New analysis found the clean slate law has no relevant impact on the likelihood of eligible individuals finding work. The New Zealand film sector is keeping calm and carrying on in the wake of new tariff threats on film and TV production made in non-US countries. Meanwhile, the Prime Minister “has not given any thought to” it. Labour leader Chris Hipkins says there is no justification for Education Minister Erica Stanford to have been using a personal email address to access work documents, including unreleased pre-Budget material.
Union coverage
Employment
Politics
- PM ‘hasn’t given any thought’ to Trump film tariff threat
- Erica Stanford sent pre-Budget documents to her personal email
- Erica Standford inviting security risks by using personal email address, Labour leader says
- Christopher Luxon reveals FTA negotiations with India start this week
- Corrections minister Mark Mitchell denies pushing for longer prison sentences
- Leaked documents say Kāhui Ako school programme ‘set to be disestablished’
- Major party donors revealed, National draws in $4.8m
Te Ao Māori
Economics
- Trump’s film tariffs: NZ industry voices say don’t panic – just yet
- Overdue home loan payments reach eight-year high – Centrix
- Snapper trialled in Tasman Bay open ocean aquaculture farming system
- ‘Golden visa’ shutting out Chinese investors, legal experts say
- Former senior National Party minister expected to chair NZ Herald owner`