The Mike Hosking Breakfast

Newstalk ZB
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Feb 5, 2026 • 3min

Al Gillespie: International Law Professor says a new arms race could arise as nuclear-weapons treaty expires

The New START treaty, signed by the United States and Russia in 2010, was a nuclear arms reduction treaty which has now expired. US President Donald Trump has now called for a brand new nuclear treaty, prompting fears of a new global arms race. International Law Professor Al Gillespie told Andrew Dickens, "Mr. Trump is the one who let it void, he was saying, well, it's not fair that only America has these restraints in Russia. "He wanted other countries like China to also have restraints, but China wasn't interested." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 5, 2026 • 12min

Marty Toomey: NZ Team Chef de Mission chats Winter Olympics 2026 hopes ahead of opening ceremony

The Winter Olympics are set to kick off in Milano Cortina, Italy this weekend with the opening ceremony taking place on Saturday February 7 at 7.30am NZT.  New Zealand team Chef de Mission Marty Toomey joined Andrew Dickens to chat about how the team is settling in, and the high hopes for this year.  "I think from a New Zealand team perspective, there's no doubt that this team is made up of athletes that are stronger across the board than we have been previously," Toomey said. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 5, 2026 • 6min

Kelly Eckhold: Westpac Chief Economist chats US dollar, European interest rates, and global dairy trade

Westpac Chief Economist Kelly Eckhold joined Andrew Dickens to discuss the economic news in New Zealand and around the world.  They discussed European interest rates, the global dairy trade, and the US job market and dollar. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 5, 2026 • 6min

Tama Potaka: Māori Development Minister addresses heckling during Waitangi Day speeches

A number of politicians, including Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour, were heckled during Waitangi speeches with conflicts surrounding treaty principles interpretations remaining the primary contention point.  Although, Māori Development Minister Tama Potaka says that, despite the evident tension, progress is being made. "We attended the National Iwi Chairs from a couple of days ago on Wednesday, and there's a real constructive and positive vibe, and appetite to do things together," he told Andrew Dickens.  LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 4, 2026 • 2min

Mark the Week: Brian Tamaki broke the camel's back

At the end of each week, Mike Hosking takes you through the big-ticket items and lets you know what he makes of it all.    The economy: 7/10 Overall, a good news week, but a reminder that until we get the jobs right we ain’t properly right.    Foster and Hansen: 9/10  The wackiest story of the week by a mile. Could it be real? Could it be fantasy? Are the union completely mad, or completely brilliant?    Epstein: 3/10  It needs to lead somewhere tangible. Having a lot of emails and photos of underwear and sleaze and tawdriness is not a crime, it's just yuck. Where is the crime?    Brian Tamaki: 7/10  An application for a bridge too far. No more protests, no more closures, no more madness. We thank you Brian. You broke the camel's back.    Melania: 7/10  An interesting insight into our times. It's an example of how the camps are the camps, and the gap has never been wider. It was rubbished, ridiculed and written off and, yet, for a documentary it did excellent business. Everything is political and very little has any nuance. It's sad.    LISTEN ABOVE FOR MIKE HOSKING'S FULL WEEK IN REVIEW See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 4, 2026 • 2min

Mike's Minute: The unemployment rate dazed the Government

It could have been a coordinated knife to the Government's heart.  On the day the unemployment rate went up, the Warehouse offered a real world example of the problem by announcing another 270 jobs would be added to the pile as they look to save and outsource and generally reorganise themselves.  The irony, well lost in the throng of those who look to use the headline for political gain, was the fact the number of people employed is up. It's up by 15,000.  But the headline is the headline and 5.4% is not 5.3%, or 5.2%.  So it makes Gareth Kiernan at Infometrics more right that any Government member had hoped.  5.4% is deja vu. It's February of 2025 all over again. There's a lot to be pleased about but the big prize, the tail at the end of the economic dog being jobs, did not come to the party.  And that old chestnut of Auckland is back to haunt us as well. They've got the highest jobless rates to be found in big cities with close to 6%. Wellington and Hamilton are close to 6% too. If the cities don’t fire, the country doesn’t fire.  It will of course. The vibe in Auckland is palpable in a variety of different areas. Positivity is well and truly back, but it takes time.  And in election year time is of the essence.  Luxon's pitch so far this year is the right one. But talking about recovery is one thing, you've got to actually feel it.  The real trouble in these numbers is not the headline.  1) It's those who need more work. Why? The cost of living. There is a big uptick of women back in the workforce. Ask yourself why.  2) The young people aged 15-24 is over 16%. It's always high but this is too high. Anyone with offspring in this age group knows the struggle. Our youngest has work but she hustled.  3) Australia. Say what you want about the price of a house and the inflation rate, and they are real issues and Australia is in trouble overall this year, but apples and apples, jobs to jobs, they kill us.  This is not a stat for nuance and subtlety. You can't pick out some vague highlights like a region, or a sector, or an industry and try and milk it.  Unemployment got worse. Full stop.  With all the rest of it in place and looking so much better there is a recovery on and it will come right.  But right here, right now, this week, the jobs stat for a government relying on economic credibility took a right hook and will be dazed. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 4, 2026 • 8min

Rod Liddle: UK Correspondent on the latest fallout from the Mandelson-Epstein allegations

The latest Jeffrey Epstein files release is developing into a political scandal in the UK, with MPs voting to release papers relating to Lord Mandelson's appointment as US ambassador.  He's being investigated over allegations he shared internal government information with the convicted sex offender.   UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer's confirmed he knew Mandelson had ties with Epstein, but claims Mandelson lied about the extent of their relationship.  UK Correspondent Rod Liddle told Mike Hosking there’s no explanation Starmer could give for the appointment, the only thing he can do is apologise.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 4, 2026 • 10min

Wrapping the Week with Kate Hawkesby and Tim Wilson: Jobs, flights, and wedding gifts

With Waitangi this weekend, the week is coming to a close a little earlier than usual. So Kate Hawkesby and Tim Wilson are back with Mike Hosking to Wrap the (short) Week that Was.  They discussed jobs and unemployment, and with Producer Sam is jetting off to a wedding right after the show, Mike was shocked at what has become the go-to gift for the newly married.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 4, 2026 • 1h 29min

Full Show Podcast: 05 February 2026

On the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast for Thursday 5th of February, Finance Minister Nicola Willis tries to put a spin on a headline unemployment number that doesn't help the Government in an election year.  There’s a sewage disaster in Wellington, so Mayor Andrew Little joined to discuss the situation.   Kate Hawkesby and Tim Wilson discuss jobs, and Mike can't believe that money is now the gift of choice for a wedding on Wrapping the Week.   Get the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast every weekday morning on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 4, 2026 • 4min

Mike Casey: Electric Cherries Founder on the season and the Mike Hosking Cherry Tree

A decent haul from Mike Hosking’s cherry tree.  Last year he was gifted a tree to ‘adopt’ by the team at Electric Cherries – who run everything without the use of fossil fuels.  The ‘Mike Hosking Tree’ has now been harvested and six kilos of cherries are ready to be eaten.   Founder Mike Casey told Mike Hosking that it’s been a pretty rough season down in Central Otago, with a lot of wind, rain, and a lot of damaged cherries.   But there’s a consolation prize, he says, which is that prices have remained high since there’s been much fewer cherries on the market.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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