Speech to Project Auckland

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Source: New Zealand Government

Check against delivery

Kia ora, and thank you so much for inviting me here today. It is great to be with you all.

Can I start by thanking Fran O’Sullivan for her hard work in organising and supporting this annual event, and also NZME and the NZ Herald for sponsoring the event as always.

I would also like to acknowledge our Deputy Mayor Desley Simpson, Councillor Richard Hills, and Councillor Andy Baker.

I also wish to acknowledge the opposition spokesperson for Auckland and Shanan Halbert. Lovely to see you here today.

And I want to acknowledge everyone in this room for the role you play in leading our great city. We are proud to be Aucklanders. We are proud of all this city has to offer, and we are all committed to making it a better place. That shared commitment mirrors our Government’s focus on fixing the basics and building the future of Auckland.

Conflict in Iran

Before I speak about the Government’s priorities, I want to acknowledge the global context we are all operating in. Everything has changed in the past four weeks with the conflict in Iran.

The Strait of Hormuz, the narrow stretch of water between Iran and Oman, carries around 20 percent of the world’s daily oil supply, and the conflict in Iran is leading to significant disruption in global oil markets. Kiwis are feeling that right now at the pump.

Our Government is responding quickly and decisively with two key priorities. First, ensuring New Zealand has continued access to fuel supplies. Second, providing targeted support to those who need it most.

As Finance Minister Nicola Willis has confirmed, we continue to have a stable fuel supply, with combined jet, petrol and diesel stocks equating to around 48.6 days of cover nationwide, meaning there is no need for immediate concern. But we are taking every action we can to shore up our position.

We have aligned our fuel standards with Australia to ensure we have access to more markets to purchase fuel products from. We are working with Australia and other nations to secure the supplies we need. And the Minister of Finance has today announced our Fuel Response Plan, which sets out clearly how we will act if we begin to face disruption in our supply chains.

There are four phases to this plan, of which we have already announced phases one and two in detail. For phases three and four, we will consult closely with industry and sector groups, as these phases would require additional restrictions. As the Minister of Finance has made clear, though, success means not having to move to phases three or four. Our focus remains on our priority: ensuring a secure fuel supply for New Zealanders.

Alongside this, we have announced targeted support for working families. We cannot control global oil markets or international conflicts, but we can soften the impact on working families who cannot easily avoid higher fuel costs. From 7 April, around 143,000 working families with children will receive an extra fifty dollars a week through a boost to the in-work tax credit. That targeted increase will be temporary, lasting for one year or until the price of 91 octane petrol drops below three dollars a litre for four consecutive weeks.

That is what responsible, temporary and targeted relief looks like.

Improvements in Auckland under National

Turning now to Auckland. While what is happening internationally will continue to occupy our attention, today is also an opportunity to take stock of the real progress this city has made over the past two years.

When National came into office, Auckland had been through an extraordinarily difficult stretch. The COVID-19 lockdowns had closed this city repeatedly, as the Royal Commission found, and we now know they went longer than the public health advice supported. The economic toll of those decisions fell hardest here. Businesses that had fought to survive were then hit by inflation peaking at over seven percent, mortgage repayments that had doubled for some families, and a cost-of-living squeeze felt right across the city. And if that was not enough, there were the ram raids. Retailers were boarding up their shopfronts, and a city that had, for a time, lost its footing.

That was the Auckland we inherited. And it is why the work of the past two years has been so focused on getting back to basics: restoring economic stability, restoring law and order, and restoring confidence in our public services.

And we have delivered:

We abolished the 11.5 cents per litre Auckland Regional Fuel Tax, putting money back in the pockets of Auckland households and businesses.
Our water reforms are saving Aucklanders hundreds of dollars on their water bills.
We have made meaningful Auckland governance changes to restore democratic decision-making.
We are progressing time-of-use schemes to improve flow across our motorways.
We’re negotiating a regional deal that gives Auckland a genuine partnership with central government.

