Seymour has embraced
libertarian social policies since becoming party leader, such as supporting the legalisation of
euthanasia, and introducing the
End of Life Choice Act 2019. He has emerged as a vocal opponent of co-governance with
Māori, and supports raising the
retirement age and enacting tax cuts. Seymour has increasingly caused controversy for his outspoken views, which include comparing co-governance with
apartheid,
He Puapua, the
Māori Health Authority and the Rotorua District Council (Representation Arrangements) Bill. He said: "The net result [of co-governance] is that someone who's not accountable to the wider community gets the right to say 'no' because of their birth. It's a recipe for frustration at best and resentment and division at worst." After Seymour proposed to abolish the
Ministry of Māori Development, Labour MP
Willie Jackson labelled Seymour a "useless Maori" and "that [he] would 'do anything' for votes." During the 2023 electoral campaign, Seymour advocated for a referendum on co-governance. There was strong opposition to the proposal by those who saw it as divisive. Seymour was quoted as saying, "I think there is a real need for us to have a genuine, high-quality conversation around co-governance." On 19 January 2024, a draft of the ACT party's
Treaty Principles Bill was leaked. as well as from academics, such as
Michael Belgrave, a historian and
Massey University professor, "Anyone who knows anything about this topic wouldn't come up with this policy... [Act] don't have any understanding of the 50 years of Treaty principles debate". Paul Goldsmith, the
Minister of Justice, subsequently appeared on television to re-confirm prime minister Christopher Luxon's position on the proposed bill, saying that "the coalition agreement is clear that the government will support a bill on Treaty principles to first reading. However, Christopher Luxon has been clear that National has no intention to support it beyond that." As reported in February 2024, a poll on various matters before the government showed 36% of respondents in support of a referendum "on the Treaty of Waitangi" with 35% opposed, and the rest undecided.
Criticism of hate speech laws In mid-May 2019, Seymour generated widespread criticism, including from MPs from all of the other parties, when he stated in a radio interview that
Green Party list MP
Golriz Ghahraman was a "menace to freedom in [New Zealand]." Critics suggested Seymour's association of Ghahraman's support for hate speech laws with suppression of free speech by dictators like
Mao Zedong and
Adolf Hitler was inappropriate. Seymour argued that he had merely "attacked her views". Seymour's concern is that the strengthening of hate speech laws is "divisive and dangerous" since the power of the state could be used by the majority to "silence unpopular views". He believes, if the law is strengthened, that what is considered hate speech will become "too subjective" and open to being abused.
Public release of Māori vaccination code In September 2021, Seymour caused a controversy after releasing a special
COVID-19 vaccination appointment access code meant exclusively for
Māori people in Auckland to his followers on
Twitter. The code was intended for the population that is the least vaccinated and most at-risk for COVID-19 demographic in New Zealand. The code offered priority access for Māori who wished to be vaccinated by Whānau Waipareira (a Māori social services agency) at the
Trusts Arena in
West Auckland. While the move was supported by right-wing groups, it was criticised by Whānau Waipareira CEO
John Tamihere and Seymour was faced with allegations of racism towards Māori despite his own Māori heritage. Seymour defended his actions, stating that "access to vaccination has been the same for people of all ethnic backgrounds." He alleged that the code was a move by the government that suggested "Māori people have trouble making a booking". He told media that "the virus doesn't discriminate on race, so neither should the roll out."
Ministry for Pacific Peoples remarks On 17 August 2023, Seymour joked about bombing the
Ministry for Pacific Peoples during an interview with
Newstalk ZB following revelations about wasteful spending by the Ministry earlier in August. During the interview, Seymour claimed "in his fantasy' he would "send a guy like
Guy Fawkes" into the Ministry's headquarters and "it'd all be over", apparently implying he would have it
blown up. This was a reference to the
Gunpowder Plot, planned in 1605 by English
Catholic plotters but foiled at the last minute. ACT has campaigned for the abolition of the Ministry, alongside the
Human Rights Commission and
Ministry for Women. Seymour's remarks were criticised by Deputy Prime Minister
Carmel Sepuloni and former National Party minister
Alfred Ngaro as inflammatory and insensitive towards
Pasifika New Zealanders. Te Pāti Māori leader
Debbie Ngarewa-Packer accused him of
hate speech. Prime Minister Chris Hipkins condemned Seymour's comments, 'should be ashamed of himself'. Seymour refused to apologise for his remarks, claiming he was joking.
Links to the Atlas Network In a 2023 interview with
Mihingarangi Forbes, Seymour was questioned about his links to the
Atlas Network, an American think tank and policy institute known for its
climate change denial. Seymour firmly denounced Forbes' line of questioning and described his supposed connection to the group as a "crazy
conspiracy theory". However, Seymour does in fact have links to the Atlas Network; during his work for the Canadian conservative think tanks
Frontier Centre for Public Policy and the
Manning Centre, he was a graduate of the Atlas Networks' 2008 "MBA for Think Tanks" program. Seymour also featured in their Autumn 2008 year-in-review magazine. In his 2021
Waitangi Day speech, available on the ACT Party website, Seymour also referred to "my old friends at the Atlas Network". Seymour accepts the
scientific consensus on climate change, and has denied the ACT Party is contributing to climate change denial after a 2008 ACT party policy under
Rodney Hide stated there is "no warming trend since 1970". Seymour said he disagreed with that statement saying "I believe New Zealand is warming".
