India-NZ FTA: Hipkins sets out three conditions for supporting the deal
Labour leader Chris Hipkins. (Samuel Rillstone/RNZ)
The Labour leader argues Luxon’s drive to conclude the negotiations quickly has left serious questions unresolved.
Labour leader Chris Hipkins is keeping the government guessing on whether his party will cast the deciding vote for the India–New Zealand free trade agreement, laying out on Sunday three conditions and demanding the government releases unredacted papers about all internal advice it received on a few points that it considers critical.
The agreement, finalised in December, cannot be ratified unless Labour backs it because National’s coalition partner, New Zealand First, has already vowed to block the legislation. Hipkins says Labour remains staunchly pro-trade but insists the government must prove the FTA will not harm New Zealand.
Hipkins argues Luxon’s drive to conclude the negotiations quickly has left serious questions unresolved. The Labour leader claims the government “botched” the process by imposing an arbitrary deadline, then emerged with a package that even foreign minister Winston Peters refuses to support.
“While the proposed agreement offers some trading opportunities, there appears to be significant risks in the way it is to be implemented in New Zealand,” Hipkins said, citing doubts that private investors could realistically send NZ$33 billion to India over fifteen years.
He noted no previous FTA had such a sweeping investment requirement, yet the deal reportedly allows India to suspend market access for apples, honey, and kiwifruit if the target is missed. Labour wants full disclosure of official advice given to ministers to determine what warnings, if any, officials raised about the clause.
Hipkins’ other sticking points revolve around migration and education. He warned that any uptick in migrant arrivals generated by the FTA must come with stronger protections against exploitation, stressing Labour “values the people who come here to work and study” but will not accept extra vulnerability in sectors already strained.
Labour also insists that international students covered by the agreement enrol only in legitimate, high-quality courses so that New Zealand’s reputation as a premium education destination is not diluted.
Hipkins said his party sent a letter containing the demands to National earlier this week, formalising those demands and asked for unredacted briefing papers so Labour MPs can scrutinise what Cabinet has seen.