Foreign visitors are usually hosted in the Beehive, Parliament's executive building, but for room booking reasons, Manele was hosted in Parliament House itself. It wasn't the decision to host Manele in Parliament that raised eyebrows, it was the Government's decision to host him in Parliament's rainbow select committee room, a room which pays tribute to Parliament's LGBT MPs. Homosexual activity is illegal in the Solomon Islands - although apparently this is not enforced. Was the Government trying to make a statement? Or was this a very bad diplomatic faux pas?
Mahuta left reporters none the wiser.
When asked why the meeting was hosted in the Rainbow Room, Mahuta said it was the "only room available" - only it wasn't, Parliament is in recess and most other select committee rooms were empty.
And on whether this was a faux pas or a statement, Mahuta said she told Manele from the beginning where the pair would be meeting.
"I made that queer… clear… at the beginning," Mahuta said, making a Freudian slip.
Saying the quiet bit out loud
Media executives piled on to a select committee Zoom this week to have their two cents on the Government's proposal to merge TVNZ and RNZ into a single entity.
Concerns ranged from editorial independence to the effect it would have on advertising revenue.
Pity the poor journalists (if you can) summoned to dutifully report on their bosses' submissions.
Awkwardness abounded. RNZ and TVNZ chief executives Paul Thompson and Simon Power offered criticisms of the bill while also subtly, not so subtly positioning themselves as the one who might potentially lead it.
Journalists covering the meeting were in the awkward position of reporting remarks made by their bosses that the merger might pump up journalists' pay.
Pity, in particular, reporters from Stuff, who had to listen to chief executive Sinead Boucher warn the companies that will be merged into the entity were already using their market power and potential public funding to poach staff with pay offers above what Stuff thinks is market rate for their services - 30 per cent more in some cases.
Having a pop at the merged entity for keeping journalists' wages down might not be a winning argument to a Labour government.
Credit to the Stuff journalist who covered the select committee hearing, who put his boss' remarks about his company's pay right at the top of his story on the select committee. He probably deserves a raise.