September 19, 2025

Harmony Thrive

Superior Health, Meaningful Life

New Zealand nurses hold more nationwide strikes

New Zealand nurses hold more nationwide strikes

Some 36,000 nurses, healthcare assistants and midwives at public hospitals across New Zealand held two 24-hour strikes on September 2 and 4, in response to the right-wing National Party-led government’s wage-cutting proposals and its under-staffing of the health system.

Healthcare workers protest near Hutt Hospital during the September 4, 2025 strike

The dispute has dragged on for nearly a year, with members of the New Zealand Nurses Organisation (NZNO) holding strikes last December and in July 2025. 

The government agency Health NZ is offering to increase pay by just 2 percent in 2025 and 1 percent in 2026—a significant cut relative to annual inflation, which is 2.7 percent. The real cost of living is even higher: In the 12 months to June, rents increased 3.2 percent, electricity 8.4 percent, and in the year to July food prices went up 5 percent.

The ruling class wants to set a benchmark for drastic pay reductions across the public and private sector, in order to drive up the rate of exploitation, fund tax cuts for the rich, and divert billions of dollars to the military to prepare for imperialist wars.

Thousands of doctors struck in May and 20,000 secondary teachers held a one-day strike last month after getting similar wage offers. Both disputes remain unresolved.

Health Minister Simeon Brown responded to the latest strikes by repeating his misleading claim that the “average salary for a registered nurse is now over $125,000 a year, including overtime and allowances.” 

In fact, the top salary for a registered nurse with several years’ experience is $106,739. The starting rate is $75,773. Healthcare assistants start on just over $60,000, or $29 per hour.

Brown cynically blamed striking healthcare workers for endangering patients, saying the strikes would result in surgeries and appointments being postponed. It is the criminal underfunding of the public health system by successive Labour and National Party governments that has led to tens of thousands of people waiting months or years to receive vital operations.

With hospitals across the country freezing recruitment to cut costs, Health NZ data shows that between January and November 2024, 51 percent of day shifts and 35 percent of evening shifts were understaffed.

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