Alliance Party prepares for 2026 General Election campaign at Conference

The Alliance Party will be working on its campaign for the 2026 General Election this Saturday 14 February at its National Conference in Christchurch.

Members from across Aotearoa will gather at the Trade Union Centre to ratify the party’s constitution, elect national officers, and confirm the policy platform for the upcoming election.

Alliance Party President Victor Billot says the conference marks a pivotal moment for the political left in New Zealand.

“The Alliance is back to offer a genuine social democratic alternative to the failed policies of the status quo,” says Mr Billot.

“We are seeing record profits for overseas-owned banks and supermarket duopolies while families struggle to pay the bills. The current government has waged war on the majority as we experience surging unemployment and waiting lists, while the entire ‘sorted’ political establishment has refused to challenge the economic structures creating this inequality.”

The Conference will confirm the Alliance’s strategy to stand candidates in key electorates across the country for the General Election on 7 November 2026.

Key agenda items for the Saturday conference include:

  • President’s Address: “The Return of the Alliance”
  • Policy Platform: Adoption of the “Statement of Intended Policy,” focusing on tax justice, public ownership of assets, free healthcare and education, and secure housing.
  • Constitutional Ratification: Updating the party rules to comply with the Incorporated Societies Act 2022.
  • Election Strategy: Confirming candidate selection processes and targeted seats.

The Conference will be held in the Helen Kelly Room, Trade Union Centre, 68 Langdons Road, Christchurch, commencing at 10:00 AM on Saturday, 14 February 2026.

Alliance Party prepares for 2026 General Election campaign at Conference Read Post »

To the working people of the East Coast

Yet again a Kiwi summer has been marred by devastation and tragedy, a natural disaster made worse by decades of failed policies and morally bankrupt decisions by our political class.

National Prime Minister Chris Luxon said, “New Zealand has always had extreme weather. We have always had slips” and that nothing “can stop rain from falling and hills from moving.”

He says the tragedy at Mount Maunganui should not be “politicised” but instead the country should focus on “accountability, not ideology.”

In fact, far from this storm being like the weather we have always had, it was exceptional – off the back of several years now of severe storms.

Tauranga recorded their wettest day on record in the storm last week. In one statement to the press, Professor James Renwick related, “It seems that these days, every storm brings with it orange or red flood warnings and devastation and misery somewhere in the country. Sadly, this is exactly what we expect with a warmer climate that has more moisture in the air.”

In another statement, he was blunter: these frequent storms will “destroy the economy.”

The National-led coalition has slashed funding for initiatives to mitigate and adapt to climate change to pay for tax cuts for their rich mates.

Chris Luxon knows full well the record of his government, hence he is doing what he knows best: trying to put the accountability on someone else.

Meanwhile, in other parts of the East Coast, working people were yet again assaulted by the scourge of slash, forestry waste washed by torrential rain through the valleys amplifying the damage the flooding would otherwise have caused.

Many members of these communities work in forestry, the industry with the highest fatalities in New Zealand. Lax regulation, brought about by decades of free market economics and insider lobbying, has created this appalling legacy of barely-there health and safety and disaster-waiting-to-happen slash.

The problem here goes beyond this current government. Under the previous Labour-led administration, Forestry Minister Stuart Nash was widely criticized for being too cosy with the forestry industry, accepting donations from forestry companies and dragging his feet on an inquiry into the environmental damage caused by slash.

The problem is systemic – Labour and National are both complicit in kicking the can down the road on climate action and protecting the corporations who abuse their workers and damage those same workers’ communities through environmental negligence.

Far from being “non-ideological”, the actions of Labour and National politicians over decades to put the interests of the rich and corporations ahead of both working people and the environment has been driven by their right-wing ideology and politics.

Weather events are a result of natural processes, but in any natural disaster there is the social and political element.

There was nothing inevitable about the loss of life in this instance. The level of damage and devastation can either be guaranteed, or mitigated, through adequate infrastructure investment and planning. Those are human, political decisions made, not blind forces of nature.

The Alliance believes there is a better way. The government should intervene in worker-killing, environment-destroying industries to ensure they operate like the law-abiding citizens everyone else is expected to be.

The Alliance also believes New Zealand must transition the economy away from fossil fuels to create a sustainable, decarbonized society for future generations.

