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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.

The Wire w/ Castor: 1st April, 2025

The Wire w/ Castor: 1st April, 2025 The Wire w/ Castor: 1st April, 2025, 106.91 MB
Tue 1 Apr 2025

This week on the Tuesday Wire...

For Dear Science this week, our expert, Doctor Cushla McGoverin chatted with us about a series of science related april fools pranks, including a local “Sheep Albedo Hypothesis”.

In our weekly catchup with the National Party’s Tom Rutherford, Wire host Castor asked about Tamatha Paul’s recent comments on public attitudes towards police officers.  

They also spoke to MOTAT’s Te Puawānanga coordinator, Phoebe Drayton about the STEM fair this weekend and what everyone can get up to. 

And they spoke to National Secretary of the Public Service Association about job cuts at archives NZ and what this means for the preservation of our nation’s records. 

Producer Amani spoke to Director of Communications for UNICEF Aotearoa Tania Sawick Mead about the recent and planned cuts to global aid funding, which leave 14 million children at an increased risk of severe malnutrition and death.

Cuts to archives NZ w/ National Secretary of the Public Service Association, Fleur Fitzsimons: 1st April, 2025

Cuts to archives NZ w/ National Secretary of the Public Service Association, Fleur Fitzsimons: 1st April, 2025 Cuts to archives NZ w/ National Secretary of the Public Service Association, Fleur Fitzsimons: 1st April, 2025, 13.19 MB
Tue 1 Apr 2025

Archives New Zealand and the National Library announced last week plans to cut 30 roles within the organisations. The two organisations are responsible for the preservation and retrieval of both historical and legal records in Aotearoa. The National Library also assists libraries and schools across the country in initiatives to boost children’s engagement with literacy and reading. 

To discuss the impact of the layoffs and what they say about the government’s broader approach to the situation Wire host Castor spoke to national secretary of the public service association, Fleur Fitzsimons.

Potential Changes to the Supermarket Duopoly w/ Consumer NZ’s Jon Duffy: 31 March, 2025

Potential Changes to the Supermarket Duopoly w/ Consumer NZ’s Jon Duffy: 31 March, 2025 Potential Changes to the Supermarket Duopoly w/ Consumer NZ’s Jon Duffy: 31 March, 2025, 6.84 MB
Mon 31 Mar 2025

Changes to how the supermarket duopoly in the country have been put forward by Finance Minister, Nicola Willis.

Currently there are only two major supermarket chains in the country: Woolworths and Foodstuffs, with this move aiming to establish alternative options to how these companies operate.

News and Editorial Director and Monday Wire Host, Joel, spoke to the Chief Executive of Consumer NZ, Jon Duffy, about these developments, and how the organisation are feeling about them.

They started off by asking him how much of a concern the current duopoly is.

The Wire w/ Joel: 31 March, 2025

The Wire w/ Joel: 31 March, 2025 The Wire w/ Joel: 31 March, 2025, 111.51 MB
Mon 31 Mar 2025

This week on the Monday Wire:

For our weekly catch up with Te Pāti Māori’s Takutai Kemp, News and Editorial Director and Monday Wire Host, Joel, speaks to her about Finance Minister, Nicola Willis’ plans to combat Aotearoa’s supermarket duopoly, Green MP, Tamatha Paul’s comments about police, and Te Pāti Māori’s recent calls for mandatory police body cameras.

For our weekly catch up with The ACT Party’s Simon Court, Joel speaks to him about the Resource Management Act, or RMA reforms and concerns about the country’s health and police system, following an 11-year old being misidentified as a 20-year old by police, and administered antipsychotic drugs.

On Friday, they spoke to the spokesperson for People Against Prisons Aotearoa and Criminology Lecturer at the University of Auckland, Dr Emmy Rākete, about Tamatha Paul’s comments about police practices in the country, the reaction they have received, and whether the reaction has been justified.

They speak to the Chief Executive Officer of Consumer NZ, Jon Duffy, about Nicola Willis’ plans to combat the supermarket duopoly and how the organisation are feeling about these developments.

