This is not the Woman of the Day post. No one meets the criteria.
This is the Woman of the Year post because three women do – For Women Scotland’s Trina Budge, Marion Calder, and Susan Smith who said in 2019:
“If we cannot see sex, then we cannot see sexism, we cannot define… pic.twitter.com/vZuw6p78BS
— Lily Craven (@TheAttagirls) April 17, 2025
Women of the day
17/04/2026Woman of the day
16/04/2026Never before have I devoted two consecutive days to one Woman of the Day, but Josephine Butler, born 198 years ago yesterday in Milfield, Northumberland, is an honourable exception. Even this, my second post about her, doesn’t touch on her tireless campaigning for women’s… pic.twitter.com/QS5gBDdvW1
— Lily Craven (@TheAttagirls) April 14, 2026
Woman of the day
14/04/2026Woman of the Day teacher and suffragist Pippa Strachey (1872-1968) of London, the organisational genius behind the very first major suffrage protest, the Mud March, in 1907.
That was 119 years ago, yet today, women are gathering in Westminster, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Manchester,… pic.twitter.com/7cosoNs5vg
— Lily Craven (@TheAttagirls) April 11, 2026
Alphabet soup gets thicker
14/04/2026How many ingredients can the alphabet soup have?
This is done perfectly.
The MMIWG2LGBTQQIA+ is NOT inclusive ENOUGH pic.twitter.com/Oi6wWGRH1L
— Marc Nixon (@MarcNixon24) April 10, 2026
MMIWG2LGBTQQIA stands forMissing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Two‑Spirit, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Questioning, Intersex, and Asexual.
The gender identity alphabet soup was always stupid and it’s now even thicker.
Quotes of the week
13/04/2026Democracy is a fragile flower that requires active participation and regular nurturing. New Zealand has an enviable reputation for our high turnout and free and fair parliamentary elections. However, our grassroots democracy in local government is in real trouble. Reform of how we conduct council elections is overdue. – Nick Smith
Online voting is not the answer. There have been several commitments by governments and councils to trial e-voting over the past decade, but none have eventuated due to being unable to overcome security concerns. Hackers have become more sophisticated and the risks have increased. Voting system integrity is all important, particularly when trust in public institutions is low.
The first solution is in-person voting, replicating the parliamentary election system as closely as possible. This means a two-week timeframe in which to vote, with polling booths in venues where people visit frequently, such as supermarkets and malls. New Zealanders are creatures of habit. We know it works well and has high turnout. – Nick Smith
I would also advocate for local government and central government elections to move to a four-year term, subject to a referendum, with elections evenly spaced two years apart. None of the big issues facing central or local government can be resolved in three years, and the community would be better served by their representatives taking a longer-term view. – Nick Smith
Teachers’ unions have long used education reform as a bargaining chip in pay negotiations. Moreover, they insist that teachers be paid according to their length of service rather than how well they teach.
Teachers should have a four-tier career structure. Advancement should be based on evidence of quality teaching, judged by expert panels.
The top two tiers should attract considerably higher pay than any classroom teacher currently receives. Teachers at these levels should be curriculum leaders and train new teachers.
The Commissioner has disrupted the ritual. Now it is time to end it once and for all. – Michael Johnston
Part of the problem, I think, is that the line between reporting and opinion has become blurred. Journalists can – and should – write opinion. I’m doing it here. But when reporting on a contested issue, the basic rules still apply.
This isn’t just about individual journalists or articles, however. It raises serious questions about what is being taught on journalism courses – and what standards are being upheld in newsrooms.- Janet Murray
Because good journalism is not about reinforcing a narrative. It is about testing it – with accuracy, balance and a willingness to ask difficult questions.
Balance doesn’t mean giving both sides equal space. But it does mean acknowledging that another side exists. Otherwise, readers aren’t being informed – they’re being led.
And that’s activism, not journalism. – Janet Murray
Journalism does not just reflect reality – it helps shape how we understand it. If basic facts are blurred, or language is used in a way that obscures rather than clarifies, the consequences go far beyond a single article. They affect how we understand issues such as crime, safeguarding and public policy – and whether people trust what they are being told.
None of this is complicated. Journalists are not required to take a particular view on contested issues. But they are required to report them clearly, accurately and with enough balance, so that audiences can make up their own minds.
If journalism is to retain public trust, it needs to get back to basics: accuracy, clarity and a willingness to test claims rather than reinforce them. – Janet Murray
For a few days in that Auckland conference centre, decision-makers from every sector of New Zealand sat together and tried, collectively, to make the country better. There was a sense of energy and shared purpose – a genuine national mojo that I have not seen replicated since. John Hood won New Zealander of the Year. It mattered.
And yet, the honest verdict, 25 years on, is that the overall impact on New Zealand has been, at best, modest. Not because the ideas were wrong. But because turning ideas into structural economic transformation requires something we find genuinely difficult: sustained, grinding, whole-of-economy follow-through. We are good at conversation. We are less good at the hard work of implementation that must follow. New Zealand can be small and nimble. We are not always able to be. – Chris Liddell
The artificial intelligence (AI) revolution is not a knowledge wave. It is a tsunami, coming with exceptional opportunities and challenges.
