As published in The New Zealand Herald, Saturday 30 May 2026.
Barry Soper’s new book should probably be required reading for anyone interested in politics, leadership and the reality of power in New Zealand.
It is a reminder that governments are judged not only by what they announce, but by whether they look capable of delivering it.
That feels relevant in a Budget week.
The economic backdrop is still difficult. Households remain under pressure, businesses are cautious and the Government is trying to restore fiscal discipline after a period of significant spending growth.
But there are also some signs of resilience. New Zealand recorded a $1.9 billion goods trade surplus in April, reportedly the largest monthly goods trade surplus on record.
That does not mean the economy has suddenly turned a corner. But it is a reminder that even in a constrained environment, there are signals worth paying attention to.
And Budgets are often full of signals.
They are usually judged by the biggest numbers: health, education, defence, tax relief and infrastructure. But sometimes the smaller figures can be just as revealing. They tell us what a government has noticed, what it values and where it believes the system needs to shift.
In this Budget, three quieter signals stood out to me.
The Government has committed $34.4 million to implement a legal entitlement for women to access a minimum three-day postnatal stay after giving birth.
As someone who has given birth to three children in Auckland, I deeply value this decision. Because those first days matter enormously.
What also matters is that this is not an abstract issue for the Health Minister. Simeon Brown is a father of four young children and I have no doubt he has experienced, first hand, just how intense and vulnerable those first days after birth can be.
The best policy is often shaped not only by ideology or briefing papers, but by lived experience.
Some of my clearest memories of becoming a parent are not actually the births themselves, but the hours afterwards. The exhaustion. The emotion.
You are recovering physically while simultaneously trying to learn how to feed, settle and care for a newborn baby. You are sleeping in fragments. Your hormones are everywhere. Your body no longer feels like your own.
With my first child especially, I remember feeling profoundly overwhelmed.
Those first days should be a time of care, recovery and reassurance. Too often, they have become a point of pressure in a system trying to move women through too quickly.
For some mothers, going home quickly feels right. But for others, particularly first-time mothers, it can feel frightening.
This policy matters because it recognises that the days after birth are not simply a discharge process. They are a critical window for recovery, feeding, bonding and reassurance.
For some mothers, home will be the right place to recover. For others, particularly after a difficult birth, feeding challenges, limited family support or the uncertainty that can come with a first baby, more time in hospital can make an enormous difference.
Good maternity care should not be one-size-fits-all. It should give women and babies the support they need, when they need it, in a way that feels safe and humane. This policy does that.
The second signal was cyber security.
The Budget includes $153.6 million for cyber security in the health system, funding intended to strengthen national monitoring, protect health data and improve resilience across Health New Zealand. That matters.
We often talk, rightly, about the state of New Zealand’s physical health infrastructure: ageing hospital buildings, leaking pipes, plumbing failures and facilities that are no longer fit for purpose.
But those of us working in healthcare have been saying for years that, in many cases, our digital infrastructure is just as fragile.
It is less visible than a broken pipe, but it is no less critical.
Outdated, fragmented and vulnerable technology creates risk for patients, clinicians and the wider system. It slows care down, adds pressure to already stretched teams and weakens public trust.
We have seen that first hand this year through recent health data breaches. No system will ever be completely bulletproof. Cyber risk is constantly evolving and health systems around the world are increasingly attractive targets.
But that cannot become an excuse for accepting fragility as normal. We can absolutely do better. We need stronger infrastructure, clearer accountability and a much higher baseline for protecting the information patients entrust to the health system.
Health information is among the most sensitive information a person has. It can include diagnoses, medications, mental health records, reproductive health information, family details and deeply personal conversations between patients and clinicians.
When people engage with healthcare, they are not just handing over data. They are placing trust in a system.
That is why cyber security is not simply an IT issue sitting somewhere in the background. It is a patient safety issue, a trust issue and a national resilience issue.
Digital health infrastructure is now core health infrastructure.
We cannot build a modern health system on outdated technology. We cannot ask clinicians to deliver world-class care while relying on systems that are not fit for purpose. And we cannot expect patients to embrace digital health unless they have confidence that every reasonable safeguard is being put in place to protect their information.
The third quieter signal was children’s online safety.
The Budget allocates $30.8 million to develop policy and possible regulatory options to improve children’s online safety.
This is an area New Zealand can no longer afford to treat as peripheral.
Children are growing up in an online environment that was never designed around their wellbeing. They are exposed to addictive platform design, violent and sexual content, cyberbullying, exploitation, algorithmic rabbit holes and social comparison at a scale no previous generation of parents has had to navigate.
For too long, responsibility has been pushed almost entirely onto parents, schools and, increasingly, the health system.
Of course parents have a role. Of course schools have a role. And of course clinicians and mental health services are left dealing with the consequences when children are harmed online.
But it is not reasonable to expect individual families, teachers or an already stretched health system to solve what is, at its core, a systems issue.
We regulate car seats, driving, alcohol, tobacco and advertising because we accept that children deserve special protection. Yet online, some of the most powerful companies in the world have been able to design products that shape children’s attention, behaviour and mental health with limited accountability.
That needs to change.
The most encouraging part of this Budget line is not just the money. It is the signal that children’s online safety is being treated as a legitimate public policy issue.
New Zealand does not need to start from scratch. Other countries have already begun moving on children’s online safety and there is a lot we can learn from them. In some areas, we may be best placed to adopt what is already working, rather than spending years trying to design something entirely bespoke.
But whatever model we choose, the principle should be clear: children deserve stronger protection online and doing nothing is no longer a serious option.
Taken together, these three announcements point in the same direction.
Maternity care supports families at the very beginning of life. Cyber security protects trust in essential public services. Children’s online safety recognises that childhood has changed and regulation must catch up.
They are different issues, but they share a common thread: prevention, protection and long-term thinking.
That is where New Zealand needs to go.
We cannot continue to orient healthcare and public policy almost entirely around crisis response. We need to invest earlier, protect critical infrastructure and design systems around people and whānau before problems become emergencies.
Barry Soper’s book is a reminder that politics is never as neat from the inside as it looks from the outside.
But governments are not ultimately judged by the drama around them. They are judged by whether they make decisions that improve people’s lives and then deliver them well.
That is why these three quieter Budget signals matter.
The future health, safety and resilience of New Zealand will be determined by whether we are prepared to act earlier.
In maternity wards.
In digital infrastructure.
And in the online lives of our children.