On Friday, they also spoke to a Senior Politics and International Relations Lecturer at the University of Auckland, Tim Fadgen, about US President Donald Trump’s ‘overreach’ in American universities, and if we should expect similar occurrences at New Zealand universities.

And Global Innovator, Matt Hart, joins Joel in studio to continue our discussion around the Netflix series ‘Adolescence,’  fandoms, and exploring the role of soft power.

Whakarongo mai

Green MP, Tamatha Paul’s comments about the police w/ People Against Prison Aotearoa’s Dr Emmy Rākete: 31 March, 2025

Green MP, Tamatha Paul’s comments about the police w/ People Against Prison Aotearoa’s Dr Emmy Rākete: 31 March, 2025 Green MP, Tamatha Paul’s comments about the police w/ People Against Prison Aotearoa’s Dr Emmy Rākete: 31 March, 2025, 11.53 MB
Mon 31 Mar 2025

Recently, Green MP, Tamatha Paul’s comments have made headlines across mainstream New Zealand political coverage.

At a panel with the University of Canterbury Greens and Peace Action Ōtautahi, Paul said Pōneke did not want to see police officers everywhere, as “for a lot of people it makes them feel unsafe,” as well as accusing police of “waiting for homeless people to leave their spot and throwing out their belongings” which she sez is a comment she received from a local MP from the Downtown Community Ministry and Salvation Army.

Paul has received backlash from some politicians, including Prime Minister, Christopher Luxon, and Opposition Leader, Chris Hipkins.

However, many believe that what Paul said has been sensationalised.

On Friday, News and Editorial Director and Monday Wire Host, Joel, spoke to the Press Spokesperson for People Against Prisons Aotearoa and Criminology Lecturer at the University of Auckland, Dr Emmy Rākete, about Paul’s comments, and how she is viewing this whole situation.

They started off by asking her how she is feeling about the reception of Paul's comments.

‘Adolescence,’ Fandoms, and Exploring Soft Power w/ Global Innovator, Matt Hart: 24 March, 2025

‘Adolescence,’ Fandoms, and Exploring Soft Power w/ Global Innovator, Matt Hart: 24 March, 2025 ‘Adolescence,’ Fandoms, and Exploring Soft Power w/ Global Innovator, Matt Hart: 24 March, 2025 , 8.3 MB
Mon 31 Mar 2025

Global Innovator, Matt Hart, joins News and Editorial Director and Monday Wire Host, Joel, is studio to continue their discussion into the Netflix TV series, 'adolescence,' fandoms, and 'soft-power'! 

Trump’s ‘overreach’ into US Universities and what we could see in New Zealand w/ the University of Auckland’s Timothy Fadgen: 31 March, 2025

Trump’s ‘overreach’ into US Universities and what we could see in New Zealand w/ the University of Auckland’s Timothy Fadgen: 31 March, 2025 Trump’s ‘overreach’ into US Universities and what we could see in New Zealand w/ the University of Auckland’s Timothy Fadgen: 31 March, 2025, 8.21 MB
Mon 31 Mar 2025

US President, Donald Trump, has cancelled over $400 million US dollars, or roughly $697 million New Zealand dollars, worth of research grants and contracts at Columbia University, as leaders at the university move to alter campus and academic policies to align with what the Trump Administration are demanding.

Many believe this is the Trump Administration ‘overreaching,’ their power into universities in the country and how they choose to operate.

On Friday, News and Editorial Director and Monday Wire Host, Joel, spoke to a Senior Politics and International Relations Lecturer at the University of Auckland, Tim Fadgen, about Trump’s moves, and if we could see something similar here in Aotearoa.

They started off by asking what the Trump Administration is wanting to change about how Columbia University operates.

