On 16 January 2022 Foreign Minister Mahuta and Ardern announced that New Zealand was making an initial donation of NZ$500,000 to Tonga in response to the
2022 Hunga Tonga–Hunga Ha'apai eruption and tsunami. She also confirmed that the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, New Zealand Defence Force, and other government agencies were working through air and sea options to provide assistance to Tonga. In addition, a
Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF)
Lockheed P-3 Orion would be sent on a reconnaissance flight as soon as it was safe to do so. On 17 January, the P-63 Orion departed for Tonga following reports of no continued ashfall in the island nation. On 26 January, Mahuta and Ardern expressed support for Ukrainian sovereignty and urged Russia to deescalate tensions in accordance with international law. Ardern also indicated that New Zealand would consider applying targeted sanctions against Russia in the event of hostilities. On 26 January, the Government asked suppliers
Abbott Laboratories,
Roche, and
Siemens to give the Government priority in ordering stocks of
rapid antigen tests. The Government was criticised by several private companies and representative bodies including the Health Works Group, the Food and Grocery Council, and InScience for allegedly commandeering their orders. In response to criticism, Health Director-General
Ashley Bloomfield denied that the Government was requisitioning their orders but was merely asking suppliers to consolidate forward orders of rapid antigen tests. The opposition National and ACT parties accused the Government of requisitioning rapid antigen tests from the private sector to hide its alleged incompetence in obtaining rapid antigent tests. In late January 2022, Transport Minister
Michael Wood announced that the New Zealand Government had approved a NZ$14.6 billion project to establish a partially tunneled
light rail network between
Auckland Airport and the Auckland CBD. The planned light rail network will integrate with current train and bus hubs as well as the City Rail Link's stations and connections. Transport Minister
Michael Wood also added that the Government would decide on plans to establish a second harbour crossing at
Waitemata Harbour in 2023. The light rail network was supported by the Green Party but criticised by the ACT party as a waste of taxpayer revenue. The
Government's COVID-19 policies particularly vaccine mandates and lockdowns attracted protests from several anti-vaccination protest groups including
Voices for Freedom and
Brian Tamaki's
The Freedoms and Rights Coalition. This anti-vaccination and anti-lockdown activism culminated in the
2022 Wellington protest between February and early March 2022. Police forcibly removed protesters on 3 March 2022, with the occupation causing significant damage to Parliament's grounds. On 15 February 2022, the Government's
Conversion Practices Prohibition Legislation Act 2022 passed its third and final reading, becoming law with broad cross-party support. The bill's passage was aided by the new National Party leader
Christopher Luxon's decision to abandon the Party's bloc vote opposition to the legislation and allow caucus members a conscientious vote. Following the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Ardern and Mahuta issued a statement on 24 February condemning Russia's invasion and calling on Russia to withdraw from Ukraine. In addition, New Zealand suspended high-level diplomatic contacts with Russia and introduced travel bans and export controls. On 1 March, New Zealand and the United Kingdom formally ratified a bilateral free trade agreement announced in October 2021. This agreement eliminates all tariffs on New Zealand exports particularly meat, butter and cheese along with duties on 99.5% of current trade. Ardern described the free trade agreement as a "gold-standard free trade agreement" that would help accelerate the country's economic recovery. On 7 March, Ardern announced that the Government would be introducing a new
Russia Sanctions Act 2022 under urgency to enable autonomous sanctions against in response to its recent invasion of Ukraine. This legislation would allow sanctions to be placed on those responsible for or associated with the Russian invasion of Ukraine including people, services, companies and assets. Key provisions include freezing assets based in New Zealand; preventing people and companies from moving their money and assets to NZ in order to escape foreign sanctions; banning super yachts, ships and aircraft from entering New Zealand waters and airspace, and imposing a travel ban on 100 top Russian officials. Ardern also indicated that this proposed bill would allow sanctions to be imposed on other states complicit with Russian aggression including
Belarus. On 9 March, the Russian Sanctions Bill passed with unanimous support from all parties in Parliament. On 10 March, Broadcasting Minister
Kris Faafoi announced plans to merge the two public broadcasters
Radio New Zealand (RNZ) and
