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The Wire

Listen back to features and interviews from 95bFM's daily news and current affairs show. Castor Chacko, Alex Fox, Emmanuel Orange, and Caeden Tipler focus on the issues of Tāmaki Makaurau and elsewhere in independent-thinking bFM style. Monday-Thursday 12-1pm on 95bFM.

US Election Aftermath and Trump’s Cabinet Appointments w/ Yale Daily News’ Andre Fa’aoso and Political Commentator Tom Unger: 14 November, 2024

US Election Aftermath and Trump’s Cabinet Appointments w/ Yale Daily News’ Andre Fa’aoso and Political Commentator Tom Unger: 14 November, 2024 US Election Aftermath and Trump’s Cabinet Appointments w/ Yale Daily News’ Andre Fa’aoso and Political Commentator Tom Unger: 14 November, 2024, 53.67 MB
Thu 14 Nov 2024

Last week Donald Trump and the Republican Party won a decisive victory in the United States election, taking both the presidency and the senate. Over the past week the Republicans have also taken the house of representatives, and president-elect Donald Trump has announced some key cabinet appointments. Wire Host Caeden speaks to Andre Fa’aoso about these developments.

They also speak to political commentator, Tom Unger, about the mood on the ground in Washington D.C. as well as how Kamala Harris and the Democrats have responded to the election over the past week.

The 'Save a Tram' Initiative w/ MOTAT's Katie Bundle: 25 November, 2024

The 'Save a Tram' Initiative w/ MOTAT's Katie Bundle: 25 November, 2024 The 'Save a Tram' Initiative w/ MOTAT's Katie Bundle: 25 November, 2024, 5.08 MB
Wed 13 Nov 2024

Needing a gift for Christmas? MOTAT has launched an ‘adopt a tram,’ initiative for their iconic trams.

News and Editorial Director, and Monday Wire Host, Joel, spoke to the Head of Philanthropy and Partnerships at MOTAT, Katie Brundle, about this initiative, and what it means exactly, to adopt a tram?

You can adopt a tram by heading to the MOTAT website.

New Anchor Butter owner must go palm-kernel free w/ Sinéad Deighton-O'Flynn, Agriculture Campaigner at Greenpeace Aotearoa

New Anchor Butter owner must go palm-kernel free w/ Sinéad Deighton-O'Flynn, Agriculture Campaigner at Greenpeace Aotearoa New Anchor Butter owner must go palm-kernel free w/ Sinéad Deighton-O'Flynn, Agriculture Campaigner at Greenpeace Aotearoa, 8.32 MB
Wed 13 Nov 2024

On the 11th of November, the Fonterra company announced that they will be selling customer-facing brands, which include Anchor, Mainland and others. Following this announcement, Greenpeace are calling for potential buyers to go palm-kernel free.

This comes after an expose of Fonterra’s dishonest marketing strategies, and claims that its milk is produced with ‘regenerative farming’, a blatant example of greenwashing.

Sasha spoke to Sinéad Deighton-O'Flynn, Agriculture Campaigner at Greenpeace Aotearoa about the new sale of companies associated with Fonterra, including potential implications for consumers and Greenpeace’s expectations for companies looking to purchase.

Amnesty International opposes The Treaty Principles Bill w/ Lisa Woods Movement Building & Advocacy Director at Amnesty International Aotearoa New Zealand

Amnesty International opposes The Treaty Principles Bill w/ Lisa Woods Movement Building & Advocacy Director at Amnesty International Aotearoa New Zealand Amnesty International opposes The Treaty Principles Bill w/ Lisa Woods Movement Building & Advocacy Director at Amnesty International Aotearoa New Zealand, 12.6 MB
Wed 13 Nov 2024

Just last week, on the Seventh of November the new Treaty Principles Bill was announced in parliament. The development of the bill excluded any consultation with Maori and does not reflect the texts or meaning of Te Tiriti, according to the Waitangi Tribunal. Principle 2 within the Bill, if enacted, would revoke the promises made by the queen to Maori in 1840.