NZ First’s “war on woke”, proposed RMA reforms, and New Zealand’s support for Palestine w/ Labour’s Carmel Sepuloni: 27 March, 2025

NZ First’s “war on woke”, proposed RMA reforms, and New Zealand’s support for Palestine w/ Labour’s Carmel Sepuloni: 27 March, 2025 NZ First’s “war on woke”, proposed RMA reforms, and New Zealand’s support for Palestine w/ Labour’s Carmel Sepuloni: 27 March, 2025, 8.99 MB
Thu 27 Mar 2025

New Zealand First leader Winston Peters gave a “State of the Nation” speech last weekend where he strongly criticised Labour and announced his party was declaring a “war on woke.”

The government has announced a new replacement for the Resource Management Act, looking to pass it before the next election.

And Labour Foreign Affairs spokesperson David Parker has criticised the government for not condemning Israel in the context of recent military action and the blocking of humanitarian aid in Gaza.

For our weekly catch-up with the Labour Party, Wire Host Caeden spoke to Deputy Leader Carmel Sepuloni about all of these topics. 

The Wire w/ Caeden: 27 March, 2025

The Wire w/ Caeden: 27 March, 2025 The Wire w/ Caeden: 27 March, 2025, 110.91 MB
Thu 27 Mar 2025

For our weekly catch-up with the Labour Party, Wire Host Caeden speaks to Deputy Leader Carmel Sepuloni about New Zealand First’s declared “war on woke”, proposed Resource Management Act reform, and Labour’s calls for the government to condemn Israel for their recent military assault on Gaza.

For International Desk, they spoke to Andre Fa’aoso from the Yale Daily News about Atlantic Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg accidentally being added to a group chat top US officials were using to make war plans. 

And they spoke to Mike Smith (Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Kahu) about National MP Joseph Mooney’s members bill that would abolish people’s right to take legal action against companies over damage to the climate. 

News and Editorial Director Joel spoke to Councillor Julie Fairey on submissions for Auckland Council’s long-term plan, ‘bed tax,’ and discussions around equity in the upcoming election.

And they spoke to Chief Executive of the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation New Zealand, Letitia Harding, about a recently released study showing vaping has not lowered smoking habits in young people in Aotearoa.

New Vape Study Findings w/ the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation New Zealand's Letitia Harding: 27 March, 2025

New Vape Study Findings w/ the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation New Zealand's Letitia Harding: 27 March, 2025 New Vape Study Findings w/ the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation New Zealand's Letitia Harding: 27 March, 2025, 5.83 MB
Thu 27 Mar 2025

New findings have shown that vaping has not lowered smoking habits in young people in Aotearoa.

The study, published in The Lancet, looked at the daily smoking rates of 14 to 15 year olds, from 1999 to 2023, and shows that the introduction of vaping and subsequent popularity of the smoking device has not helped in lower daily smoking rates in Aotearoa.

News and Editorial Director, Joel, spoke to the Chief Executive of the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation New Zealand, Letitia Harding, about this study, and how the organisation hopes the government will react to these findings.

They started off by asking if the findings in the study were surprising to her.

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.

Pacific Communities and Crypto Schemes w/ Sione Taufa: May 21st 2026

Pacific Communities and Crypto Schemes w/ Sione Taufa Pacific Communities and Crypto Schemes w/ Sione Taufa, 23.87 MB
Thu 21 May 2026

Crypto investment schemes are spreading across the Pacific, often through trusted family, church, and community networks. While they are promoted as offering financial freedom and fast returns, regulators have warned that some schemes carry serious risks and limited protections for investors.

Producer Pranuja spoke with Associate Dean Pacific Sione Taufa about how trust can be exploited in Pacific communities, why endorsement matters, and what people should know before investing.

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.

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!

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.

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.

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.

City Counselling w/ Julie Fairey: 14 May, 2026

City Counselling w/ Julie Fairey: 14 May, 2026 City Counselling w/ Julie Fairey: 14 May, 2026, 13.71 MB
Thu 14 May 2026

Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown says the council must be involved in any final decision on a second Waitematā harbour crossing. 

And the number of jobs that will be lost in the Auckland Transport restructure has been revealed - a net reduction of 20. 

For City Counselling this week, Wire Host Caeden spoke to Councillor Julie Fairey about both of these topics.

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.