Television New Zealand (TVNZ) into a new public broadcasting service. The new broadcasting entity would have complete editorial independence, operate under a charter, and be funded through a mixture of government funding and commercial revenue. It is expected to launch in July 2023. While the proposed merger was welcomed by RNZ chief executive Paul Thompson and TVNZ chief executive
Simon Power, the opposition National Party described it as wasteful and unnecessary. On 14 March, Ardern announced that the Government would reduce fuel excise taxes and road user charges by 25 cents a litre for the next three months from 11:59 pm that night. In addition, all public transport fares would be halved from 1 April 2022 for the next three months. This announcement was in response to a global energy crisis caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Ardern had initially denied that New Zealand was experiencing a "cost of living crisis" but had since reconsidered her position. Over the past 12 months, the rising cost of living had led New Zealanders to spend an extra NZ$4000 to $5000 on basic commodities such as food, rent and fuel. Customers spent an extra NZ$678 a year on petrol on average. On 15 March, Ardern announced that the Government would introduce a new two-year work visa programme allowing New Zealand citizens and residents of Ukrainian descent to sponsor Ukrainian family members seeking to shelter in New Zealand. This "Special Ukraine Policy" aims to bring over 4,000 Ukrainians and comes with work and study rights. In addition, the Government contributed another NZ$4 million in humanitarian aid. On 17 March, the Government launched its "
Te Takanga o Te Wā" history curriculum, which emphasizes the teaching of New Zealand history including the contributions of the
Māori,
Pasifika and Asian communities. The curriculum will be launched in 2023 and will be compulsory in schools up to Year 10. On 24 March, Immigration Minister Kris Faafoi and Australian
Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews jointly announced that the two governments had reached an agreement for New Zealand to accept 150 refugees a year as part of its annual refugee quota from the
Nauru Regional Processing Centre or asylum seekers temporarily in Australia for "processing." Refugees being resettled in New Zealand will have to go through the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) process and meet the criteria for NZ's refugee quota requirements. As part of the deal, 450 refugees would be resettled in New Zealand over a three-year period. The
Morrison Government had decided to accept a 2012 deal between former New Zealand Prime Minister
John Key and
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard for New Zealand to accept several asylum seekers who had travelled to Australia by sea. Subsequent Australian governments had declined to accept New Zealand's offer due to concerns that it would encourage more asylum seekers to travel by boat to Australia and that former asylum seekers could gain New Zealand citizenship and migrate to Australia. On 25 March 2022, Ardern and Mahuta joined the Australian Government in expressing concerns about a proposed Solomon Islands security agreement with China, which would allow China to deploy military and security forces in the Solomon Islands and establish a military base there. On 8 May, Ardern announced that the Government would allocating NZ$23 million from the State Sector Decarbonisation Fund to reduce greenhouse emissions. As part of the investment, NZ$10 million would be spent on replacing coal boilers at 180 New Zealand schools with clean wood burners or electrical heating. In addition, NZ$12.92 million would be spent on other projects including purchasing electrical vehicles, charging infrastructure, and upgrading heating systems at various public facilities including hospitals, police stations, the
University of Waikato and
Northland Polytechnic. On 9 May, Police Minister
Poto Williams, Corrections Minister
Kelvin Davis, and Justice Minister
Kris Faafoi announced that the Government would be investing NZ$562 million to combat crime over the next four years. In addition to a package to help businesses deal with ram raids, the Government would allocate NZ$94 million to combating gangs and organised crime; NZ$208 million to new firearms control unit within the
New Zealand Police; NZ$164.6 million in operating cash and NZ$20.7 million capital funding to training Police to the standards of the
Armed Offenders Squad and recruiting new Police officers; and NZ$$198.3 million to prison rehabilitation programmes and recruiting new