School lunches Seymour shrank the budget for
free school lunches, a programme introduced by the previous Sixth Labour Government that he has long opposed. On 8 May 2024, Seymour had launched a modified NZ$234.8 million school lunch programme for the 2025 school year. While the school lunch programme would remained unchanged for primary school students, the school lunch programme for intermediate and high school students would be bulk-purchased by the Government and delivered to schools. During the press announcement, Seymour stated that the bulk-purchased food would consist of
sandwiches and fruit rather than
quinoa,
couscous, and
hummus. When asked about food items such as sushi, Seymour said "If you don't get that sushi's
woke, then I don't know how to wake you up, but the key message here is that we are introducing the kinds of foods that are put in the lunchboxes of children, the other 75 percent of kids, who rely on their parents to send their lunch." At the start of the 2025 school year between late January and early February 2025, several schools reported problems with the revised school lunch programme including late or missed deliveries, uncooked food, insufficient nutrition, food wastage, ham in
halal meals and a shortage of vegetarian meals. Consequently, several schools were forced to use their own funds to buy meals for pupils. On 1 March, Prime Minister Luxon said that the school lunch programme was experiencing "teething issues" and said that Seymour "will work his way through those issues... and I expect he will [find a solution]." On 4 March, the
Ministry for Primary Industries launched an investigation into School Lunch Collective meals after children were served meals with melted plastic packaging. On 11 March, the Libelle Group went into liquidation. The company had been contracted by the
Compass Group to provide 125,000 meals to the Government's school meal programme. By 12 March,
Radio New Zealand reported that the School Lunch Collective had turned to Australian providers to address the shortfall caused by Libelle's liquidation.
Philip Polkinghorne letter On 9 February 2025, Seymour acknowledged that he had written a letter to Auckland District Commander Karyn Malthus in April 2022 complaining about former eye surgeon Philip Polkinghorne's treatment by Police during the course of their investigation into
the death of his wife Pauline Hanna. Seymour said that he had written to Police in his capacity as Polkinghorne's electorate member of Parliament. Seymour had written the letter prior to Police charging Polkinghorne with murder in August 2022. On 10 February 2025, Prime Minister Luxon criticised Seymour's letter as "ill-advised" since Polkinghorne was the subject of an active Police investigation at the time. In response, Seymour countered that he was advocating for a constituent and believed that Police had gone "beyond the brief" of their investigation at the time. Seymour's actions were also criticised by
Labour Party leader
Chris Hipkins, who called for his resignation as a cabinet minister, and Chief Victims' Advisor Ruth Money, who said that Seymour should have raised Polkinghorne's concerns with the
Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA).
2025 Land Rover fundraiser On 10 February 2025, Seymour attracted media attention after driving a 1948
Land Rover up the steps of the
New Zealand House of Representatives in order to raise funds for the
University of Auckland's Centre for Heart Research's
heart valve development programme. The Land Rover had been purchased from Dunedin by the centre's director Professor Julian Paton, who was relocating it to Auckland. A security officer stopped Seymour from completing the full climb and informed him that he did not have permission from the Speaker of the House. During the incident, Seymour said "you shouldn't have to get permission do to every little thing in New Zealand" and said that Members of Parliament should not need to seek permission since Parliament was their workplace. On 11 February, Speaker Gerry Brownlee rebuked Seymour for suggesting that MPs could do as they please at Parliament. Seymour subsequently apologised for his actions in a letter.
2025 Cabinet restructuring proposal During a speech to the
Tauranga Business Chamber on 1 May 2025, Seymour proposed reducing the number of
New Zealand Cabinet ministers, describing the current ministerial lineup as "looking bloated and full of meaningless titles." He said: Seymour has proposed reducing the ministerial lineup to 20 cabinet ministers, with no associate positions except for the
Minister of Finance. On 19 February, he advocated merging the
Ministry for Ethnic Communities,
Ministry for Women,
Ministry for Pacific Peoples, Office for Seniors,
Ministry of Youth Development and
Te Puni Kōkiri (Ministry for Māori Development) into the
Ministry for Culture and Heritage.
Regulatory Standards Bill In late June 2025, Seymour published several social media posts targeting several critics of his
Regulatory Standards Bill, whom he claimed were suffering from a "derangement syndrome." These critics included
Mayor of Wellington Tory Whanau, Labour MP
Willie Jackson, academics Dame
Anne Salmond, George Laking, and
Metiria Turei. In response, Whanau and Salmond accused Seymour of breaching the Cabinet Manual and announced they would lodge complaints with the Prime Minister and the
New Zealand Cabinet Office. Similar criticism was echoed by Labour leader Chris Hipkins, who said that Seymour's conduct was "unbecoming" of a Minister of the Crown. In response to criticism, Seymour said he was responding to "incorrect statements" and "being playful with them." In June 2025, the
United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Albert Kwokwo Barume wrote a letter to the New Zealand Government raising concerns about several policies affecting indigenous people including the Regulatory Standards Bill. Barume said that the legislation risked undermining the Government's
Treaty of Waitangi obligations and sidelining Māori. In mid July 2025, Seymour wrote a letter dismissing the
United Nations' concerns as "insane." In response, Prime Minister Luxon and Foreign Minister Peters criticised Seymour for writing a reply without consulting with his Cabinet colleagues. Following a meeting with Luxon, Seymour agreed to rescind his letter and allow Peters to issue an official response to Barume's letter. Later, Seymour defended his remarks about colonialism, saying "it had been more good than bad, as even the poorest people in New Zealand today live like Kings and Queens compared with most places in most times in history." Seymour also defended the failed
Treaty Principles Bill and expressed hope that it would become law in the future. == Personal life ==