The results speak for themselves. The NZIER Business Confidence survey shows the strongest equal result since 1994. The Consumer Sentiment Index has risen to 107, reflecting more optimism than pessimism for the first time in several years. Building activity is up, with a 13 percent increase in new dwellings consented in the year to January. Interest rates have come down meaningfully, which is real relief for homeowners and businesses alike. And the International Convention Centre is now open, already hosting 120 events over the year and generating international visitor spend that flows through the whole Auckland economy.

These are not small things. They are the product of a clear plan focused on fixing the basics and building the future.

Opportunities We Must Seize

With that foundation in place, the question now is: what do we do with it? Because Auckland’s best days are not behind us, they are ahead of us, and there are real opportunities in front of us that we must seize together.

The City Rail Link will open this year. It is the largest infrastructure project in New Zealand’s history, started under a National Government and delivered by a National Government. When it opens, it will transform how people move around Auckland, cut travel times, and unlock development opportunities along the rail corridor. But we need to make sure we capture the full benefit. That means using the planning tools available to us to ensure housing growth happens around the stations, with density in the right places and of the right kind. A rail network only delivers its full potential when the city grows intelligently around it, and we are working to make sure our planning settings support exactly that.

On transport more broadly, the CRL is just the beginning. We are progressing the next generation of projects that will define Auckland’s connectivity for decades to come: Mill Road, Northwestern Rapid Transit, and completing the Eastern Busway. 

On safety, the progress in our city centre has been real and measurable. Through our Housing First initiative, 188 people have been placed into housing by March, up from just 33 when the plan was announced in November. Crime victimisations have fallen from 1,010 in January 2024 to 638 in December 2025. A new Police Station in the CBD and officers increasingly on the beat are making a tangible difference. New move-on powers for Police will give them an important additional tool to address the antisocial behaviour that drives people away from our city centre. Our approach balances support with accountability: helping those who need housing and mental health services, while taking firm action against behaviour that makes people feel unsafe.

On health, waiting times skyrocketed following Labour’s decisions to remove the previous National Government’s health targets, and Health New Zealand was left managing $28 billion on a single Excel spreadsheet following the decisions to restructure our healthcare system in the middle of a pandemic. National has brought back the health targets, and we are seeing encouraging improvements across the board, with Kiwis spending less time in emergency departments, more children being fully immunised by the age of 24 months, and waitlists for elective surgeries and first specialist assessments coming down. 

There is still more work to do, however, our focus on fixing the basics is delivering results.

As part of this continued focus, today I am pleased to announce that Health New Zealand is issuing a Request for Proposal to identified landowners for land in Drury, to support the development of a future South Auckland hospital. This is the next concrete step towards a major new hospital health precinct for one of the fastest-growing parts of this country, and it is a step that has been a long time coming. South Auckland carries some of the highest health burdens in New Zealand, with elevated rates of infectious disease, diabetes, cardiovascular and chronic respiratory conditions, and a population projected to grow by hundreds of thousands by 2050. Drury is the right location. It sits alongside our Roads of Regional Significance and planned public transport infrastructure, meaning patients, staff and visitors can actually get there. Securing the right site now means Health New Zealand can plan with confidence, and future investment goes to the right place, at the right scale.

Conclusion

When I look at the full picture, Auckland has real momentum behind it. Inflation is down. Interest rates are down. Business confidence is up. Crime is down. We are delivering in health and in education. The Convention Centre is open and the City Rail Link is coming. These are the results of a clear plan that is working, and we need to stick to it.

We also need to work in genuine partnership with Auckland Council to deliver on these objectives. We have devolved decision-making to the Council in a number of areas, and that makes sense. But this is not an Auckland versus Wellington thing. The majority of Cabinet Ministers come from Auckland. We live here, we shop here, we sit in the same traffic as everyone else in this room. Ministers are constantly engaging with the Mayor and the Council. We are not here to serve Auckland Council. We are here to deliver for Aucklanders.

Yes, we are living in challenging times. The conflict in Iran is a reminder that we cannot always control what arrives on our doorstep. But what we can control is how prepared we are, how resilient we are, and how well we have set Auckland up to seize the opportunities ahead of it.

Auckland’s best days lie ahead of us. The plan is working. Let’s continue to fix the basics and build the future.

Thank you very much.

MIL OSI

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