Episodi
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The Trump Administration has hit out at reporters pushing back against their official line on Iran.
US President Donald Trump continues to insist the strikes from the US obliterated Iran’s nuclear sites – a stance Iran’s Supreme Leader claims is exaggerated.
Fox News’ Pentagon Correspondent Jennifer Griffin questioned Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth during a press conference, asking if the White House was certain all the highly enriched uranium was inside the Fordow Mountain – the location hit by the US.
US Correspondent Kirk Clyatt joined Heather du Plessis-Allan to break down the latest developments.
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Listen to the Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive Full Show Podcast for Friday 27 June.
Get the Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive Full Show Podcast every weekday evening on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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The high street tailor "Crane Brothers" has been a fixture on the street for years - and it will remain so for even longer.
Murray Crane - the man behind the business - has signed to keep the business in it's current location for another 25 years.
He told Heather du Plessis-Allan, "[on High Street] we're seeing tenancies being refilled and leases being signed."
Crane said that despite the CBD's post-COVID drop in footfall, he's confident in his decision to stay put.
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CEO Sir Russell Coutts has today announced the City of Sails as the second stop of next season's world tour.
Auckland Unlimited revealed their million-dollar investment to the January regatta, which returned $5million.
Head of Major Events Michelle Hooper told Heather du Plessis-Allan that they're looking to do it all again and continue to have Auckland host in the future.
She says the intention by all parties is to have Auckland host in 2027 and beyond - but they just have to sort out long-term funding.
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A former Speaker of the house is being taken to the High Court for musical torture during the 2022 anti-mandate protest.
A girl from Northland, who was 11 at the time, says Mallard weaponised songs like Disney's Let it Go - causing mental anguish, humiliation and de-humanisation.
Her lawyer, Tudor Clee says blasting someone with music is a military-style torture technique.
He says this is the first time this technique has been intentionally used on children.
The girl is seeking 40 thousand dollars in damages.
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A draft Inland Revenue briefing supports lifting the GST rate if required - and notes tax credits could help people on lower incomes.
The IRD briefing also brought up the lack of a capital gains tax, but did not endorse any specific view on it.
Tax expert Geof Nightingale told Heather du Plessis-Allan that lifting GST is a fast and efficient way to raise revenue.
But he says while quick, it's much harder on lower-income people.
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Hopes Canterbury's aerospace sector will continue going from strength to strength, with a permanent test flight space confirmed at Tawhaki.
The National Aerospace centre, west of Banks Peninsula, can now hold tests without continual re-permits.
Tāwhaki executive director John Holt told Heather du Plessis-Allan this helps remove red tape and paperwork, adding that it's difficult in the early construction stages, to find a safe aircraft testing place.
The sector now aims to boost its economic value from 250 million in 2023, to one billion dollars a year.
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There’s a strong chance that this has been Moana Pasifika's best and last season in super rugby.
Do you want them to have another one?
And if so, how much should the taxpayer put in to save it?
Would you pay $7million? Because that’s apparently what they’re short.
The Whānau Ora money is gone and it's understood that Sky is pulling its sponsorship of half a million dollars a year.
World rugby also wants to either reduce or completely cut the money it puts in. That’s around $1.7million a year.
So, for a club that costs about 12 m a year to run, it is short around $7million.
My answer to the first question I asked you … is yes. Moana Pasifika should be saved.
There is a very good reason to have a super ruby team dedicated to giving professional opportunities to Tongan and Samoan rugby players.
They were also one of the best success stories of the season.
My answer to the second question is that the taxpayer should pay nothing.
I can almost guarantee there will be a request for taxpayer help, but this is not a taxpayer problem. This is a rugby problem. This is one for NZ rugby and rugby Australia to fix.
They are the ones who own the Super Rugby competition, and the ones who make money off the broadcast deal from it.
I hope they can sort it out though because in a rugby competition that failed to excite people during the regular season, Moana Pasifika were one of the better stories.
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New data shows Nigel Farage and the Reform Party would win more seats than Labour and the Conservatives in the next general election.
Political analysts have revealed that Farage and Reform would win 278 seats if a general election were to take place tomorrow - the most of any party.
UK correspondent Enda Brady says the next election is four years away - but Prime Minister Starmer's team should be taking this data into account going forward.
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New reports show Nike's stock has plummeted 68 percent from its November 2021 peak.
Experts say it's a textbook 'fallen angel' - a former market darling now trading at beaten-down prices.
Sam Dickie from Fisher Funds explains further.
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In a surprise move, Federated Farmers meat and wool group recently ousted chair Toby Williams.
Williams lost the chairmanship to Marlborough provincial vice president Richard Dawkins during the council annual meeting.
The Country host Jamie Mackay explains further.
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Tonight on The Huddle, Auckland Councillor Maurice Williamson and CTU economist Craig Renney joined in on a discussion about the following issues of the day - and more!
We recently found out Whānau Ora funding has been used to fund Moana Pasifika. What do we make of this?