Corrections officers. On 11 May, Ardern announced that New Zealand's border reopening would be accelerated. From 16 May, the border would reopen to Pacific Island visitors. From 4 July, the border would reopen to all work visa holders and a new "green list" would be introduced in order to attract "high-skilled" migrants for "hard to fill positions." In addition, the border would reopen to all visitor and student visa holders as well as cruise ships on 31 July. In addition, streamlined residency pathways would be introduced in September 2022 for migrants in "green list" occupations or who earn twice the median wage. However, new working restrictions would be introduced to international students including limiting working rights to degree-level students with the exception of certain specified occupations, limiting undergraduate working rights to the length of their courses, and preventing students from applying for a second post-study work visa. The Government's decision to exclude nurses, teachers, and dairy farm managers from the visa residency "green list" was also criticised by professional bodies. In early August 2022, the Government acknowledged that it had not consulted professional nursing organisations and the
district health boards about its nursing "green list" visa scheme. On 8 August, the
Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment admitted that only nine nurses had applied for the "green list" scheme by late July 2022. In late May 2022, Ardern led a trade and tourism mission to the United States. During her trip, she urged the
Biden administration to join the
Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) and promoted New Zealand's firearms legislation in response to the
Robb Elementary School shooting. On 28 May, Ardern signed a memorandum of understanding with
Governor of California Gavin Newsom facilitating bilateral cooperation between New Zealand and
California in climate change emissions mitigation and research. On 2 June, Mahuta introduced the
Water Services Entities Bill as the first of several new bills to entrench the
Three Waters reform programme into law. The proposed bill would establish the four regional water services entities which would take over management of water infrastructure from the 67 local councils. While councils would retain ownership of their water assets through a "community share" arrangement, the new water service entities would exercise effective control over the water assets. Mahuta also confirmed that further legislation would be introduced to facilitate the transfer of assets and liabilities from local authorities to the Water Services Entities, integrate entities into other regulatory systems, and to ensure economic regulation and consumer protection over the new entities. The opposition National and ACT parties claimed that the proposed bill amounted to the theft of local water assets, bureaucratic centralisation, and would inflame ethnic divisions. On 7 June, the Government's
Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Act 2022 passed its third reading. The bill replaces the country's existing
district health boards with a new Crown agency called
Health New Zealand and establishes as separate
Māori Health Authority. The Health Futures Act also establishes a new
Public Health Agency within the
Ministry of Health while strengthening the Ministry's stewardship role. It also includes a rural health strategy. While Labour and the
Māori Party supported the bill as a means of facilitating health reforms and ensuring Māori
co-governance, the opposition National Party questioned the government's proposed reforms while the ACT Party expressed concerns about racial division. On 13 June, a cabinet reshuffle occurred.
Kris Faafoi resigned from Parliament, with his immigration, justice, and broadcasting portfolios being assumed by
Michael Wood,
Kiri Allan, and
Willie Jackson. In addition, Ardern confirmed that Speaker of the House
Trevor Mallard would be resigning in mid-August 2022 to assume a diplomatic post in Europe.
Adrian Rurawhe was designated as his successor. In addition,
Poto Williams stepped down from her
Police ministerial portfolio, which was assumed by
Chris Hipkins.
Priyanca Radhakrishnan was promoted to Cabinet while retaining her community and voluntary sector, ethnic communities, youth, associate social development portfolios and adopting the associate workplace relations portfolios. Former Chief Whip
Kieran McAnulty became deputy leader of the House while gaining the associate transport, associate local government, emergency management and racing portfolios. In addition,
Ayesha Verrall assumed the COVID-19 response and Research, Science and Innovation ministerial portfolios;
Duncan Webb became the new Chief Whip; and Meka Whatiri assumed the food safety portfolio. Labour list MPs
Dan Rosewarne and
Soraya Peke-Mason replaced the outgoing Faafoi and Mallard. In mid-June 2022, Broadcasting Minister Willie Jackson introduced draft legislation to formally merge public broadcasters
Radio New Zealand and
TVNZ into a new non-profit autonomous Crown entity called
Aotearoa New Zealand Public Media (ANZPM). The new broadcasting service is expected to come into existence on 1 March 2023. Under the proposed
Aotearoa New Zealand Public Media Bill, RNZ and TVNZ would become subsidiaries of the new entity, headed by a single board. ANZPM would be funded through a mixture of commercial and government funding. The new organisation would also operate under a charter outlining goals and responsibilities, with editorial independence being enshrined in its statutory legislation. The Government has also allocated NZ$370m over four years in operating expenditure and $306m in capital funding from the
