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Seymour insists Govt coalition is stable and productive despite public rifts

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 12 Jan 2026, 12:20pm
National leader Christopher Luxon, Act leader David Seymour and NZ First leader Winston Peters sign their coalition agreement in November 2023. Photo / Mark Mitchell
National leader Christopher Luxon, Act leader David Seymour and NZ First leader Winston Peters sign their coalition agreement in November 2023. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Seymour insists Govt coalition is stable and productive despite public rifts

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 12 Jan 2026, 12:20pm

Act leader David Seymour has defended the three-party coalition Government as election year kicks off, insisting it is stable and productive despite public spats that have led it to be coined a 鈥渃oalition of chaos鈥.

Appearing on 九一星空无限talk ZB this morning to reflect on 2025 and explore the year ahead, the Deputy Prime Minister was asked whether he remained confident the three governing parties could hold the three-party coalition together before the general election.

Cracks in the coalition have been seen throughout its term; late last year, New Zealand First revealed it would campaign to repeal Seymour鈥檚 Regulatory Standards Bill at the polls and would vote against the recently struck free trade agreement with India.

Yet Seymour suggested the coalition鈥檚 dynamic was more a product of healthy debate and constructive dialogue, describing the setbacks as an inevitable part of politics and praising his partners for working through their differences to deliver results.

鈥淚t feels like we鈥檙e starting to get to a place 鈥 not just in coalition government, but in society 鈥 where actually some people do have different views, they鈥檙e allowed to express them, and, you know, the sun will still come up tomorrow,鈥 he told host Andrew Dickens.

鈥淚n fact, it will be brighter if we鈥檙e able to express ourselves and work through our challenges together.鈥

Seymour said that, under the coalition鈥檚 direction, Parliament had passed more legislation in two years than any of its predecessors in a full three-year term.

鈥淚 recognise there鈥檒l be some people who say, 鈥極h, is that actually a good thing?鈥 and 鈥業 didn鈥檛 like the laws鈥.

鈥淪ure, we can debate all of that, but I just make the point that if we have been fighting like cats in a sack, it hasn鈥檛 stopped us being very productive, in terms of preparing laws and getting them through Parliament.

鈥淎nd actually, I would say the truth is that we鈥檝e worked very well together, because the challenges that the country faces have demanded it.鈥

It was 鈥渋n nobody鈥檚 interest to have instability鈥, Seymour added, vowing to continue work on cutting red tape and reducing government expenditure.

鈥淎t the end of the day, we have a productivity problem in New Zealand. People talk about a cost-of-living crisis and that鈥檚 real. But when you really get down to it, it鈥檚 because our economy doesn鈥檛 produce the kind of wealth that people want to consume,鈥 he said.

鈥淭his is a great country. We haven鈥檛 really felt like that for a while, but it is. It鈥檚 one of the greatest societies that鈥檚 ever existed, and we should start celebrating that more.鈥

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