Hikoi protesting the bill began three days ago and has moved from Cape Reinga to Northcote and Bastion Point today, with its eventual goal to protest at parliament on the 19th. The first reading occurs this week in parliament, afterwards being sent to the select committee for a six-month hearing process.

Sasha spoke to Lisa Woods, a Movement Building & Advocacy Director at Amnesty International Aotearoa New Zealand, about the Treaty Principles Bill and its opposition.

The Wire w/ Oto: 13 November, 2024

The Wire w/ Oto: 13 November, 2024 The Wire w/ Oto: 13 November, 2024, 121.48 MB
Wed 13 Nov 2024

For their regular catch-up, Oto spoke to the Green Party’s Ricardo Menéndez March about Hīkoi Mō te Tiriti, the 9-day Hīkoi opposing the treaty principles bill, as well as the government apologies to victims of abuse in care and the election of former US president Donald Trump.

He spoke to John Minto from Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa about the ongoing siege of Northern Gaza, as well as media coverage of the clashes between Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters and locals in Amsterdam and the implication of Donald Trump’s election on the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories.

He spoke to Ti Lamusse from Victoria University of Wellington about the governments cuts to mental health services for prisoners and the increase in the prison population of Aotearoa to 10,000 inmates.

And he spoke to Kevin Lamb from Age Concern Auckland to talk about a study examining loneliness amongst older New Zealanders.

Sasha spoke to Lisa Woods, A Movement Building & Advocacy Director at Amnesty International Aotearoa New Zealand about the treaty principles bill and calls for a codified constitution.

And he spoke to Sinéad O'Flynn, an Agriculture Campaigner at Greenpeace Aotearoa, about the new sale of companies associated with Fonterra, including potential implications for consumers and Greenpeace’s expectations for companies.

Loneliness Amongst Seniors w/ Kevin Lamb from Age Concern Auckland: 13 November, 2024

Loneliness Amongst Seniors w/ Kevin Lamb from Age Concern Auckland: 13 November, 2024 Loneliness Amongst Seniors w/ Kevin Lamb from Age Concern Auckland: 13 November, 2024, 23.7 MB
Wed 13 Nov 2024

A new study has been published showing that senior citizens in Aotearoa were experiencing record levels of loneliness and isolation.

The study - called The Breaking Barriers study, was commissioned by Age Concern Auckland, a charity dedicated to improving outcomes for Aotearoa’s elderly population, and it found that 59% of Kiwis aged 65+ had recently felt lonely or socially isolated. 

The study calls for an increase in holistic solutions to address loneliness amongst seniors, as wel as establishing a minister of loneliness in government, a move that has been adopted in the United Kingdom and Japan. 

Oto spoke to Kevin Lamb, Chief Executive Officer of Age Concern Auckland, to discuss the study and why older New Zealanders are experiencing increased levels of loneliness.

Mental Health Service Cuts and the Prison Population Explosion w/ Ti Lamusse from Victoria University of Wellington: 13 November, 2024

Mental Health Service Cuts and the Prison Population Explosion w/ Ti Lamusse from Victoria University of Wellington: 13 November, 2024 Mental Health Service Cuts and the Prison Population Explosion w/ Ti Lamusse from Victoria University of Wellington: 13 November, 2024, 23.74 MB
Wed 13 Nov 2024

Last week, the Department of Corrections announced that it had axed four contracts with community organisations providing mental health support services to prison inmates. 

This comes amidst an internal review of mental health services within Corrections, leading to these contracts being the next set of public service initiatives to face cuts under the coalition government.

Oto spoke to Ti Lamusse, a Lecturer in Criminology at Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington, to discuss these cuts and mental health services for prisoners in general.

They also had a discussion about new figures showing that the prison population of Aotearoa had exceeded 10,000 inmates, for the first time in four years.