2022 New Zealand budget for funding the ANZPM. On 27 June, Ardern confirmed that New Zealand would contribute NZ$4.5 million worth of aid to the
NATO Trust Fund including medical kits, fuel, communications equipment, and rations for the
Ukrainian Army, bringing the total amount of New Zealand military assistance to Ukraine to $33 million. In addition, the Government dispatched a military officer to support the
International Criminal Court's investigation into alleged Russian war crimes. New Zealand also contributed $1 million to the ICC Trust Fund for Victims and the ICC Office of the Prosecutor. In addition, the Government extended the deployment and number of New Zealand military and intelligence personnel assisting NATO forces in the United Kingdom, Belgium, and Germany. On 30 June, Mahuta and Parker confirmed that New Zealand would support Ukraine's legal challenge at the
International Court of Justice (ICJ) contesting Russia's claim that it had invaded Ukraine in response to alleged Ukrainian genocide in the
Luhansk and
Donetsk regions. This marked the second time that New Zealand had filed a legal challenge at the ICJ in support of another country. In 2012, New Zealand had supported Australia's case against Japanese whaling at the ICJ. On 11 July, Economic and Regional Development Minister
Stuart Nash announced that the Government had loaned NZ$6 million from the Regional Strategic Partnership Fund to help food producer
New Zealand Functional Foods build an
oat milk factory in
Makarewa,
Southland. The factory will cost NZ$50 million and is due to be completed in 2023. The oat milk factory is estimated to produce 80 million litres of oat milk and create 50 new jobs. While New Zealand produces oats, the country lacked an oat milk processing facility and was forced to import the product from Australia. On 13 July, Police Minister Hipkins and Justice Minister
Kiri Allan announced that the Government would introduce several new laws to combat criminal gangs including a new criminal offence for firing a gun with intention to intimidate; expanding the range of offences for Police to seize vehicles and financial assets; empowering Police and law enforcement agencies to seize cash over NZ$10,000 found in suspicious circumstances; and expanding Police search and warrant powers to find and confiscate weapons from gang members. Hipkins confirmed that these new offenses would be packaged in a new omnibus amendment bill. In response, the National Party's acting police spokesperson
Chris Penk claimed that the Government's measures were insufficient in tackling organised crime and called on the Government to ban
gang patches and giving Police the powers to disrupt gangs' communications, ability to organise their activities, and warrantless search powers. On 19 July, the Government extended the 25-cent fuel tax cut and the half price public transportation subsidy until late January 2023 in a bid to combat rising inflation in New Zealand. On 27 July, the Government's
Smokefree Environments and Regulated Products (Smoked Tobacco) Amendment Bill passed its first reading. The bill proposes reducing the number of retailers allowed to sell tobacco, reducing the amount of nicotine allowed in tobacco products, and banning the sale of tobacco to anyone born on or after 1 January 2009. The bill was supported by most parties with the exception of the libertarian ACT Party. While the National and Green parties supported the legislation, the former voiced concern about the experimental nature of the bill while the latter raised concerns about criminal prohibition pushing the tobacco industry "underground." On 1 August, the Government launched its "cost of living payment" support programme as part of the
2022 New Zealand Budget. People eligible for these payments include New Zealand tax residents 18 years and above who are earning below NZ$70,000 a year, and who are not entitled to the Winter Energy Payment and are not in prison. Two million people are considered to be eligible for the cost of living payments. The first NZ$116 payment was released on 1 August with the second and third payments following on 1 September and 1 October 2022. The rollout was plagued by reports that overseas-based New Zealanders were receiving payments since the
Inland Revenue Department had opted to dispense the payments automatically rather than manually check the eligibility of tax residents. The opposition National Party accused the Government of wasting taxpayer money. On 1 August, Health Minister Little announced that the Government would be spending NZ$14.4 million to recruit more health workers including doctors, nurses, and radiographers for the country's health workforce. As part of the package, the Government would be providing overseas nurses NZ$10,000 to help cover registration costs. In addition, the Government announced that it would be launching a six-month bridging programme for overseas-trained doctors. Other measures include encouraging retired nurses to return to work, expanding a pilot programme allowing overseas-trained doctors to intern at general practitioners' clinics rather than hospitals, and boosting the number of nurse practitioners and doctors. The Government also confirmed that it would launch a national and international healthcare recruitment campaign in coordination with the