To the working people of the East Coast Read Post »

Government’s Christmas info dump reveals rates capping policy failed quality checks and targets vulnerable

Ethan Gullery
Ethan Gullery

The Alliance Party says the Government’s proposed rates capping policy is an “exercise in intergenerational theft,” following the release of official advice that reveals the policy failed its own quality checks and explicitly targets services for the elderly and disabled.

Alliance Party Local Government spokesperson Ethan Gullery says the advice, which was released quietly on 22 December in response to an Official Information Act request, confirms the Minister of Local Government knew the policy was flawed but proceeded anyway.

“Releasing major policy documents three days before Christmas is the oldest trick in the book,” says Gullery. 

The documents reveal that the Department of Internal Affairs’ own Quality Assurance panel gave the rates capping policy a rating of “Does Not Meet Quality Assurance Criteria.”

Gullery says the Government’s own experts failed this policy because there was a basic mismatch between the Minister’s political claims that councils are ‘wasteful’ and the hard evidence that councils are facing unavoidable infrastructure costs.

The Alliance Party says the documents expose a financial trap that will cost ratepayers more in the long run. 

Treasury advice contained in the release explicitly warns that capping revenue will damage council credit ratings, driving up interest rates on council debt.

“This policy effectively turns our local councils into sub-prime borrowers,” says Gullery. 

“Ratepayers will end up paying more just to service higher interest payments to the banks. It is fiscal incompetence.”

Most concerning is the admission within the advice that councils, unable to raise necessary revenue, will be forced to cut “less visible services” to survive. 

The briefing specifically identifies elderly assistance and disability support as likely targets for cuts.

“The Government is engineering a crisis that will force councils to slash support for vulnerable citizens and sell off public assets in a fire sale just to keep the lights on,” says Gullery. 

The Regulatory Impact Statement also admits that current rate rises are not due to waste, but are the bill coming due for decades of under-investment.

“The Minister knows this policy failed its quality check. He knows it risks spiking interest costs. And he knows that ‘keeping rates low’ is exactly what caused our infrastructure crisis in the first place,” Gullery says.

Gullery says by delaying the full implementation of the cap until 2029, the Government is simply announcing a headline today while scheduling the pain for future generations.

Government’s Christmas info dump reveals rates capping policy failed quality checks and targets vulnerable Read Post »

We are back to fight for working people in 2026

The Alliance Party has welcomed the announcement of the 2026 General Election date of 7 November, saying that it is ready to offer New Zealanders a genuine social democratic alternative to the failed policies of the status quo.

Alliance President Victor Billot

Alliance Party President Victor Billot says the return of the Alliance comes at a critical time as working people are being crushed by a cost-of-living crisis.

This Government has waged war on the majority while rolling out the red carpet for the already wealthy and powerful, he says.

“We have seen a sustained attack on public services, an ongoing housing crisis, and stagnating wages and jobs. It is a government of the rich, for the rich, that shows contempt for the needs of the working people who are the backbone of New Zealand.”

Mr Billot says the Alliance provides a voice for those who have been abandoned by the long-term shift to the right in New Zealand politics.

“We are seeing record profits for overseas-owned banks and supermarket duopolies while families struggle to put food on the table. The political establishment – both the anti-worker Government and a timid and compromised Opposition – refuses to challenge the economic structures that create this inequality.”

“The Alliance is not afraid to say that the system is broken, and we are not afraid to offer real solutions.”

The Alliance is campaigning on bold, practical solutions to the cost-of-living crisis, including:

  • Tax Justice: Tax reform to take the tax burden off the working majority and a wealth tax to ensure the super-rich pay their fair share to keep the country running.
  • Public Ownership: Halting asset sales and taking back control of our energy, transport and infrastructure to serve people, not private profit.
  • Housing for All: A massive investment in state housing.
  • Free Public Services: Free healthcare and education, funded by a fair tax system.

“We don’t need tinkering, we need transformation,” says Mr Billot.

“The Alliance is bringing an unapologetic message back to the electorate. New Zealand can be a country where everyone has enough, where our environment is protected, and where the economy operates in the service of the community.”

The Alliance will officially launch its campaign and manifesto at its National Conference in Christchurch on 14 February 2026.

The Party confirmed it will be standing electorate candidates in key seats across the country, ensuring that voters have the chance to cast a vote for real change.

“We invite every New Zealander who is tired of their future being sold out to join us.”

