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NZ First has accused the National Party NZ and the ACT Party NZ of breaching the coalition agreement after a homeschool backdown, sharpening tensions inside the three‑party Government in Wellington this week. The party says the reversal undermines commitments in the agreement and has put trust within the coalition under strain.
Coalition agreement dispute
The dispute centres on what NZ First describes as a “homeschool backdown”, arguing that National and ACT have stepped away from the policy settings set out in the coalition agreement. By framing the issue as a breach, NZ First is elevating the matter from policy disagreement to a question of credibility and adherence to formal commitments.
That language matters in a coalition built on negotiated trade‑offs. Calling it “breaching the coalition agreement” signals a willingness to use the agreement as leverage, and suggests NZ First may seek concessions or a public acknowledgement from its partners to restore confidence.
Why the backdown matters
For National and ACT, the claim raises reputational risk and adds pressure to maintain unity while delivering policy. For NZ First, the stance reinforces its image as a watchdog of the coalition terms, but also tests whether it can push back without destabilising the Government’s wider agenda.
The clash over the homeschool issue shows how narrow policy shifts can carry broader consequences in NZ politics, turning a single decision into a test of power dynamics and trust across the coalition.