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Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has given another statement on, saying he had spoken to Australia鈥檚 PM Anthony Albanese this morning.
Their positions were aligned and they would stay in touch to be sure they were aligning their efforts.
He had also spoken to Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta and told her to听.
鈥淲e will see how things unfold, but we will be ready to respond to any humanitarian response.鈥 He re-stated New Zealand鈥檚 鈥渁bsolute condemnation.鈥
Hipkins says he would not break his word and work with New Zealand First leader Winston Peters in order to break a possible post-election stalemate, even if that meant sending voters back to the polls.
But if the Labour leader were in such a scenario, he says a second election would be National鈥檚 fault.
Hipkins was asked about the prospect of working with NZ First after National said there was 鈥渁 very real and growing possibility鈥 of post-election talks between National, Act and NZ First falling short of forming a government.
With only five days to go, a series of polls show National would likely need both Act and NZ First to form a government, despite National leader Christopher Luxon鈥檚 plea to voters to deliver a clear two-party hand to him. There is also the possibility of a Labour-Greens-Te P膩ti M膩ori bloc forming a parliamentary majority with the help of NZ First.
Luxon said two weeks ago that he would听as a last resort if it meant avoiding another Labour-led government, but on Saturday, National鈥檚 campaign chair Chris Bishop said a听if 鈥渋t is just impossible to do a deal between National, Act and NZ First鈥.
Peters dismissed the prospect of a second election听, and described National鈥檚 latest campaign ads - which suggested eight weeks of coalition talks after no clear election winner - as 鈥渄irt鈥.
鈥淚t is a slight,鈥 Peters said after a public meeting in Masterton. 鈥淚t is a mistruth, but sadly we just have to get on with the job and keep going. We are not going to be derailed by that sort of talk because people can work out that it鈥檚 a lie.鈥
Yesterday Hipkins and Luxon both said it was going to be a close election, pitching themselves respectively as the safe bet to avoid post-election uncertainty.
Hipkins said raising the prospect of a second election showed National was 鈥渇alling apart鈥.
鈥淎fter spending the last few weeks telling New Zealanders that he could work with Winston Peters, Christopher Luxon is now threatening New Zealanders with another general election,鈥 he said.
鈥淐hristopher Luxon has been saying that he would work with Winston Peters. Now he鈥檚 saying that he thinks it might not work - and they haven鈥檛 even sat in a room together yet.鈥
Labour leader Chris Hipkins serves ice cream from a Mr Whippy truck in Takapuna yesterday. Photo / Alex Burton
Peters has promised multiple times not to work with Labour and Hipkins has returned the favour, but in a recent poll a majority - 55 per cent -听.
Asked if he would open the door to Peters if it meant avoiding a second election, Hipkins said: 鈥淚 made it clear months ago we wouldn鈥檛 be working with Winston Peters or New Zealand First.鈥
He said it wouldn鈥檛 really be a choice for him because any blame for such a scenario would lie with National if they walked away from post-election negotiations.
听鈥淚鈥檓 not the one talking about an extra general election. That鈥檚 Christopher Luxon鈥檚 threat to New Zealanders.鈥
Hipkins said if the numbers fell his way and he was in post-election talks with the Greens and Te P膩ti M膩ori, those negotiations wouldn鈥檛 break down to the point of forcing another election - even though Hipkins has ruled out the wealth tax that those parties are prioritising.
鈥淚鈥檓 confident that we have enough common ground that we would be able to put together a stable government.鈥
Campaigning in Kerikeri yesterday, Luxon was asked by Quail Ridge Retirement Village resident Rhonda Blakie about him working with Peters.
鈥淚 will find a way to make that work as best as I possibly can,鈥 he said, but he added there were 鈥渘o guarantees鈥.
Speaking to media afterwards, Luxon repeated his preference for a National-Act coalition and that Peters was a last resort.
He wouldn鈥檛 say what the chances were of finding a workable deal with Peters, nor would he answer whether he was trying to scare voters away from NZ First and towards National.
Luxon didn鈥檛 directly answer when asked whether raising the spectre of another election was a threat, but he rejected the notion that he was scaremongering by talking about the possibility of a hung Parliament.
鈥淭hat could be one of the complexities that emerges and one of the uncertainties that emerges on the other side of the election.鈥
His position hadn鈥檛 changed since he ruled Peters in two weeks ago, Luxon said.
鈥淲hat we鈥檙e saying is there鈥檚 huge uncertainty on the other side of this election. To avoid all of the uncertainty on the other side of the election, party vote National.鈥
National leader Christopher Luxon campaigning in Northland yesterday. Photo / Michael Cunningham
He laughed off Hipkins鈥 suggestion that Labour was on the up.
鈥淵ou cannot say you鈥檝e got momentum when you鈥檙e in the 20s. Been there, done that. Not a great place to be,鈥 Luxon said.
The听贬别谤补濒诲鈥s poll of polls shows Labour on 26.8 per cent, the Greens on 12.3 per cent and Te P膩ti M膩ori on 2.8 per cent - or 41.9 per cent between all three.
Labour鈥檚 internal polling, the听Herald听understands, is showing the left bloc with 55 out of Parliament鈥檚 120 seats, versus the right bloc with 58 seats, with NZ First holding the balance of power.
鈥淭he gap between the centre-right and the centre-left is narrowing. There鈥檚 still a week to go in this campaign and a lot can happen,鈥 Hipkins said.
Act leader David Seymour said New Zealanders cannot afford a second election in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis.
鈥淚t is absolutely critical that parties respect the result of this election and work together, not just to bring about a change of Government,鈥 Seymour said.
鈥淲e will make our best effort to make it work.鈥
Following听earlier this week, Labour unveiled a plea from former Prime Minister Helen Clark on its social media channels yesterday.
鈥淲hen times are tough it鈥檚 natural to look for change, but the question is: 鈥榗hange to what?鈥 Change to tax cuts that deliver so little to people on low incomes? Tax cuts funded by skimping on the basic services Kiwis rely on, and selling our houses to offshore buyers? Policies like those would deepen poverty and inequality,鈥 Clark said.
This morning, Hipkins faces a two-hour grilling by 九一星空无限talk ZB鈥檚 Mike Hosking, while Luxon is campaigning in Christchurch before flying back to Auckland for a public rally in the evening.
Derek Cheng is a senior journalist who started at the听Herald听in 2004. He has worked several stints in the press gallery and is a former deputy political editor.
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