Gone By Lunchtime (Image: Tina Tiller)
Gone By Lunchtime (Image: Tina Tiller)

PoliticsMarch 4, 2025

Gone By Lunchtime: The curious case of Christopher Luxon’s Bayly equivocations

Gone By Lunchtime (Image: Tina Tiller)
Gone By Lunchtime (Image: Tina Tiller)

A double bill of political comedy.

Ambiguity surrounding the precise nature of the “animated” behaviour by Andrew Bayly towards a staffer, which led to his resignation as commerce minister, seeped into the prime minister’s media response. Speaking to Mike Hosking, Christopher Luxon danced around the question of whether he would have sacked Bayly had he not quit, then danced around it again, and again, to the audible displeasure of the ZB superstar. Ben Thomas, Annabelle Lee-Mather and Toby Manhire try to get their heads around this double bill of The Thick of It and Clarke & Dawe in a new episode of the Spinoff politics podcast Gone By Lunchtime.

First, however, it’s to the Tasman Sea, and the unexpected appearance of a trio of Chinese warships and live-fire exercises that left commercial airlines re-routing. What message was being sent, should it spur New Zealand to boosted defence spending, and how, in the naval wake, would Winston Peters have approached his visit to Beijing?

Plus: the proposed reforms to citizen’s arrest laws and a step towards a referendum on a four-year term, with one big condition attached.

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