Siege of Northern Gaza, Donald Trump’s Election and Maccabi Tel Aviv w/ John Minto from PSNA: 13 November, 2024

Siege of Northern Gaza, Donald Trump’s Election and Maccabi Tel Aviv w/ John Minto from PSNA: 13 November, 2024 Siege of Northern Gaza, Donald Trump’s Election and Maccabi Tel Aviv w/ John Minto from PSNA: 13 November, 2024, 30.48 MB
Wed 13 Nov 2024

Since October this year, as part of Israel’s ongoing war in Gaza, Israeli Defence Forces have imposed a siege on the Northern Gaza Governate in the Gaza strip. 

The IDF has designated the entire Northern half of Gaza as a combat zone, blocked the movement of all aid heading into the area and sent evacuation notices to all of Northern Gaza’s Palestinian inhabitants, effectively declaring everyone in Northern Gaza to be an enemy combatant.

Oto spoke to John Minto from Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa, to discuss the implications of Israel’s ongoing siege of Northern Gaza for the area’s Palestinian inhabitants.

They also had a discussion about the implication of Donald Trump’s election victory for the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories, as well as the media coverage of the clashes between locals in Amsterdam and supporters of the Israeli football team - Maccabi Tel Aviv.

Pharmac Funds New ADHD Medication and Removing Renewal Criteria for Funded Treatments w/ ADHD New Zealand’s Darrin Bull: 12 November, 2024

Pharmac Funds New ADHD Medication and Removing Renewal Criteria for Funded Treatments w/ ADHD New Zealand’s Darrin Bull: 12 November, 2024 Pharmac Funds New ADHD Medication and Removing Renewal Criteria for Funded Treatments w/ ADHD New Zealand’s Darrin Bull: 12 November, 2024, 7.12 MB
Tue 12 Nov 2024

Pharmac has announced the funding of the ADHD medication Lisdexamfetamine, which is currently not available in the country, as well as removing the renewal criteria for funded treatments.

The new medication will be funded from December, which is expected to benefit over 6000 people.

Many have welcomed these developments, including ADHD New Zealand.

News and Editorial Director, Joel, spoke to the spokesperson from the organisation, Darrin Bull, about these developments, and why they are so important for Aotearoa’s ADHD community.

The Post Primary Teachers Association’s Paid Union Meetings w/ President of the PPTA, Chris Abercrombie: 12th November, 2024

The Post Primary Teachers Association’s Paid Union Meetings w/ President of the PPTA, Chris Abercrombie: 12th November, 2024 The Post Primary Teachers Association’s Paid Union Meetings w/ President of the PPTA, Chris Abercrombie: 12th November, 2024, 12.7 MB
Tue 12 Nov 2024

Education Minister Erica Stanford and Associate Minister David Seymour put out a press release last Friday accusing the Post Primary Teachers Association of disrupting students’ learning. 

The press release continues that the PPTA is prioritising ideology over students, and that the meetings create a poor example.

Stanford says “We can’t expect students to value the importance of education and attendance when adults walk off the job.”

To address these claims, Wire host Castor spoke to president of the PPTA, Chris Abercrombie, about the press release and the PPTA’s concerns for teaching in Aotearoa.

Do we need a bill to define "men" and "women" w/ the ACT Party's Simon Court: 25th May, 2026

Do we need a bill to define "men" and "women" w/ the ACT Party's Simon Court: 25th May, 2026 Do we need a bill to define "men" and "women" w/ the ACT Party's Simon Court: 25th May, 2026, 12.68 MB
Mon 25 May 2026

Last week, NZ First MP Jenny Marcroft put forward a bill that would seek to define the terms “man” and “woman” in law. The bill has been supported by coalition parties through its first reading. Its primary supporters in parliament, ACT and NZ First, say the bill is about prioritising biology over ideology, or about maintaining common sense. 

Its opponents, however, say the bill is unnecessary, and that the ideology pushed by its supporters does not align with evidence. Te Kāhui Tika Tangata, the human rights commission, says that the bill is “not necessary”, and “risks harm to communities who continue to experience discrimination on the basis of their gender identity”. 

Disability Rights Commissioner and Rainbow rights spokesperson at the Human Rights Commission, Prudence Walker, sez the bill will not only “trample on the mana of trans and intersex people”, but it also “attempts to completely erase non-binary people”. 