TVNZ soap opera series
Shortland Street. The new international recruitment service would be housed within the new public health agency
Health New Zealand. On 9 August, the Government's
Three Strikes Legislation Repeal Bill passed its third and final reading, repealing the
Sentencing and Parole Reform Act 2010. The bill was supported by the Labour, Green, and Māori parties but was opposed by the National and ACT parties. While Justice Minister
Kiri Allan and Green MP
Elizabeth Kerekere welcomed the repeal of what they described as a punitive law that did little to rehabilitate or reintegrate criminals, the National and ACT parties' justice spokespersons
Paul Goldsmith and
Nicole McKee claimed the Government was ignoring the crime rate and vowed to reinstate the Sentencing and Parole Reform Act if re-elected in the future. On 22 August 2022, the New Zealand Government purchased
Kiwibank's holdings company
Kiwi Group Holdings for an estimated NZ$2.1 billion. As a result, the Government acquired full control of the state-owned bank from the New Zealand Superannuation Fund, ACC, and
New Zealand Post. On 24 August 2022, the Government passed two new laws
replacing the
Children's Commissioner with the
Children and Young People's Commission and
splitting oversight of the
Oranga Tamariki (Ministry for Children) system between the
Independent Children's Monitor and
Ombudsman's Office. On 30 August, Revenue Minister
David Parker announced that it would introduce legislation to apply the
Goods and Services Tax (GST) to
KiwiSaver fees. The
Inland Revenue Department estimated that this proposed tax change could generate NZ$226 million in tax revenue from 2026. Following intense public criticism from fund managers and the opposition National Party, the Government abandoned its plans to apply GST taxation on Kiwisaver fees. Following the death of
Queen Elizabeth II, Ardern announced that a one-off public holiday would be held on 26 September to mark the monarch's passing. The holiday would coincide with a state memorial service for Elizabeth at the
Wellington Cathedral of St Paul. This holiday is similar to other public holidays held in the United Kingdom on 19 September and Australia on 22 September to mark the Queen's passing. While the Greens and opposition National Party supported the Government's plans for the one-off holiday, the ACT Party and businesses expressed concerns about the adverse economic impact on businesses. On 20 September, Parliament passed
urgent legislation creating a once-off public holiday on 26 September. While Labour, National and the Green parties supported the bill, it was opposed by the ACT and Māori parties. On 12 September, the Government announced that the country's
COVID-19 Protection Framework ("traffic light system") would end at 11:59pm that night. As a result, face masks will be eliminated for most public spaces and transportation with the exception of hospitals, clinics, pharmacies, and aged care facilities. In addition, household contacts of COVID-19 positive individuals will not be required to isolate unless they test positive for COVID-19. In addition, vaccine mandates for all travellers entering New Zealand and healthcare workers will end on 13 September and 27 September respectively. COVID-19 antiviral medicines will also be freely provided to COVID-19 positive individuals aged 65 years and above as well as Māori and Pasifika COVID-19 positive individuals aged 50 years and above. On 28 September, the Government passed the
Animal Welfare Amendment Act 2022 which would ban live animal exports from April 2023. The bill was supported by the Labour and Green parties but was opposed by the opposition National and ACT parties. The Government's ban on live animal exports was motivated by the
Gulf Livestock 1 disaster in September 2020. On 11 October, Ardern announced plans to tax the emissions produced by farm animals by 2025. Agricultural emissions by farm animals including burping and urination account for about half of New Zealand's emissions. The Government's proposal was criticised by
Federated Farmers national president
Andrew Hoggard, who said it would hurt the farming sector by discouraging farmers from making a living.
Greenpeace Aotearoa New Zealand's lead climate campaigner Christine Rose claimed the Government's proposed tax on agricultural emissions was insufficient and favoured dairy producers over beef and sheep farmers and Māori landowners. On 21 October, Transport Minister
Michael Wood announced that the Government would launch a NZ$1.3 billion national payment system for all bus, train and ferry fares called the
National Ticketing Solution.