My old boss, Bill Gates, has long observed that we overestimate the short-term impact of technology but underestimate its long-term impact. With AI, progress is not linear; it is exponential, and the long term is arriving far sooner than we expect. The future that many experts imagine arriving in 20 years may be five years away. – Chris Liddell
In Machines of Loving Grace, he [Dario Amodei] sketches the massive upside of powerful AI, the prospect of compressing a century of medical and scientific progress into a single decade, of eliminating diseases that have plagued humanity for millennia, of dramatically expanding access to education and economic opportunity across the globe.
In his second essay, The Adolescence of Technology, Amodei is more sobering. He argues that humanity is about to be handed almost unimaginable power and that it is unclear whether our social, political and technological institutions possess the maturity to wield it wisely. This is a passage, he writes, that will test who we are as a species. – Chris Liddell
What does this mean for New Zealand?
It means the opportunity is extraordinary. It also means that the cost of our often-characteristic inertia has never been higher.
The United States and China will dominate the global AI race. New Zealand cannot and should not try to compete on their terms. But scale is not the only path to significance. – Chris Liddell
New Zealand holds some baseline advantages for the AI age. A global reputation for integrity and trustworthy governance. A transparent regulatory environment. Abundant renewable energy, a critical and increasingly scarce resource for the data centres that power AI. A Government with the structural capacity to move fast. And a unique indigenous worldview, Te Ao Māori, that offers a genuinely different perspective on data sovereignty, collective benefit and the ethics of technology.
Evolutionary biology teaches us that change comes from the edge of the species. New Zealand has always been a place at the edge geographically, culturally and institutionally. That is not a disadvantage in a world being remade by AI. Being a laboratory for ideas, a place nimble enough to experiment and iterate at speed, is a genuine strategic asset. The countries that will lead are not necessarily just the biggest. They are the boldest. – Chris Liddell
This time the boldness must be backed by something the Knowledge Wave ultimately lacked: a genuine, sustained, whole-of-economy commitment.
On the Government side, what is needed is a substantive, ongoing set of enabling policies. – Chris Liddell
AI can also make the Government itself both more efficient in delivering existing services and more effective in adopting new delivery models. This will require a serious programme to drive AI adoption through every part of the Government. The Government can use it to significantly increase its policy cadence, speed up regulatory clearances and do a regulatory “clean-up” that eliminates conflicting or low-value regulations. AI will open major opportunities in personalised medicine and education, two of the country’s largest sectors in need of re-imagining. New Zealand could be at the forefront of their experimentation and application.
Last, but critically, we need a national AI literacy programme. – Chris Liddell
The Government cannot do this alone. The private sector must step up by investing in AI capabilities and building the new companies and platforms that a modern economy requires. This will require “top-down” driving from business leaders willing to invest in AI applications, and “bottom-up” ideas from all levels of the organisation, empowered by the general deployment of frontier models to every employee.
There are opportunities for significant advances in making existing companies more productive, an area New Zealand has consistently lagged in, but also new growth. There has never been a better moment in New Zealand history to start or scale a technology company or reimagine existing industries. – Chris Liddell
For Māori entrepreneurs and iwi, in particular, the AI moment offers something the Knowledge Wave only gestured toward: real structural opportunity to build wealth, own platforms and participate in the highest-value parts of the global economy on their own terms. –
In the philanthropic sector, AI also opens new worlds. – Chris Liddell
The opportunities are only limited by our imagination. However, none of them will come easily. There will be no silver bullet, just a broad adoption in every sector and the willingness to embrace new business models and approaches. There will be successes but also failures. It will require relentless commitment. – Chris Liddell
Working alongside some of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs, investors and leaders, I’ve come to admire what I would describe as relentless pragmatic optimism – the ability to hold multiple conflicting realities simultaneously, with a clear bias towards the positive. Not naive optimism. Not a denial of the challenges. But the understanding that in times of great dislocation, the bigger the disruption, the bigger the opportunity for those bold enough to compete.
I have seen and competed against the best in the world. I believe that New Zealand has the DNA, but we need the attitude. My enduring concern, seen from the distance I have gained, is our tendency towards complacency and incrementalism and more recently, a degree of fatalism. We must fight those attitudes. In the world we are now entering, every country and every citizen has agency. What’s coming will require a fundamentally different level of response and a higher level of aspiration across government, business and the wider public. – Chris Liddell
There is a Greek proverb I have carried with me for much of my life, “we should plant trees in whose shade we shall never sit”. Every serious act of nation-building is an act of intergenerational generosity, done not for the people in the room, but for the New Zealanders who will inherit what we choose to do or fail to do now.
We largely missed the Knowledge Wave. The conference and what came afterwards catalysed real outcomes and a brief but genuine sense of national shared purpose. However, measured against the scale of the generational challenge it set out to meet, the honest verdict is that we did not do anywhere enough, fast enough, or with enough sustained commitment. We planted some trees when we needed a forest.