Despite the strong opposition, the government is pushing for the bill to be considered in select committee. 

For our weekly catchup with the ACT Party’s Simon Court, News Director Castor asked about the bill and why the government is bringing it about.

DISCLAIMER: this interview covers multiple anti-trans talking points, and briefly discusses sexual violence.

You can make a submission on the bill here

City Counselling w/ Shane Henderson: 21 May, 2026

City Counselling w/ Shane Henderson: 21 May, 2026 City Counselling w/ Shane Henderson: 21 May, 2026, 8.64 MB
Thu 21 May 2026

A survey of Automobile Association members' views on time-of-use charging has been presented to the Auckland Council’s Transport and Infrastructure Delivery Committee. 

The survey found that members were open to congestion charging if it worked, even if they thought it was unfair.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins gave a ‘State of Auckland’ speech last week, focusing on the need for cross-party collaboration on infrastructure projects.

Wire Host Caeden spoke with Councillor Shane Henderson about both of these topics.

Budget Cuts, Public Service Reform and NCEA Changes w/ Labour’s Shanan Halbert: May 21st 2026

Budget Cuts, Public Service Reform and NCEA Changes w/ Labour’s Shanan Halbert Budget Cuts, Public Service Reform and NCEA Changes w/ Labour’s Shanan Halbert, 25.66 MB
Thu 21 May 2026

The Government is heading into Budget week with plans to cut the core public service, and RNZ reports public servants' fears that their jobs are once again on the line. At the same time, questions have been raised over MFAT being spared from cuts, and the Government has unveiled major changes to secondary education through its proposed NCEA replacement.
For our weekly catch-up with the Labour Party, Producer Pranuja spoke with Shanan Halbert about public service cuts, Budget priorities, and what the education overhaul could mean for students and teachers.

NZ First, BNZ, and the power of minor parties w/ Green Party MP Ricardo Menéndez March: 20th May, 2026

NZ First, BNZ, and the power of minor parties NZ First, BNZ, and the power of minor parties , 18.29 MB
Wed 20 May 2026

This week has seen discussions on New Zealand Firsts announcement that if they win the election they plan to buy BNZ and nationalise it into kiwibank, a plan some estimate to cost $30,000,000,000 and has been completely ruled out by their coalition partner in the National Party. Despite this, it’s sparked conversations around how we should be engaging with our banking sector, the vast majority of it dominated by Australian owned banks.

And critics fear that National party changes to the accommodation supplement is going to hit poor working families at a time they’re already doing it rough, nullifying other support that they are offering the rest of the country more broadly, repeating a pattern of policies that hurt poorer communities worse than the rich.

So for our weekly catchup w/ the Green Party, Host Manny spoke with MP Ricardo Menéndez March on what impact he thinks will come from restrictions to the accommodation supplement, particularly for the poor, they then discussed New Zealand Firsts policy to buy BNZ bank, and whether minor parties tend to over promise if they are constrained by the major parties who they will inevitably have to work with if they make into parliament.

Dear Science w/ Professor Allan Blackman: 19 May, 2026

Dear Science w/ Professor Allan Blackman: 19 May, 2026 Dear Science w/ Professor Allan Blackman: 19 May, 2026, 19.16 MB
Tue 19 May 2026

This week for Dear Science, our expert, Professor Allan Blackman, speaks with us about politics affecting trust in experts, solar events recorded in trees, and drought predictions in Aotearoa.

Thanks to MOTAT - Home of Powerful Play!

Social Media Ban, National's Stance on Immigration, and the Upcoming Budget w/ National Party MP Ryan Hamilton: 19 May, 2026

Social Media Ban, National's Stance on Immigration, and the Upcoming Budget w/ National Party MP Ryan Hamilton: 19 May, 2026 Social Media Ban, National's Stance on Immigration, and the Upcoming Budget w/ National Party MP Ryan Hamilton: 19 May, 2026, 13.97 MB
Tue 19 May 2026

Last week, National MP Catherine Wedd’s members bill for an Under-16s social media ban was paused. Instead, Education Minister Erica Stanford has pledged to, before this years election, bring a wider and more robust proposal for a ban in a larger bill.

