14 Dec 2021

Parliament: last orders please

From The House , 6:55 pm on 14 December 2021

Parliament has reached its final sitting week for the year. There are just two days of shouting to go, and with it being the last week, possibly a little slightly manic laughing as well.

At this point in most years MPs would be in full wind-down mode, but this week there is still a surprisingly ambitious agenda of work to fit into these final two days.

Chris Hipkins

Leader of the House, Chris Hipkins. Photo: RNZ / Angus Dreaver

MPs are expected to tackle debates on eight different bills; plus a debate over approving sixteen Covid Orders, and a final clean-up of the estimates (from the final reading of the budget legislation). 

And then, just when they're all out of puff, an adjournment debate - which is the final wrap-up of the year with many rounds of thanks for all and sundry and quite a few jokes.

Under debate

Along the way key bills being debated include a couple of major third readings (final debates):

There are also a number of new bills getting first readings. First readings are an agreement by MPs to have a closer look at legislation (initially via a Select Committee inquiry), which also allows public feedback:

Presuming the House gets through that massive workload the Select Committees considering those five bills will likely be asking for public feedback soon. So that gives you something to do when it entirely fails to stop raining across summer.

One more bill will get debated - but unusually it will be a quick burst through all stages. It’s a tidy-up on problem caused when a Covid-fix bill (relating to charity fund-raising via lotteries), wasn’t assented to by the Governor General before the bill it was replacing expired. That left a few days when some charity fund raising was (strictly speaking) breaking the law. Whoops, best to fix that.