Labour continues to trail National in the latest political poll.
Labour is on 27 per cent in the Taxpayers鈥 Union-Curia poll - no change from last month.
The party is well behind National which is at 35 per cent, again unchanged.
Act has risen one point to 14 per cent, the Greens are also up one to 13 per cent.
Te P膩ti M膩ori are on 3 per cent, which is no change from last month. NZ First is on 4 per cent, down two points from last month.
On those numbers, National and Act could govern comfortably alone with 64 seats. NZ First would be out of Parliament.
Chris Hipkins and Christopher Luxon are once again equal in the preferred prime minister stakes, with 25 per cent each.
Meanwhile,听Chris Hipkins said his election campaign is 鈥渙nly just ramping up鈥, when asked about Labour鈥檚 most recent poor poll result.
The party recorded one of its worst Talbot Mills Corporate Poll results since entering Government. The poll, released to the Herald yesterday, had Labour falling to 30 per cent. That was down from 32 per cent last month.
Hipkins said, while on the campaign trail this morning, that National had been campaigning far longer while he had been focused on 鈥渂eing Prime Minister鈥.
He said there was a 鈥渉uge undecided vote鈥 out there, and he was looking forward to speaking to more of the public about Labour鈥檚 policies.
Starting his day at the Wellington Chamber of Commerce business breakfast, Hipkins talked up a Budget 2023 promise to turn the capital into a science city with research hubs.
It capped off an economically-focused week, which saw Hipkins address a major BusinessNZ conference in Wellington and deliver a Bloomberg address in Auckland.
He later was given a stern message by a business owner - lower personal tax rates. Hipkins was visiting Quay Marine in Wellington, a repair shop which helps fix boats like the Cook Strait ferries.
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STORY CONTINUES听
Hipkins toured the factory and then disappeared into the tea room with the business owner Alan Collins for an extended chat. Media were not invited but a source in the room said a frank discussion about tax rates took place. Collins later told media that high-income tax rates were making it difficult for staff who worked overtime. They meant overtime was not worth it for staff.听
鈥滾ess taxation鈥 if I get the boys to work overtime they go into the next tax bracket. It鈥檚 just not worth it to work,鈥 he said.听
Hipkins was visiting businesses and meeting locals in the Wellington 艑hariu electorate today with local MP and candidate Greg O鈥機onnor.听
Some of the people they spoke to pushed Labour on personal income tax breaks. Hipkins said he was also able to discuss with them things taxes paid for such as apprenticeship programmes. He said he was confident in his party鈥檚 tax policies - including being able to introduce GST off fruit and vegetables by April 1.听
He said now was not the time for wider income tax breaks as he was 鈥渘ot willing鈥 to cut into public services.听
On a听recent breach of the Official Information Act by his office听and the Ombudsman ruling that he apologise, Hipkins said he had not had a chance to read it yet but accepted the issues raised. Nobody would be fired for the incident, he said.听
O鈥機onnor, the incumbent 艑hariu MP but who is up against National deputy leader Nicola Willis, said he was not taking anything for granted and it was an 鈥渆qual start鈥.听
Meanwhile, Luxon is in Hamilton and Tauranga today. He gave a speech to the NZ Chamber of Commerce Annual Conference in Hamilton before heaidng to the AIMS games in Mount Maunganui.听
Luxon was welcomed by AIMS games trust chairman Henk Popping and tournament director Kelly Schiscka. He is accompanied by Bay of Plenty national candidate Tom Rutherford and Tauranga MP and National candidate Sam Uffindell.听
New Zealand鈥檚 53rd Parliament concluded with its dissolution made official this morning on the steps of Parliament.听
About 500 people gathered in the Wellington sunshine to watch as the New Zealand Herald of Arms Extraordinary to the King, Phillip O鈥橲hea, descended the steps to the sounds of trumpets, a tuba and a trombone ringing out across the grounds. O鈥橲hea stated the confirmation of Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro to dissolve Parliament by signing a proclamation.听
That was then certified by three witnesses: the Clerk of the House of Representatives, the Deputy Clerk and the听Clerk-Assistant. At听the end of his short speech, O鈥橲hea proclaimed 鈥淕od save the King鈥. There was one person in the crowd who responded in kind. The ceremony was finished with the singing of the national anthem.听
Poll raises questions听
The Talbot Mills Corporate Poll had National on 36 per cent, up one percentage point on the previous poll. The Green Party had jumped two points to 12 per cent. Act had fallen one point to 10 per cent. Based on this poll, NZ First would be back in Parliament on 5.4 per cent.听
On those numbers, National would have 45 seats, and Act would have 13. They would need NZ First鈥檚 seven seats to govern.听
National Party leader Christopher Luxon holds up his pledge card, which he revealed at his party's campaign launch in Auckland last weekend. Photo / Alex Burton听
Labour would have 37 seats, the Greens would get 15, and Te P膩ti M膩ori would have three.
