Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is expected to announce the date of the T膩maki Makaurau byelection at this afternoon鈥檚 post-Cabinet press conference.
A byelection is being held in the Auckland M膩ori seat after the death of Te P膩ti M膩ori MP Takutai Tarsh Kemp, who had been battling kidney disease.
It appears it will be a two-horse race between well-known broadcaster Oriini Kaipara for Te P膩ti M膩ori and Labour鈥檚 Peeni Henare, who held the seat for nine years until the 2023 when Kemp won the seat by a slim 42 votes.
Voting during byelections is open for about two weeks for people already enrolled in the electorate.
Labour MPs, from left, Arena Williams, Carmel Sepuloni, Peeni Henare and Willie Jackson pay tribute to Te P膩ti M膩ori MP Takutai Tarsh Kemp at Parliament. Photo / Mark Mitchell
The Herald understands this afternoon鈥檚 post-Cabinet press conference, held at 4pm, will also likely involve tertiary education, a portfolio led by National Minister Penny Simmonds.
Simmonds has been overseeing the dismantling of Te P奴kenga, a mega-merger of the country鈥檚 polytechnics and training organisations.
The Vocational Education minister has previously described the polytech cluster as an 鈥渁bject disaster鈥 and a 鈥渇inancial mess鈥 drowning in hundreds of millions of dollars of debt.
Te P奴kenga was established in April 2020 under the previous Labour Government and merged 25 polytechnics and industry training organisations into one national network.
Last week, RNZ reported warnings from Te P奴kenga鈥檚 managers that the Government will still need to bail out the struggling polytechnics despite the reforms.
The mega-merger鈥檚 chief financial officer James Smith told a Parliamentary select committee the changes being made would leave behind a 鈥渟implistic, inefficient volumetric system鈥 with no ability to adjust price based on scale.
Vocational Education Minister Penny Simmonds. Photo / Mark Mitchell
鈥淲e also expect because of this that the government will be relied upon for further ad hoc financial support for ITPs (Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics) in the future,鈥 he said.
Recently, the Universal College of Learning (Ucol) revealed plans to cut staff numbers and courses to save $7.1 million to be financially viable as a standalone institution. The disestablishment of Te P奴kenga means polytechnics, including Ucol, will now act as 鈥渟tandalones鈥.
This morning, the Government also announced plans to double the international student sector to $7.2 billion by 2034. Under the new 鈥淚nternational Education Going for Growth Plan鈥 eligible student visa holders in New Zealand will now be able to work 25 hours per week, up from the current 20.
It also wants to grow student enrolments from 83,700 in 2024 to 105,000 in 2027 and 119,000 by 2034 and increase the proportion of prospective students rating New Zealand among their top three choices from 18% in 2024 to 20% in 2027 and 22% in 2034.
Julia Gabel is a Wellington-based political reporter. She joined the Herald in 2020 and has most recently focused on data journalism.
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