Waka Kotahi (the New Zealand Transport Agency) and several urban and regional councils had signed contracts with the public transport company
Cubic Corporation. The national payment system would be gradually rolled out across the country and would replace existing municipal and regional payment systems including the
Bee Card. On 25 October, the Government's
Fair Pay Agreements Act 2022 passed its third reading in Parliament. The bill allows employers and employees to collectively bargain at an industry-wide level. While the bill was supported by the Labour, Green and Māori parties, it was opposed by the National and ACT parties which vowed to repeal it if elected into government at the next general election. On 4 November 2022, the Government introduced the Arms Act Amendment Bill to stop gun licenses from expiring until Police were able to resolve a backlog of renewing firearms licenses. At the time, there were 12,000 people on the waitlist for a new firearms license. Of this figure, half had been on the waitlist for six months or longer, 1569 had been waiting for at least a year, and 72 have been waiting for two years or more. In mid November 2022, the Government introduced two new bills, the
Natural and Built Environment Act 2023 (NBA) and the
Spatial Planning Act 2023 (SPA), as part of its efforts to replace the
Resource Management Act 1991 (RMA). The NBA replaces the Government's environmental policy statements with a National Planning Framework (NPF). Under the NPF framework, all 15 regions will be required to develop a Natural and Built Environment Plan (NBE) that will replace the 100 district and regional plans, harmonising consenting and planning rules. An independent national
Māori entity will also be established to provide input into the NPF and ensure compliance with the
Treaty of Waitangi's provisions. The SSPA will deal with long-term planning. Local committees will be required to develop 30-year regional spatial strategies (RSS) for regional NBEs. In response, the opposition National and ACT parties criticised the Government's proposed overhaul of the RMA legislation on the grounds that it created more centralisation, bureaucracy, and did little to reform the problems associated with the RMA process. The Green Party expressed concerns about what it perceived as the lack of environment protection in the two bills. On 25 November, the Government and the Māori
iwi/tribe
Ngāti Mutunga o Wharekauri concluded an "agreement in principle" to settle historical
Treaty of Waitangi claims relating to the annexation of the
Chatham Islands in 1842. The agreements includes a financial redress of NZ$13 million, the option to transfer culturally significant lands to the iwi as "cultural redress," and shared redress between the iwi and
Moriori. In response to the
Murder of Janak Patel, Ardern and Hipkins announced that the Government would be launching a new retail crime package to combat retail crime including a fog cannon subsidy scheme, a NZ$4 million fund to support local councils' crime prevention programmes, and expanding the existing Retail Crime Prevention Fund eligibility to include aggravated robberies. On 5 December, Ardern and Verrall formally announced that the Government would be holding a
royal commission of inquiry into its
COVID-19 pandemic response. The inquiry will be chaired by Australian-based epidemiologist
Tony Blakely, former
National Party cabinet minister
Hekia Parata, and former
Treasury secretary
John Whitehead. The inquiry is expected to be launched on 1 February 2023 and finish in mid-2024. It will examine the overall pandemic response including the health response, border management, community care, isolation, quarantine, and the economic response including monetary policy. However, it will not examine decisions made by the
Reserve Bank of New Zealand's Monetary Policy Committee as well as how government policies applied to individual cases. While epidemiologist
Michael Baker welcomed the inquiry as a means of preparing for future pandemics, the Green and National parties regarded the inquiry's scope as too narrow and called for a separate review into its economic impact. On 7 December 2022, the Government's
Water Services Entities Act 2022 passed its third and final reading with the sole support of the Labour Party. While National and ACT opposed the Bill on the grounds it promoted co-governance and centralisation, the Greens and Māori parties rejected the Bill due to its lack of anti-privatisation safeguards and alleged "insufficient" co-governance arrangements. On 12 December 2022, Ardern and Immigration Minister Michael Wood confirmed that the Government would add nurses and midwives to its immigration green list, making them eligible for immediate residency in New Zealand. In addition, the Government established a temporary residence immigration pathway for bus and truck drivers. Teachers and tradespeople including drain layers and motor mechanics were also added to the work to residence immigration pathway. These changes came in response to a national labour shortage across different sectors in the New Zealand economy caused by emigration and low wages. The Government also confirmed plans to add ten jobs to the green list in March 2023 including gas fitters, drain layers, crane operators, civil machine operators, telecommunication technicians, civil construction supervisors, and
halal slaughterers. On 13 December, the Government's
Smokefree Environments and Regulated Products (Smoked Tobacco) Amendment Act 2022 passed its third reading by a margin of 76 to 43 votes. While Labour, the Green, and Māori parties voted in favour of the Bill, it was opposed by the National and ACT parties. Associate-Health Minister Verrall argued that the legislation would help reduce tobacco harm among young people and the Māori community while National health spokesperson Reti and ACT Deputy leader Van Velden questioned the effectiveness of the legislation and argued it would cause more harm and crime in the community. ==2023==