Credible rumours from National Party MPs suggest Chris Luxon could be replaced as New Zealand Prime Minister by Mark Mitchell imminently, according to sources within the party who claim an announcement could come as soon as tomorrow.
The speculation, circulating widely on New Zealand political forums, comes amid economic crisis, mass migration to Australia, and a collapsing construction sector—all unfolding under National's watch. If true, this would represent one of the shortest PM tenures in recent Kiwi history.
Mate, when your own MPs are whispering to the media about leadership changes, you know things have gone pear-shaped. Luxon came in promising serious economic management. Instead, he's delivered a recession that's sending thousands of Kiwis across the Tasman.
The timing of the rumours is telling. National campaigned hard on being the party of economic competence, the adults in the room who would get New Zealand back on track. But the numbers tell a different story: building company bankruptcies at all-time highs, thousands of public servants fired, and new nurses graduating into unemployment.
According to political discussion in Wellington circles, the discontent within National's caucus has been building for months. "I'm hearing this on very good authority from people who are current National Party MPs," one source claimed on social media, lending weight to speculation that's been dismissed before.
Mark Mitchell, the rumored replacement, serves as Minister of Defence and has cultivated an image as a no-nonsense operator. But whether swapping leaders solves National's fundamental problem—an economy in structural decline—is another question entirely.
The construction industry collapse is particularly damaging for National's credibility. Building company bankruptcies have reached levels not seen in 25 years, with industry veterans describing conditions as the worst they've witnessed in their careers. Major infrastructure projects have been cancelled, compounding the crisis.

/file/attachments/2991/P1Estellehantaviruscover_411095.jpg)
