations, Nicola Willis and Chris Luxon insist that they can deliver promised tax cuts without new taxes or higher borrowing. Or that’s the intention, at least. Toby Manhire, Annabelle Lee-Mather and Ben Thomas chew over the fiscal predicament.
Plus: is the new fast-track consenting law, which concentrates immense power in the hands of Chris Bishop, Simeon Brown and Shane Jones, a necessary circuit breaker or a lurch towards Muldoonism? What to make of Winston Peters’ ramblings about Nazism, DNA and co-governance? And while Chumbawamba have urged New Zealand's veteran tub-thumper to cease and desist, is a better template for his contribution one of the Gallagher brothers?
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Winston Peters? I don't know her
Megapod 22: Can Annabelle, Ben and Toby make it out alive?
Megapod 21: The Real Pod x Gone By Lunchtime + The Worm
Megapod 20: Bernard Hickey – the man, the myth, the machine
Megapod 19: All hail Policy.nz
Megapod 18: Youth Wings revisited
Megapod 17: Raf Manji says Top is still in the game
Megapod 16: Grant Robertson on Labour’s record and the mood for change
Megapod 15: Andrew Geddis on how to make a government
Megapod 14: David Seymour on why he despises political TV drama
Megapod 13: Ben McKay on the Voice vote in Australia
Megapod 12: Brooke Van Velden on the battle for Tāmaki
Megapod 11: The hot seats in election 2023
Megapod 10: Chris Hipkins reveals he has read a book
Megapod 9: The foreign affairs debate we’re not having in election 2023
Megapod 8: Erica Stanford on the minister she wants to be
Megapod 7: Lara Greaves on polling, the Māori roll and harassment
Megapod 6: James Shaw on the climate change election
Megapod 5: A conversation with Debbie Ngarewa-Packer
Megapod 4: A special Auckland Central debate / shock moderator walkout
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