Labour leader Chris Hipkins has issued a stern warning for the leaker of the party鈥檚 capital gains tax policy, vowing they will be ousted from the party if found to have deliberately released details.
Labour today confirmed it will campaign on introducing a 鈥渢argeted capital gains tax鈥 on profits made following the sale of commercial or residential property, excluding the family home.
But aspects of the policy came to be in the public domain this morning, leading to an abrupt 5am Labour Party press release.
Hipkins said in a subsequent press conference he was 鈥渞eally proud鈥 of the policy he said would be the 鈥渕ost progressive change鈥 to tax in a generation in New Zealand.
The three governing parties have already launched attacks on the policy which aims to fund free GP visits for Kiwis.
The 28% tax, which would come into force from July 1, 2027, would also not apply to farms, KiwiSaver, shares, business assets, inheritances and personal items like cars, boats, art and furniture.
Labour says all tax revenue collected would go towards health spending, including funding three free GP visits for every New Zealander.
The party鈥檚 policy wasn鈥檛 expected to be announced today, but its hand was seemingly forced after details were leaked to RNZ, which reports the Labour caucus approved the policy in a 鈥渘ear-unanimous vote鈥.
No costings have been provided by Labour as yet. Hipkins began a press conference about 10.30am in Wellington this morning.
All three coalition Government parties have publicly condemned the policy, with National鈥檚 finance spokeswoman Nicola Willis claiming the tax would increase costs and stunt economic growth.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a tax on savings, investment and growth. The complete opposite of what our economy needs right now.鈥

National's finance spokeswoman Nicola Willis has criticised Labour's policy. Photo / Mark Mitchell
She also warned using the revenue to fund free GP visits would 鈥渃log the system鈥 and provide free doctor appointments for 鈥渕illionaires鈥. Willis affirmed National would not introduce a capital gains tax.
Act leader David Seymour, also Acting Prime Minister with Christopher Luxon in Malaysia, criticised the policy as a cynical exercise in 鈥減olitical signaling rather than policy鈥.
鈥淭he policy would make New Zealand a nation of tax accountants, not entrepreneurs. The policy won鈥檛 raise much revenue, but it will raise a generation of people gaming the system instead of growing the economy.
鈥淭hey say it鈥檒l fund free doctor visits, but it wouldn鈥檛. The tax wouldn鈥檛 raise a cent until years after its proposed start date. It鈥檚 marketing, not policy.鈥
New Zealand First leader Winston Peters, speaking from Denmark amid a series of overseas visits as Foreign Minister, doubted the tax would raise enough revenue to pay for free GP visits for everyone.
He also questioned whether it would require compensation if the sale of eligible property ended in a loss.
鈥淚t was an absolute mess of an announcement,鈥 he said.
Labour鈥檚 tax plan being leaked ahead of its planned announcement is the latest in a string of missteps in the party鈥檚 policy release.
Last week, Labour revealed its first policy, a 鈥淔uture Fund鈥 that would use dividends from some state-owned assets to invest in New Zealand businesses, which was broadly welcomed but also criticised for a lack of detail.
It also shared the name of a similar policy from NZ First, which Hipkins claimed not to be aware of.
Hipkins was also caught out when part of its health policy proposing to create an independent authority to set 鈥渟ustainable prices鈥 for general practices was revealed in an opinion piece by Labour鈥檚 health spokeswoman Dr Ayesha Verrall, published in NZ Doctor.
Labour鈥檚 tax announcement had been expected in the coming weeks but was evidently brought forward after the party learned the policy had been leaked to RNZ.
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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