New Zealand Prime Minister John Key has found himself embroiled in a dispute over his own right to privacy, just ahead of general elections at the end of next week.
Key had been expected to have an easy re-election campaign after opinion polls put him and the National Party well ahead of rivals. However, with just 10 days remaining until New Zealanders go the polls, Key on Wednesday walked out of a news conference in frustration after refusing to answer questions about a recording of a conservation he says was private.
“I’m here to talk about trade and the economy, and I think they’re the issues that matter to New Zealanders, and I’m not interested in engaging in the others,” he said before walking out.
The recording, which hasn’t been made public, was taken by a freelance cameraman on Friday in Auckland when Key met at a cafe with a potential political ally, Act Party candidate John Banks. Key laid a complaint with police, saying the recording was illegal.
However, opponents say it contains embarrassing political statements by Key and should be released.
Key’s meeting with Banks began as a staged event, with media invited. However, the media were then asked to leave so the men could have a private conversation.
Freelancer Brad Ambrose left a cloth pouch on the table containing a recording device, which wasn’t spotted by Key or his security detail. Ambrose later turned over the recording to the Herald on Sunday, which hasn’t published details of the recording, but has hinted it contains material that could change the way people choose to vote.
In media interviews, Ambrose said he inadvertently left the device on the table in the confusion of the media scrum and hadn’t intended to record the conversation.
However, Key and his party dispute that account.
“There are a number of inconsistencies in the story, which together suggest an attempt to conceal a deliberate News of the World-type covert operation,” Member of Parliament Steven Joyce, who is the National Party’s campaign chair, said in a release.
This week New Zealand Police issued an advisory notice to media organizations saying they were investigating the prime minister’s complaint and reminding organizations that disclosing intercepted communications was an offense punishable by up to two years in prison.
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