Last week also saw Prime Minister Christopher Luxon make comments about the National Party’s stance on immigration, amidst criticised changes to compliance officer powers, and previous spats and comments over immigration policy between government coalition partners.

And with the budget expected next week, promises have begun to be made by the government for where funding can be expected, particularly within education.

Host Alex spoke with National MP Ryan Hamilton about these topics, starting with the Social Media ban.

The Disestablishment of the Ministry for the Environment w/ Professor Nicolas Lewis : 19 May, 2026

The Disestablishment of the Ministry for the Environment w/ Professor Nicolas Lewis : 19 May, 2026 The Disestablishment of the Ministry for the Environment w/ Professor Nicolas Lewis : 19 May, 2026, 34.01 MB
Tue 19 May 2026

Since 1986, the Ministry for the Environment has been the central policy advising entity in New Zealand for environmental issues. The government has recently proposed the Environment Amendment Bill, which seeks to disestablish the Ministry for the Environment, which would be amalgamated into a larger Ministry for Cities, Environment, Regions and Transport.  

For Green World this week, Wire producer Liam spoke with Professor Nicolas Lewis, of the University of Auckland’s School of Environment, about these proposed changes, how they fit in with the government's current priorities around the environment, and the impact this may have on New Zealand in the short-term and long-term.

Anti-immigration policies amidst overseas anti-immigrant sentiment w/ the ACT party’s Simon Court: 18th May, 2026

Anti-immigration policies amidst overseas anti-immigrant sentiment w/ the ACT party’s Simon Court: 18th May, 2026 Anti-immigration policies amidst overseas anti-immigrant sentiment w/ the ACT party’s Simon Court: 18th May, 2026, 11.64 MB
Mon 18 May 2026

Recent weeks have seen the government adopting a series of policies targeted at immigration. Some of these policies are set to be introduced immediately, while others are proposals for the upcoming election. What all of these policies have in common is that they aim to respond to an idea that there is a subset of immigrants who are making society in New Zealand worse. 

This is a narrative that we’ve seen dominate conversations about immigration overseas, particularly in the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia. It often leads to gross displays of racism, with mass riots and crackdowns on people who have done nothing wrong. With these recent policies and media attention towards the anti-immigrant rhetoric in Aotearoa this month, concerns have been raised over whether those overseas developments could be seen here. 

For this week’s catchup with the ACT Party’s Simon Court, News Director Castor planned to ask about both immigration and the move-on orders for rough sleepers, though we ran out of time to discuss both. They began by asking Simon about the government’s recent stance on immigration.

BSA, Fees Free and Citizenship Test w/ Labour’s Shanan Halbert: May 14th 2026

BSA, Fees Free and Citizenship Test w/ Labour’s Shanan Halbert BSA, Fees Free and Citizenship Test w/ Labour’s Shanan Halbert, 23.86 MB
Thu 14 May 2026

The Government has confirmed plans to disestablish the Broadcasting Standards Authority and move toward a self-regulation model for media complaints, raising questions about accountability, misinformation, and audience protection.

It has also been confirmed that the Fees Free tertiary scheme will be scrapped in the upcoming Budget, while the new citizenship test has sparked debate over whether it strengthens civic knowledge or creates another barrier for migrants.

For our weekly catch-up with the Labour Party, Producer Pranuja spoke with Shanan Halbert about these topics.

Politics with Māni Dunlop: 14 May, 2026

Politics with Māni Dunlop: 14 May, 2026 Politics with Māni Dunlop: 14 May, 2026, 9.87 MB
Thu 14 May 2026

The Wire is starting a new segment - Politics with Māni Dunlop for Te Ao Māori News.

We’ll be catching up on the big political issues of the week and goings on in the House from a Māori perspective.

Wire Host Caeden caught up with Māni Dunlop about the new Te Tai Tokerau Party, the Conservation Amendment Bill passing first reading, and the submissions made as part of the Mana Wāhine inquiry this week.