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Watch: Luxon plans free-trade talks blitz as Trump changes tune on tariffs

Author
Thomas Coughlan,
Publish Date
Thu, 10 Apr 2025, 8:51am

Watch: Luxon plans free-trade talks blitz as Trump changes tune on tariffs

Author
Thomas Coughlan,
Publish Date
Thu, 10 Apr 2025, 8:51am

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon will speak to media after announcing this morning that he plans an all-out push to protect free and fair trade.

In a speech this morning, Luxon announced he would jump on a phone call with other world leaders later today in a bid to save what is left of the rules-based trading system after it was tested to breaking point in the wake of US President Donald Trump鈥檚 tariffs.

He also announced that he will travel to the United Kingdom later in the month to talk 鈥渢rade, security, and the geopolitical backdrop in Europe and the Indo-Pacific鈥 with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.

Speaking to the Wellington Chamber of Commerce breakfast this morning, Luxon spoke of the virtues of free trade for New Zealand, not just because it opened up markets for exports, but because it made imports cheaper at the same time, lifting overall living standards.

Luxon said he would be testing what leaders 鈥渃an do together to buttress the rules-based trading system鈥.

He said that while some commentators have 鈥渄eclared an end of an era to free markets鈥, he was not ready to 鈥渢hrow in the towel quite yet鈥.

鈥淜iwis have worked too hard and for too long, to give up on the values and institutions which have seen our country and the region we live in thrive.鈥

Luxon said he would explore whether there was a way to use one of New Zealand鈥檚 largest trade agreements, the CPTPP, as a springboard to a better global trading system.

New Zealand was one of the original P3 countries that began negotiating the deal, which grew into one of the world鈥檚 most important trade deals, which is still growing, with the ascension of the UK recently.

鈥淚 expect they won鈥檛 be the last,鈥 Luxon said.

鈥淣ew Zealand will continue to work with like-minded countries to promote free trade as a path to prosperity and explore the role of the CPTPP in strengthening that vision.

鈥淥ne possibility is that members of the CPTPP and the European Union [EU] work together to champion rules-based trade and make specific commitments on how that support plays out in practice.鈥

Labour鈥檚 outgoing foreign affairs spokesman David Parker recently floated the idea of getting the EU to join the CPTPP as a way of bolstering the rules-based trading system, which has been under strain for nearly a decade thanks to dysfunction at the World Trade Organisation. He suggested building on the CPTPP might be a way around that impasse.

Labour's foreign affairs spokesman David Parker backed approaching the EU to join CPTPP. Photo / Mark MitchellLabour's foreign affairs spokesman David Parker backed approaching the EU to join CPTPP. Photo / Mark Mitchell 

Luxon told a potted history of Prime Minister Robert Muldoon鈥檚 economics of the 1970s as a parable for insulating a country from the global economy. 

In those years, when cars and TVs were assembled domestically, New Zealand suffered 鈥渟piralling prices鈥 and a heavily subsidised but 鈥渕uch less productive, much less diverse鈥 agricultural sector. 

Luxon described these policies, while being 鈥渇oolish economics鈥 also 鈥渞eflected the best efforts of political leaders to insulate New Zealand from an era of major social and geopolitical change鈥. 

鈥淗istory shows those best efforts were a mistake, that required years of difficult choices and careful recovery,鈥 he said. 

鈥淣ew Zealanders paid the price then. 

鈥淚 don鈥檛 intend for them to do so again.鈥 

Thomas Coughlan is deputy political editor and covers politics from Parliament. He has worked for the Herald since 2021 and has worked in the press gallery since 2018. 

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