15-storey apartment buildings will soon go up in some Auckland suburbs near strategic train stations - and the locals aren't happy. Are the detractors being NIMBY's - or are people right to be concerned?
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How disappointing is the revelation that Whānau Ora money has been used to fund the Moana Pasifika rugby team?
How disappointing is that?
And this is not a criticism of the team. I mean, the team has been one of the rockstar stories of the Super Rugby season. This is about the funding.
This is the kind of revelation, I reckon, that does huge damage to public confidence and Government use of taxpayer money.
Because this is money that, to our minds, is supposed to be going to some of the most vulnerable people, to helping Māori and Pasifika families with things like health, medical appointments, baby jabs, education, housing, that kind of thing.
But instead, we find out it's been going to fund a rugby team for elite athletes - and this has been going on for at least 2 years.
One of the outfits that's contracted to spend final order funds, Pacifica Medical Association Group - we're going to call them PMA - has been giving $770,000 a year to Moana Pasifika.
Now, if they do it again this year - we haven't got the financials - but if they do it again at the same level, it will total $2.3 million. That's a lot of money.
Now, credit where credit is due, credit to the new Whānau Ora minister or to his department. Either of which appears to have already stopped this in its tracks.
They've taken the contract off PMA, given it to a new outfit - and that outfit has to abide by a much tighter set of measurements around the spending and the money and a bit more clarity about whether they're getting their bang bang for their buck when they spend the dollars.
But once again, even though it has been stopped - and credit where credit is due - taxpayer money has been wasted.
And the lesson here, if there is a lesson, is that it is absolutely fine to hand out taxpayer money to a third party.
But if you do that, there have got to be rules and there has got to be supervision. Otherwise, money that we all think is going to families who need it could instead be propping up a rugby team.
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On the Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive Full Show Podcast for Thursday, 26 June 2025, Labour MP Willie Jackson reflects on the sudden death of his friend and Maori Party MP Takutai Tarsh Kemp.
Should taxpayer money be used to pay for a rugby team? Heather dives into the Moana Pasifika story with NZ Herald senior journalist Kate MacNamara.
The drug that made Oprah skinny is coming to New Zealand from next week. Novo Nordisk's Dr Ana Svensson tells Heather Wegovy could potentially help up to 2.8 million overweight Kiwis.
NZ Rugby's Mike Hester gets grilled by Heather over the incident of referee abuse that's led to all rugby being postponed by the Horowhenua Kapiti Rugby Union.
Plus, the Huddle debates Nimbyism in the light of a Government directive that will see 15 storey apartment buildings in Auckland suburbs.
Get the Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive Full Show Podcast every weekday evening on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Workers taking part in partial strikes could soon have their pay docked under new legislation coming out of Parliament.
Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Brooke van Velden recently confirmed the changes to the Employment Relations Act - and claimed they would be fairer for workers.
PSA National Secretary Fleur Fitzsimons says employers will now be allowed to dock 10 percent of pay for workers who participate in low-level strike action.
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Concerns have been raised after Horowhenua-Kāpiti Rugby Union cancelled a series of Saturday matches.
The provincial union made the call after the abuse of a referee at last Saturday's game between Kapiti College and Mana College, which saw him escorted to his car out of safety fears.
NZ Rugby's Mike Hester says there was abuse from spectators that prompted the match getting called off.
"A lot of these things can happen on the sideline with chat from spectators to coaches and the like. The details of it - again, it depends on who you talk to - but certainly, it was sufficient enough that the referee had to make a decision."
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The Moana Pasifika Super Rugby franchise faces questions over disclosure and transparency at ownership level.
It recently came to light that the team received taxpayer money indirectly through Whanau Ora contracts.
NZ Herald journalist Kate McNamara says it's unclear how much public money funded the team - but investigations are ongoing.
"It may be that all of their funding came from the Whanau Ora contract - but it may be that there's a small amount of funding from another source in there."
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Labour's Willie Jackson will attend Kemp's tangi in Taihape over the weekend.
Te Pāti Māori's Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp died today aged 50, following a battle with kidney disease.
He says Labour isn't thinking about the by-election triggered in Tāmaki Makaurau.
"We'll turn our mind to it next week - and we don't mind having a chat about it as we get into it. But it's not something we should probably be talking about at the moment."
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Not everyone's a fan of Government's efforts to build taller in central Auckland suburbs.
The Government is requiring the council to legislate for apartments at least 15 storeys high around the Mount Eden, Kingsland, and Morningside Stations.
It will be 10 storeys near the Mount Albert and Baldwin Avenue terminals.
Albert-Eden Local Board Chair, Kendyl Smith, says this feels rushed, and hasn't included any consultation with residents.
"So to be told overnight that you might have a 15-storey block beside you is very unpalatable."
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Parliament adjourned early today, after marking the death of Te Pāti Māori's Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp.
Kemp died aged 50 following kidney disease.
NZ Herald political editor Thomas Coughlan says this came as a shock - with tributes coming in from many key politicians.
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