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'It's not impossible': National may campaign on regulatory standards repeal, Willis says

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九一星空无限talk ZB,
Publish Date
Wed, 26 Nov 2025, 12:57pm

'It's not impossible': National may campaign on regulatory standards repeal, Willis says

Author
九一星空无限talk ZB,
Publish Date
Wed, 26 Nov 2025, 12:57pm

The National Party could join coalition partner NZ First and campaign on repealing the Regulatory Standards Act at the next election, deputy leader Nicola Willis says.

This is despite the law, which was pushed by the Act Party during coalition talks, being less than a month old, and having been passed into law with votes from both National and NZ First.

Speaking to Wellington Mornings with Nick Mills on 九一星空无限talk ZB, Willis said National had not 鈥渃ome up with what our party position will be after the election鈥.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 ruled out repealing it either. We haven鈥檛 taken a position yet, but it鈥檚 not impossible that we would go to the campaign trail saying, 鈥榶es, we met our coalition commitment, we supported that into law, but actually we agree with the concerns of some people, it hasn鈥檛 operated as we鈥檇 hoped and we want to repeal it鈥.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 come to a position yet, but we haven鈥檛 ruled it out.鈥

NZ First leader Winston Peters shocked the coalition last week when he said his party would campaign on repealing the law it had just helped to pass.

His position is that the coalition obliged his party to pass the law, but his party is free to repeal it in the next Parliament.

Willis said she was 鈥渃omfortable鈥 with this position.

鈥淭hey joined the Cabinet, they used their votes to ensure it is passed into law 鈥 they did their bit,鈥 Willis said.

Willis is not the only National MP to float repealing the law.

Last week, when her colleague Chris Bishop was asked what the party was thinking, he replied, 鈥測ou鈥檒l see our policy going into the election鈥.

鈥淚鈥檓 not going to give you a commitment on National policy,鈥 he said.

All three opposition parties say they will repeal the law if they have the numbers next term. Labour MP Duncan Webb has even submitted a member鈥檚 bill to the ballot which, if drawn, would give NZ First the opportunity to repeal the law this term of parliament.

Peters, however, described this as game-playing and said he would not be supporting the effort.

Act leader David Seymour attacked Peters鈥 about-turn on the law, saying it looked as though Peters was gearing up to join another Labour-led coalition, something Peters has said he would not do while Chris Hipkins was leader of the party.

The Regulatory Standards Act is designed to improve the quality of government regulation by establishing a set of principles for what constitutes 鈥済ood regulation鈥.

Part of the controversy surrounding the law is the fact these principles are closely aligned to Act鈥檚 political worldview and do not constitute more universally recognised principles of good regulation.

The act is also controversial for the creation of a regulations board that acts as an assessor of compliance against these principles, although power to act on what the board says ultimately still rests with ministers and Parliament.

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