ACT leader David Seymour is playing down reported complaints from volunteers about his party’s culture.

Last week, Stuff reported claims of volunteers leaving the party, expressing no confidence in the board and raising concerns about the party’s treatment of women.

The reports said sources close to the party accused its campaign leadership of creating a “culture of fear”.

But leader David Seymour has brushed off the reports, saying they are not representative of ACT as a whole.

  • @DaveOPMA
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    1118 days ago

    “I think when even (former Labour finance minister) Roger Douglas says the ACT party has become the party of entrenched privilege, I think it’s time for the ACT party to have a rethink.”

    RNZ seems to have missed that Roger Douglas was not only a Labour minister, but also a co-founder of ACT.

    • @liv
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      518 days ago

      Yeah it was an unnecessarily obtuse insertion by the reporter.

  • pkboi
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    18 days ago

    @Dave

    The reported complaints are not representative of the party as a whole, ACT leader says.

    Isn’t that how bullying works? Done in a way that people don’t see it or can ignore it.

    • @DaveOPMA
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      318 days ago

      Yes, the important thing isn’t whether everyone in the party acts like that, the important thing is what the party does when issues are raised to them. Brushing it off, and saying things like “Every time you have an election, people come and they find that maybe politics is not for them”, indicate to me that they don’t take the reports seriously.

  • @Ozymati
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    618 days ago

    This won’t make me dislike ACT more but that’s only because I’m already at max dislike.

  • @deadbeef79000
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    517 days ago

    “I’m not afraid, therefore no one else is either.”

    Seymour probably

  • @absGeekNZ
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    417 days ago

    Better headline:

    ACT leader David Seymour brushes off claims party has a ‘culture at all’