
Labour MP Deborah Russell has apologised for swearing at acting Prime Minister David Seymour to kick off a tetchy select committee hearing.
Seymour, who is acting PM while Christopher Luxon is travelling to China, today fronted the finance and expenditure select committee so members could scrutinise the budget for his new Ministry of Regulation as part of Parliament鈥檚 scrutiny week.
During Seymour鈥檚 brief initial remarks to committee members, Russell and fellow Labour MP Megan Woods could be heard conversing.
After Seymour had concluded, National MP Ryan Hamilton alerted committee chairman and National MP Cameron Brewer to a 鈥渞ather unparliamentary outburst鈥 from Russell during the minister鈥檚 comments and claimed he wanted to check whether that indicated the standard of committee behaviour.
Brewer seemed happy to move on after noting any such behaviour would warrant the application of Parliament鈥檚 rules called Standing Orders.
However, Seymour quickly piped up, asking Russell what she had said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 something I should have kept under my breath,鈥 Russell responded.
鈥淲ell, just tell, people would like to know,鈥 Seymour replied.
鈥淚 believe I said, 鈥楩or f**** sake鈥 in response to something you said,鈥 Russell said bluntly, to which Seymour chuckled.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the standard of the Labour Party, they鈥檙e swearing already,鈥 he proclaimed with a grin.
Acting PM David Seymour was in select committee this morning. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Russell confirmed to Brewer she had withdrawn the comment and apologised.
Labour MP Duncan Webb appeared to follow Russell鈥檚 example, claiming later in the committee meeting Seymour was 鈥渕aking s*** up鈥.
Webb questioned Seymour about his comments around the Ministry of Regulation鈥檚 work around flour dust standards.
Webb wasn鈥檛 happy with Seymour鈥檚 comments, accusing him of conflating Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment advice with a change in regulations.
鈥淭ime and again, you [Seymour] have suggested that you have changed the rules ... do you want to correct that, or are you going to keep saying things which are not accurate?鈥
As Seymour was answering, he was cut off by Webb who told him he was, 鈥渕aking s*** up鈥.
When challenged, Webb said he was 鈥渘ot here to answer your [Seymour鈥檚] questions鈥, before apologising for swearing.
It wasn鈥檛 the only political tension from the morning鈥檚 select committee.
Green MP Francisco Hernandez arrived at Parliament鈥檚 Bowen House wheeling a trolley of boxes containing 鈥25,000 pages of Yellow Tape鈥 - a nod to Seymour鈥檚 repeated claim his ministry was designed to reduce ineffective and restrictive regulation.
Unfortunately for Hernandez, the trolley didn鈥檛 make it into the select committee room. He instead carried one box in with him that he kept at his feet.
Adam Pearse is the Deputy Political Editor and part of the NZ Herald鈥檚 Press Gallery team based at Parliament in Wellington. He has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2018, reporting for the Northern Advocate in Whang膩rei and the Herald in Auckland.
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