In the wake of the revelation the UK is poised to give Huawei the greenlight, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has said the door is still open to the Chinese telco technology supplier here.
At her post-cabinet press conference yesterday, and a OneNews interview last night, the PM sought to de-politicise the issue, reiterating GCSB Minister Andrew Little's longstanding position that there is no ban on Huawei per se.
Rather, the GCSB vetted proposed telco upgrades on a project-by-project basis under legislation put in place in 2015 by the National-led government.
"I have confidence in the process established by the last government, and I would hope they [National] hold confidence in that process as well," Ardern said in a piece of political jiu-jitsu, perhaps aimed at former Communications Minister Steven Joyce, who has raised questions about the decision to block Huawei from Spark's 5G mobile network upgrade.
While the GCSB had blocked Spark's initial proposal to upgrade its mobile network from 4G to 5G technology supplied by Huawei (its incumbent provider), based on unspecified "significant national security risks", the agency had given the pair the opportunity to present a revised upgrade proposal that mitigated those risks. That door was still open.