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Chris Hipkins Under the Microscope: Covid Inquiry, Police Portfolio, and the Shadow Cabinet

Politics ✍️ James Davidson 🕒 2026-03-16 15:35 🔥 Views: 1

It’s been a decade since we first heard the name Chris Hipkins in a crisis—back then he was the guy with the hammer and the PowerPoint slides, calmly walking us through another level of the Covid-19 alert system. Now, with last week’s Royal Commission report into the pandemic response landing like a political depth charge, Hipkins finds himself back in the spotlight. Only this time he’s not at the podium; he’s in the Shadow Cabinet, watching from the other side as the government scrambles to explain itself.

Chris Hipkins speaking at a press conference

The Royal Commission’s findings, released on Tuesday, didn’t pull any punches. They pointed to gaps in preparedness, communication stumbles, and the toll on communities. For Hipkins—who served as Minister for Covid-19 Response during the thick of it—the report is both a legacy document and a political livewire. He’s been largely quiet since stepping into the Police Minister role and then shifting to opposition, but you can bet he’s been studying every line. Friends say he’s itching to defend his record, but aware that the public’s memory of lockdowns is still raw.

From Covid Czar to Shadow Critic

After Labour lost the election, Hipkins didn’t disappear. He took on the police portfolio in the Shadow Cabinet of Chris Hipkins, shadowing the government on law and order—a clever move, given that crime and gang violence are hot-button issues. But the pandemic file has never really left him. Whenever the government talks about future outbreaks, Hipkins is the first to remind them of their own past decisions. He’s particularly keen on holding the new minister, Gerry Brownlee, to account. Brownlee now holds the reins for pandemic readiness, and the contrast between the two couldn’t be starker.

Just days after the Royal Commission report dropped, NZ First took aim at Brownlee for what they called “complacency” in the face of the next potential health crisis. Hipkins, ever the pragmatist, hasn’t joined the pile-on directly—yet. But insiders say he’s quietly coordinating with other shadow ministers to ensure the government doesn’t bury the report’s recommendations. The Shadow Cabinet of Chris Hipkins is treating this as a test case for opposition effectiveness.

What the Royal Commission Actually Found

For those who haven’t waded through the 800-page report, here are the headlines that Hipkins and his team are zeroing in on:

  • Fragmented leadership during the early response, with multiple agencies pulling in different directions.
  • Inconsistent messaging that confused the public, especially around lockdown rules and vaccine mandates.
  • Underfunded public health infrastructure that left contact tracers scrambling when cases surged.
  • Disproportionate impact on Māori and Pasifika communities, something Hipkins has publicly acknowledged needs systemic fixing.

Hipkins has already signalled that he’ll use these findings to push for a more resilient setup. In a private hui last week, he reportedly told colleagues that “the next pandemic isn’t a matter of if, but when,” and that the government’s current plans look worryingly like a photocopy of the old ones.

The Brownlee Factor and the Politics of Preparedness

It’s no secret that Gerry Brownlee and Hipkins have a prickly history. When Brownlee took over the pandemic readiness portfolio last year, Hipkins warned that the National-led government was “sleepwalking into a repeat of 2020.” Now, with well‑placed sources confirming that NZ’s readiness is officially Brownlee’s responsibility, the pressure is on. The Police Minister Chris Hipkins (shadow version) has been quietly liaising with health experts to draft alternative proposals—a shadow pandemic plan, if you will.

But Hipkins is also mindful not to overplay his hand. Voters are tired of Covid talk. The cost of living, housing, and crime dominate kitchen-table conversations. That’s why he’s kept his fire focused on Brownlee’s perceived inaction rather than re-litigating old battles. It’s a delicate balance: honour the lessons of the inquiry without sounding like you’re stuck in 2021.

What’s Next for Chris Hipkins?

Politically, Hipkins is in a holding pattern. He’s widely respected inside the caucus—steady, experienced, and scandal-free—which makes him a potential future leader if the current one stumbles. But for now, his job is to shadow, scrutinise, and prepare. The Shadow Cabinet of Chris Hipkins is quietly building policy muscle, readying for a return to government whenever the next election comes.

The Royal Commission report gave him a platform, but it’s how he uses it that will define the next phase of his career. If he can translate those findings into concrete, workable safeguards, he’ll be seen as the man who learned from the crisis—not just the one who managed it. And in the fickle world of politics, that kind of evolution can make all the difference.

For now, Hipkins is doing what he does best: staying just behind the cameras, watching, waiting, and—when the moment’s right—stepping forward with a hammer of his own.