Politics

PM Jacinda Ardern washes hands of NZ First Foundation photos saga

08:54 am on 17 February 2020

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says the New Zealand First Foundation - which faces investigation from the SFO - has nothing to do with her or Winston Peters' role in her Cabinet.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern. Photo: RNZ / Dom Thomas

Ardern has said she would wait for any findings, after an investigation by the Electoral Commission was immediately referred to the Serious Fraud Office as soon as it was handed to police.

In the latest development last week, NZ First leader Winston Peters claimed photos taken of investigative journalists Guyon Espiner (RNZ) and Matt Shand (Stuff) had been taken by a party supporter - after earlier saying "we took them [the photos]".

Speaking to RNZ's Morning Report today, Ardern kept her distance from the whole affair, saying none of it was a matter for her.

"Actually these aren't matters for me, these are matters for New Zealand First" - Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern

"Indeed, I'm the Prime Minister, I run the government. I do not run three separate parties, so I don't think it's unfair or unreasonable to say that these are matters for New Zealand First, not for me.

"I have a personal view on blogs like that - they're not something that I choose to engage with or have the Labour Party engage with - I don't believe them and think they tend to engage in mudslinging and that's not how I do politics."

She confirmed Peters was safe in his portfolios.

She was asked directly whether - considering the fact he was in her Cabinet and was the deputy Prime Minister and stood in for her when she was unavailable - it was truly not a matter for her.

She was also asked whether Peters' conduct met the threshold required by the Cabinet manual of upholding the highest ethical standards.

"It is not conduct I've been engaged in. No, I don't see these things as being explicit to the Cabinet manual, which is the conduct of how we run the government," she said.

"He maintains the role he needs to maintain appropriately as Minister of Foreign Affairs. You're asking questions of him as leader of a political party ... these are matters for him, I don't even have clarity over who took them (the photos), how they got on a blog post.

"It is ultimately an MMP environment, it will have separate political parties, they are in charge of their own conduct as party and party leaders.

"These aren't matters that I have any responsibility for. I'm the leader of the Labour Party, I had nothing to do with this and I'm not going to stand here and explain it or defend it because it's not for me."

"I cannot run both a government and three political parties."

New Zealand First MP Shane Jones also rejected comments from National Party deputy leader Paula Bennett last week that the photos were "chilling".

"My response to any remarks from the opposition is to remind everyone it's an election year and you'll get all this hyperbole and exaggeration and I would dismiss anything the National Party says with a grain of sand," he said.

NZ First MP Shane Jones Photo: RNZ / YouTube

"We are abiding by a process which the SFO follows when it receives complaints and really that's the focus of ... our party's attention" - NZ First MP Shane Jones

"Our party has made a complaint to the police about information doing the rounds," he said.

"I'm not across those details (of the photos) and, look, I wouldn't read too much into it. You get these squalls of misfortune, it'll soon pass."