New Zealand’s justice minister resigned on Monday after police charged her with reckless driving and resisting arrest after a car crash.
Kiri Allan was involved in the crash shortly after 9pm on Sunday in Wellington, said prime minister Chris Hipkins, and she was detained at the central police station before being released four hours later.
Police have charged her with careless use of a motor vehicle, and refusing to accompany a police officer, and summonsed to appear in court at a later date. Allan was handed an infringement notice for excess breath alcohol between 250 and 400mcg.
The incident involving Allan was the latest in a series of missteps and scandals involving government ministers less than three months out from national elections. Polls indicate the conservative opposition has pulled level or moved slightly ahead of the incumbent liberals in what promises to be a close race.
Once considered a rising star of the Labour party, Allan had recently taken time off for her mental health after being involved in a public split with her partner and accusations of poor working relationships with staff.
Hipkins said he spoke to Allan on Monday morning and told her that he thought she wasn’t in a fit state to remain a minister and that it was untenable for a justice minister to be charged with criminal offending. She agreed and resigned her ministerial roles, Hipkins said.
For now, Allan remains a member of parliament.
“While her alleged actions are inexcusable, I’ve been advised she was experiencing extreme emotional distress at the time of the incident,” Hipkins said. “Her recent personal struggles with mental health have been well documented and it appears some of those issues came to a head yesterday.”
Allan said she was sorry for her actions and was heading home to consider her future in politics. “Over recent weeks I’ve faced a number of personal difficulties. I took time off to address those, and believed I was OK to juggle those challenges with the pressure of being a minister,” she said in a statement. “My actions yesterday show I wasn’t OK, and I’ve let myself and my colleagues down.”
Last month, transport and immigration minister Michael Wood resigned after failing to disclose a possible conflict of interest with stock he owned. In March, police minister Stuart Nash was sacked after it came to light he had given confidential information to donors. In May, customs minister Meka Whaitiri was fired after switching allegiance to another political party.
Hipkins took over as prime minister in January after his predecessor Jacinda Ardern stepped down. New Zealand’s elections will be held on 14 October.
I don't agree with this take.
I agree I don't think they are likely to stay in power - New Zealand likes to change after 2 terms unless there is a compwlling reason not to.
But you seem to be blaming their policies for problems that have been steadily getting worse and worse over the last 20 years, no matter who has been in power. No one is going to fix it.
The dollar, incidentally, is at US 62 cents. This is pretty close to the ideal dollar strength preferred by the last Centre Right government (John Key and Bill English are on record saying as much). New Zealand is an export economy. Getting paid in a stronger currency than ours is good for exporters.
There are of course factors outside the control of the governing party, but they are not blameless. They've been in power for six years. Are you really arguing they're not responsible for anything? I don't think that's a reasonable position.
NZDUSD has had a pretty rough decade. It hit a peak of 88c in 2014 and has steadily declined to 62c now. I don't place much stock in the musings of John Key or Bill English. The bottom line is Kiwis can buy less with their money now.
I don't think that's a reasonable position either. And no of course I'm not arguing it. I don't think anything I said above suggests I was.
A high dollar (and a high OCR) benefit me personally so I understand where you're coming from and why you would think it's a good thing.
However, exporters prefer a low dollar because that way they effectively get paid a lot more for their exports, and New Zealand is primarily an export economy, meaning exports are how we get the money to buy things in the first place.
For that reason, New Zealand politicians of both major parties have a target somewhere between 60c and 70c. If you want to vote for a party that wants to deliberately drive the dollar back to 88c, I think you will have a hard job finding one.
Surely the low dollar means we get less for our exports? Our exports just become more in demand as they're cheaper for our customers to buy (costs them less to get the NZ dollars to pay for them).
Not really how it works. You can sell to them in their own currency (or USD if theirs is volatile), at the price their market will bear. When your own currency's down that means you either get more NZD when you exchange, or else you can lower your price and undercut your competition from other countries without losing profit. This applies to people exporting services as well as goods.
Seriously, what I'm saying is not controversial. Check out the link in my other comment.