Hipkins鈥 ranking as preferred Prime Minister had plummeted from 34 per cent in the last poll to 28 per cent this month.
Luxon was hot on his heels at 26 per cent. Act leader David Seymour also polled well, hitting 11 per cent; Green co-leaders Marama Davidson and James Shaw scored 4 per cent each.
The poll was taken between August 24 and 30, a period that covered Hipkins鈥 ruling out governing with NZ First but missed the fallout from National鈥檚 tax plan, which was released on August 30.
Crime plan
The Labour leader released the party鈥檚 six-point plan to reduce crime, which included a $124 million investment to add 300 more police officers to the front line by 2027/28.
Fifty extra officers would be introduced in the first year and 75 in the second and third years, with the remaining 100 hitting the ground in the 2027/28 year.
Hipkins said the boost in front-line officers meant there was one officer for every 470 Kiwis, which he claimed was the 鈥渂est ratio in modern history鈥.
Labour promised to add 300 more police officers to the front line if elected. Photo / Hayden Woodward听
Labour had also promised to investigate adding a new offence to the Crimes Act to address stalking.
It followed the 2022 murder of promising AUT student Farzana Yaqubi by Kanwarpal Singh, who last month was sentenced to 17 years in prison after pleading guilty to murder.
The Herald had earlier revealed Yaqubi had gone to police with concerns she was being harassed two months before she was murdered.
Today, Labour鈥檚 policy document acknowledged the need to modernise stalking and harassment laws with the potential to create a stalking offence.
The other new promise concerned gang convoys and could include new legislation to allow the seizure of gang members鈥 vehicles 鈥渨ithout conviction when it is unsafe for police to intervene at the time of the offending, ensuring that gang members don鈥檛 get away with breaking the law when it鈥檚 difficult to identify the driver of the vehicle, and expanding the scope of police powers so that any breach of road laws by gang members when there are two or more vehicles involved would result in seizure鈥.
Hipkins described recent gang convoys, like the one in 艑p艒tiki in June, as 鈥渋ntolerable鈥.
鈥淟abour will introduce laws to punish this behaviour and develop new ways to target gang leaders and break their international links.鈥
On the pink bus
Meanwhile, Act Party leader David Seymour unveiled his bright-pink campaign bus, which he calls 鈥淏ig Pinky鈥 - and revealed a donor will supply him with a piloted plane to help him get around 75 campaign stops.
The Act Party campaign bus, named 'Big Pinky', was revealed in Auckland yesterday. Photo / Sylvie Whinray听
Yesterday, Seymour, candidates, supporters and media took the bus - loaned by a supporter - from the Auckland Showgrounds to a political panel at St Paul鈥檚 College in Ponsonby.
鈥淲e are a little bit concerned that we are actually going to attract as many Barbie fans as Act fans,鈥 Seymour said of the bright pink branding. 鈥淏ut increasingly there鈥檚 a cross-over. We think that this bus will be more than Ken-ough.鈥
Luxon was in Queenstown to announce his promise to build a new 鈥淕reat Walk鈥 and encourage more young people to come to New Zealand on working holiday visas, as part of his party鈥檚 tourism strategy.
Tourism spokesman Joseph Mooney said the party would create a new 80-kilometre Great Walk at Waiau - Toa/Molesworth in the South Island.
The party would also lift the upper age for being allowed a working holiday visa from 30 to 35 years and allow people to apply for a second and third work visa as long as worker shortages continue.
Luxon also promised to electrify the New Zealand cycle trail for e-bikes, with $3m set aside to co-invest in e-bike chargers.
Mooney said the total cost of the tourism package came to $22m over four years, which would be funded through money that was unallocated from the International Visitor Levy, a charge levied on incoming tourists that was brought in by Labour.
Adam Pearse is a political reporter in the听NZ Herald听press gallery team, based at Parliament. He has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2018, covering sport and health for the听Northern Advocate听in Whang膩rei before moving to the听NZ Herald听in Auckland, covering Covid-19 and crime.听
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