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Watch – 'I have a PhD': Labour's Russell fires up at former judge over contentious bill

Author
Jamie Ensor,
Publish Date
Tue, 8 Jul 2025, 1:32pm

Watch – 'I have a PhD': Labour's Russell fires up at former judge over contentious bill

Author
Jamie Ensor,
Publish Date
Tue, 8 Jul 2025, 1:32pm

A select committee hearing on David Seymour鈥檚 Regulatory Standards Bill turned into 鈥渁cademic jousting鈥 on Tuesday morning as Labour鈥檚 Dr Deborah Russell went head-to-head with a retired District Court judge.

The legislation would codify a set of principles that Seymour believes are a guide to 鈥渞esponsible regulation鈥 and require agencies to assess the consistency of legislation against these. A board would be established to assess different legislation. However, this would only be able to make non-binding recommendations or findings of inconsistency.

The proposed principles found in the bill include that it is important laws are 鈥渃lear and accessible鈥, should 鈥渘ot unduly diminish a person鈥檚 liberty鈥 and there should be reasonable consultation on bills. There are principles about private property rights, such as allowing for 鈥渇air compensation鈥 if these are impaired or taken.

David Harvey, who served as a judge between 1989 and 2021, was submitting on the legislation and expressing general support for it. His written submission said the bill introduced a 鈥減roper, rigorous process for considering the enactment of legislation鈥.

He covered several themes from his written submission, including that the bill was 鈥渘ot constitutional鈥 but instead 鈥減rocedural鈥 and could be amended or repealed by future Governments.

鈥淭he only thing is that if it is going to be ignored, those who are responsible for ignoring it are going to have to stand up and say why,鈥 Harvey said.

One of his arguments was that the legislation didn鈥檛 reflect a libertarian ideology, as some critics have suggested.

鈥淓very piece of legislation that is enacted involves an erosion or some form of interference with individual or corporate liberty,鈥 Harvey said.

He said the principles which legislation could be compared against in the future involved a 鈥減rocess of legislative balancing鈥, but he did not believe this was an example of libertarian ideology.

Labour's Deborah Russell questioned David Harvey. Photo / Parliament
Labour's Deborah Russell questioned David Harvey. Photo / Parliament

Labour鈥檚 Russell asked Harvey 鈥渨hat notion of liberty you鈥檙e working with鈥, as she believed it was 鈥渃ontentious鈥 to suggest every law infringes on liberty.

Harvey responded by asking if she was familiar with Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the German Enlightenment philosopher.

鈥淚 have a PhD in political theory so I鈥檓 familiar with [Thomas] Hobbes鈥, Russell responded.

As Russell continued, Harvey asked if she was aware of the opening line of Rousseau鈥檚 The Social Contract.

She said: 鈥淭here is no need to patronise me. I am asking you what notion of liberty you鈥檙e working with.鈥

Harvey said: 鈥溾橫an is born free, and everywhere he is in chains鈥. The chains in fact are legislation. Everywhere, any time that you enact legislation, you infringe on a person鈥檚 liberty, freedom of action or ability to choose.鈥

Russell said: 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 buy into the notion, then, that in actual fact the laws can create our liberties, which is the Harringtonian notion, or the notion that comes to us through the civil republican tradition, as opposed to the liberal or libertarian tradition.鈥

Harvey said he was 鈥渕ore a person from the Enlightenment鈥, which Russell said she was too.

鈥淚鈥檓 afraid that just stating that as a notion of liberty is actually a deeply contested view of liberty,鈥 Russell said.

Harvey said it might be contested, but 鈥渋t might be one to which I adhere鈥.

Following that, the select committee鈥檚 chair Ryan Hamilton said there was nothing like a 鈥済ood academic jousting on a Tuesday morning鈥.

In 2019, Labour complained about a National Party social media ad of Russell talking about wellbeing in ancient times, including the philosophy of eudaimonia: happiness.

鈥淚t is an ancient idea as part of the ancient wisdom,鈥 Russell said in the House at the time.

She last month apologised after swearing during a select committee Acting Prime Minister David Seymour was appearing at.

Should the Treaty be referenced?

Later in Tuesday鈥檚 select committee hearing, Harvey faced questions from Act鈥檚 Cameron Luxton about the former judge鈥檚 view that the legislation should make reference to the Treaty of Waitangi.

鈥淚t involves elements of governance. It involves elements of equal application of the law. Articles 1 and 3 of the Treaty. For those reasons, there should be some recognition of the Treaty,鈥 Harvey submitted.

鈥淚鈥檓 not exactly sure how that should be done within the scope of the bill.鈥

Luxton asked whether he thought the legislation鈥檚 principles already accounted for those articles of the Treaty, to which Harvey said they could 鈥渋n a very vague sense鈥, but he believed there should be specificity about it.

鈥淚鈥檓 not one who suggests that the Treaty has a place in every piece of legislation, but because there are elements of governance and because there are elements of equal application, I think that that has got to be made clear and should be referenced within the bill.鈥

The Act MP asked how that could be done, but Harvey said he鈥檇 need time to consider that.

鈥淚鈥檓 still recovering from my academic dispute with Dr Russell,鈥 Harvey said.

Seymour on Monday said he hadn鈥檛 heard an argument about why the Treaty should be referenced.

鈥淎ll these people sort of mindlessly say, 鈥榶ou must have the Treaty of Waitangi because it鈥檚 our founding document鈥.

鈥淎ll of that is true, but they aren鈥檛 really able to give a practical example of why making the Treaty a principle in this particular law will change the amount of red tape New Zealanders face.鈥

Seymour said the principles in the Regulatory Standards Bill were designed to benefit all New Zealanders.

Jamie Ensor is a political reporter in the NZ Herald press gallery team based at Parliament. He was previously a TV reporter and digital producer in the 九一星空无限hub press gallery office. In 2025, he was a finalist for Political Journalist of the Year at the Voyager Media Awards.

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