 

We are back to fight for working people in 2026 Read Post »

Zohran Mamdani

Alliance hails Zohran Mamdani victory in NYC for democratic socialism

The Alliance Party of New Zealand has welcomed the significant election victory of democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani in New York City, seeing it as a powerful symbol of a growing public appetite for genuine change.

Alliance Party President Victor Billot says the win in New York is a rejection of the status-quo politics that has failed to deliver for ordinary people.

He says in order to defeat the surge of the far-right, the political left needs to stand up for its key principles rather than apologizing for them.

“Zohran Mamdani ran on a left-wing platform that resonates strongly with the Alliance’s core principles: a commitment to affordable housing, tax reform to help the working-class majority, keeping our public assets, and fighting for climate justice.”

“This is about real change, not just tweaking the system,” says Mr. Billot. 

“People, whether in New York City or in New Zealand, are tired of establishment parties that spend their time telling the majority to suck it up while the core problems of the cost of living, access to health care and housing, and the climate crisis get worse.”

Mr. Billot says Mamdani’s success proves that bold, democratic socialist ideas, like fully-funded public services, wealth taxes, and putting people before profit, can win.

“As Zohran Mamdani says, democracies the world over have for too long been dominated by those who believe they are born to rule, not in the calloused hands of a factory or warehouse worker, the heat blistered hands of a glassy or the grease burnt arms of the line cook, or even the steady and precise hands of the nurse, the doctor, the surgeon. A change will come, when the ordinary people who do the work that makes society run will in turn run society.”

Mr Billot says the Alliance Party is committed to building that same grassroots movement here in Aotearoa New Zealand. 

“We offer a clear political home for those who believe in public ownership, a living wage for all, and a just transition to a sustainable future. This victory in New York gives us one more reason to be hopeful.”

Alliance hails Zohran Mamdani victory in NYC for democratic socialism Read Post »

Labour leaked capital gains tax policy is more of the “long snooze”

Alliance spokesperson Tom Roud says Labour’s plan is a weak and compromised effort that continues the “long snooze of Chris Hipkins.”

The Alliance Party says the Labour Party’s leaked capital gains tax (CGT) policy fails to address Aotearoa New Zealand’s profound inequality and infrastructure crisis. 

He says New Zealanders are crying out for bold leadership and alternatives to the disastrous recession created by the ACT-dominated Luxon Government.

“Jacinda Ardern and Chris Hipkins both undermined tax reform, and after years of wasted time we are now underwhelmed by this policy.”

The Labour CGT policy will not remotely generate the revenue to restore quality public services and national infrastructure, he says.

Labour leaked capital gains tax policy is more of the “long snooze” Read Post »

Nurses protest in Wellington, 2025

Alliance Party stands with striking Public Sector workers

Alliance Party industrial spokesperson Quentin Findlay today confirmed the party’s unwavering support for the 23 October nationwide public sector strike.

“The Alliance backs the 100,000 workers protesting the decades-long failure of successive governments to deliver quality public services and fair wages,” says Mr Findlay.

Alliance Party stands with striking Public Sector workers Read Post »

Alliance Party Backs Unions’ Call for Public Power

Tom Roud
Tom Roud

The Alliance Party today has given its full support to the Council of Trade Unions’ (CTU) new policy calling for the public ownership of Aotearoa New Zealand’s electricity generation

The Alliance Party says this policy reflects a long-standing bottom line for the Alliance.

The CTU’s proposal to bring electricity generators back into public ownership to tackle the cost of living crisis and ensure security of supply is a welcome return to common sense, says Alliance Public Assets spokesperson Tom Roud.

“For decades, the Alliance has consistently called for the return of essential assets to public hands.”

Alliance Party Backs Unions’ Call for Public Power Read Post »

The return of the Alliance 2025: a surprise contender in local body elections

The Alliance Party is back in the fight, ready to shake up the political establishment, and put working people first in local communities across Aotearoa. 

After years of a lack of a genuine left-wing voice, the Alliance is re-emerging to endorse candidates in the upcoming local body elections.

“For too long, ordinary New Zealanders have been ignored and their needs sidelined,” says Alliance Party spokesperson Quentin Findlay. 

“We’ve watched as political decisions made by a select few fail our communities. That’s why we’re aiming to elect dedicated, community-focused candidates to local councils.” …

The return of the Alliance 2025: a surprise contender in local body elections Read Post »

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