The Prime Minister said he was sick of the Easter Sunday trading issue flaring up year after year, so it appears the whip was applied to National MPs to enact legislation last week that passes the buck to city councils. The fact that National MPs did not divide as they usually do on a free vote on Sunday trading suggests a majority of Parliament was opposed to Easter opening, or at least wanted a national decision one way or the other. But it was not to be.
If John Key imagines the issue will not now flare up year after year, he is likely destined for disappointment. The argument, between local business associations on one side and churches and workers' unions on the other, will be focused next on councils instead of Parliament. But the Government's relief may be temporary.
Local decisions are bound to produce so many inconsistencies and so much resentment that before very long pressure probably will come on the Government to sort it out.
Easter Sunday should not be a difficult issue. It is one of very few non-trading days of the year; Christmas, Good Friday and Anzac Day (until 1pm) being the others. The others seem to be accepted by traders everywhere, even in Rotorua which has been agitating to open at Easter for years.
Rotorua has a case. Nearby Taupo has been able to open on Easter Sunday, as has Queenstown, under exemptions for specified tourist centres in the Shop Trading Hours Act 1990. Rotorua ought to have had an exemption too. The Government could easily have passed an amendment to give it one, instead of opening the door to pressure from business in all sorts of communities.