logo
Labour and Te Pāti Māori miss deadline for financial statements

Labour and Te Pāti Māori miss deadline for financial statements

RNZ News2 days ago
Labour and Te Pāti Māori's statements were due at the end of the financial year on 30 June. File photo.
Photo:
RNZ / REECE BAKER
Labour and Te Pāti Māori have both been late in filing audited financial statements to the Electoral Commission.
It is another strike for Te Pāti Māori, although the Electoral Commission says the party has assured them this year's and last year's statements will be filed together soon.
Labour has filed its financial statements - but not an audit.
Their statements were due at the end of the financial year on 30 June. All other parties with that due date - including ACT and National - have filed their financial statements.
Electoral Commission manager of legal, regulation and policy Kristina Temel said the commission was continuing to follow up with both parties.
"Labour has not filed an audit report for its financial statements. The party contacted us before 30 June to advise that its audit report is taking longer than expected and at this stage we are satisfied with the reasons they and their auditor have given," Temel said.
Labour general secretary Rob Salmond said the party was "continuing to work with our audit partners as we transition to a new set of accounting practices" and was "in the late stages of this process".
Temel said Te Pāti Māori had not yet filed an audit report, or financial statements "but has told the commission they are being prepared and will be filed soon".
"They have also informed us that the outstanding audit report for last year's financial statements will be filed at the same time."
As incorporated societies, Labour and Te Pāti Māori are the only parties required to have their financial statements audited under changes to the Electoral Act passed in 2022.
Several other parties - including the Greens and NZ First - have a reporting date at the end of September.
Police previously
issued a formal warning to Te Pāti Māori
over the failure to file a complete and audited 2023 financial statement on time.
The commission said no decisions had yet been made on whether to refer any of Te Pāti Māori's leadership to police over this year's statements but noted that "under section 210J of the Electoral Act, it is an offence for a party secretary to file a financial statement late or fail to file a financial statement without reasonable excuse".
Te Pāti Māori president John Tamihere declined to comment.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Butter prices push up food bills as cost of block goes up 120% in a decade
Butter prices push up food bills as cost of block goes up 120% in a decade

RNZ News

timea few seconds ago

  • RNZ News

Butter prices push up food bills as cost of block goes up 120% in a decade

Photo: Sorin Gheorghita for Unsplash The price of a block of butter is now 120 percent higher than it was 10 years ago, and increases in dairy prices in general helped pull up food prices in June, Stats NZ says. It said food prices lifted 4.6 percent in the 12 months to June 2025. Stats NZ spokesperson Nicola Growden said dairy prices were a continued driver of the increase. Milk was up 14.3 percent for the year, to $4.57 for two litres, butter was up 46.5 percent to $8.60 for a 500g block, and cheese was up 30 percent to $13.04 for a 1kg block. "Butter prices are nearly five dollars more expensive than 10 years ago, an increase of over 120 percent," Growden said. There were also significant increases in the price of meat, poultry and fish. "The average cost for 1kg of beef mince was $21.73 in June 2025, up from $18.80 a year ago," Growden said. Food prices rose 1.2 percent in the month. More expensive tomatoes, capsicum, and broccoli drove the increase for fruit and vegetables, while higher prices for boxed chocolates and eggs drove the increase for grocery foods. More to come.... Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Councils blindsided by government call to halt planning work
Councils blindsided by government call to halt planning work

RNZ News

time31 minutes ago

  • RNZ News

Councils blindsided by government call to halt planning work

Waitaki mayor Gary Kircher says his council is being adversely affected by the government's constant changes. Photo: RNZ / Tess Brunton Councils have been blindsided by the government's call to halt planning work, which they say will have "unintended consequences". Photo: Resource Management Act (RMA) Reform Minister Chris Bishop has put a stop to councils working on District and Regional Plans until the new RMA legislation takes effect. "Rather than let these pricey, pointless planning and policy processes play out, we will be giving councils clarity on where to focus their efforts while they await the new planning system," Bishop said at the Local Government NZ conference in Christchurch on Wednesday. The shake-up of the RMA is expected to come into effect in 2027. Christchurch city councillor Sara Templeton said her council is working on a plan change on noise in the central city , which could be placed under threat. The plan change was about "finding a balance between people living in town and the need for a vibrant nightlife", she said. Sara Templeton Photo: Supplied / Christchurch City Council "I'd be frustrated if we couldn't do that work with our communities. "The top-down approach from central government at the moment has had multiple unintended impacts." Cr Templeton called on the government to work more closely with councils. The Kaikōura District Council has been working through a review of its District Plan, which was adopted in 2008. Council chief executive Will Doughty said the announcement will stifle the council's attempts to make changes to benefit the community. "We have just awarded a contract to our consultants to work on the first two or three chapters. "We always knew reform was underway, but we took an approach to respond to the needs of our community, while being flexible enough to review and respond to any changes." Doughty said the council faced criticism that the "rules are prohibitive", so it was keen to update the plan. Waitaki mayor Gary Kircher said his council has been reviewing parts of its District Plan, but its efforts were impacted by constant changes from central government. "The government has been signalling changing requirements for a long time, and we wish they would just get on and do it so we can get on and do what we need to do." Kircher said councils had called on the government to stop signalling changes ahead of legislation, as it set "unrealistic expectations for the community". "Once the government makes these announcements, people expect us to implement the changes, but it takes time to go through the planning process." RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop Photo: NZME / LDR Bishop said money was wasted on planning review processes, which was required under the existing RMA. "The government will suspend councils' mandatory RMA requirements to undertake plan and regional policy statement reviews every ten years, and the requirement to implement national planning standards." Bishop said there will be some exemptions, including private plan changes and natural hazards planning. -LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

Government Attacks Māori Rights On World Stage
Government Attacks Māori Rights On World Stage

Scoop

timean hour ago

  • Scoop

Government Attacks Māori Rights On World Stage

Te Pāti Māori condemns the Government's escalating assault on tangata whenua, following the letter sent by Regulations Minister David Seymour to the United Nations and Prime Minister Luxon's weak attempt to distance himself while still endorsing its dangerous intent. 'This Government is setting fire to Māori rights through regressive, colonial legislation. Seymour's letter is not a rogue move, it's a warning shot, signalling this Government's intent to dismantle Indigenous rights' said Te Pāti Māori Co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. 'The real threat isn't his tantrum, it's the policy machine behind it, backed by every party in this coalition.' The Prime Minister has now said publicly that 'we've all read the letter, and we all think it's a waste of time' effectively agreeing with Seymour's withdrawn rant. That statement has already been reported back to the United Nations as the formal position of the New Zealand Prime Minister. 'It's a complete diplomatic failure' said Te Pāti Māori Co-leader Rawiri Waititi. 'Winston Peters is trying to reassure international partners, but he's being publicly undermined by his own Prime Minister. If all Ministers think the UN's concerns are 'bunkum', then Peters' response is meaningless and Aotearoa's credibility on the world stage is in tatters.' Earlier this year, Māori rights violations were raised during the UN's Universal Periodic Review (UPR) process. The Government's actions are not just bad policy they are breaches of international human rights standards. 'In 2010, it was a National Government that endorsed the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). That wasn't a diplomatic accident it was a formal recognition of our rights as tangata whenua' said Waititi. 'Now, this coalition is dismantling that legacy while the world watches. This is global embarrassment for the government stating the United Nations is a waste of time.' 'As Māori rights come under attack at home, we need the protections promised in UNDRIP more than ever' concluded Ngarewa-Packer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store