The next wave will be dramatically more significant. The question for New Zealand is not whether the AI tsunami is coming. It is whether, this time, we choose to meet it with the full force of everything we have. – Chris Liddell
I’m not saying we don’t need a capable public sector. The public sector needs to be competent and powerful in the right places.
But like Canada and increasingly the UK, if the safest, most secure and best paying jobs in your country do not produce experts, useful goods and services or involve incentive for innovation then you get less and less productivity. – Liam Hehir
No religion deserves its own tsar. To assault a Muslim is a crime. To discriminate against a Muslim is unlawful. But to say Islam promotes the subordination of women is not a crime. To mock the proposition that a seventh-century Arabian merchant received the final revelation of the creator of the universe is not a crime. The capacity to give offence is not an unfortunate byproduct of free speech. It is its essential purpose. This is not about protecting Muslims from hatred. It is about protecting Islam from criticism. Those are two completely different things. – Owen Shapell
Parties that ride high in one election tend to shrink in the next. It’s not fun if you are in the middle of it but it’s political reality nevertheless.
In an environment where the vote is so widely split, having 30%+ parties will get more and more rare. It’s not a bad thing, but the media having decided they hate Luxon can’t look past it.
Maybe for them it’s more fun than the reality of the overall poll, which is of course their preferred option.
The left is getting spanked. – Mike Hosking
Appropriately, it was April Fool’s Day when I read that Queen Elizabeth I is to be portrayed as a cross-dressing man in a forthcoming television show. But we live in times when the more silly and outlandish a rumoured cultural or political plan, the more likely it is to be true. Majesty – an oddly ‘heritage’ title for a project that clearly considers itself ‘transgressive’ – is set to film this summer, and is seeking ‘trans actresses’ (what we used to call cross-dressers, before they got really cross) to play the monarch. – Julie Burchill
What would these questions be? That Elizabeth never married and had no children? Must be a bloke, then – what real woman would forego such unqualified pleasures? It’s a sign that trans thought is so woefully conventional, so gender straitjacketed, that it just doesn’t seem able to grasp, in this case, why a woman would refuse to hand over her hard-won power to a man by marrying a stranger who didn’t even speak her language. Or that she said on the eve of the Spanish Armada invasion: ‘I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a king’? It’s called wordplay, I believe, and was extremely common until people with Tin Ear Syndrome – a disease affecting the ‘trans community’ and their inordinate number of ‘allies’ – became so prevalent among those in the arts and media. – Julie Burchill
We can easily mock the kind of mind that can tie itself into the most labyrinthine of sailor’s knots in order to posit the notion of invading ‘trans’ hordes raping their way across countries, presumably using papier-mâché penises, without the poor women of those nations noticing. Who cares about Vikings’ rights anyway? But it’s beyond a joke when real women who lived in (relatively) recent memory – who we know had to fight against monstrous insults and / or oppression – have their remains picked over by academic half-wits, apparently for no greater cause than making inadequate men (befrocked or not) feel better about themselves; Joan of Arc, Rosa Bonheur, Louisa May Alcott, Storme DeLarverie. Some women pretended to be men so they could be doctors, soldiers, pirates – not because they really considered themselves he / hims. The class privilege of those intent on ‘queering’ every female ‘presenting’ as female in history quite understandably prevents them from understanding how earning a living was the reason many women pretended to be men – including, of course, the Brontë sisters, or Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell, as they were known. Or even JK Rowling, whose publishers advised her that boys would not buy books written by someone called Joanne. – Julie Burchill
Famous women are rare in history. They are generally there because they dared to do what was not expected of them – sometimes on pain of death. Yet somehow, it’s now ‘progressive’ to cancel them out by posthumously changing their sex. – Julie Burchill
It’s telling that those who scream most loudly about having their feelings hurt when they’re called Martha instead of Arthur don’t mind trampling all over the graves of women killed by the savage misogyny of the age. – Julie Burchill
A less important but still significant side effect of ‘queering’ or ‘transing’ the past is that this will mean fewer roles for actresses, already at a disadvantage in a profession that throws them on the scrapheap far earlier than men. Shakespeare’s heroines were originally played by teenage boys, as it was considered improper for women to display themselves in such a way. The call for ‘actors who identify as transgender women’, as the casting call for Majesty puts it, means that women can be edged out once more. – Julie Burchill
When I was a youngster in the 1970s, and Margaret Thatcher first came to notice as a leader of the Tory Party, I remember the sneering from both right and left about her being ‘a man in drag’ and ‘a female impersonator’. I never thought I’d be hearing the same sort of trash talk about powerful women half a century later, as the Elizabeth project so creepily does. Tell you what, queer folx, let’s just explain away every driven, successful woman in history as a man and have done with it; from Don Ciccone and John Crawford in the showbiz world to everyone from Lionel Shriver to me in the writing world. Because women aren’t ambitious and forceful, ever. Talk about erasure! – Julie Burchill
Tova O’Brien’s interview with the Prime Minister is not an isolated moment. It is part of a broader pattern in which media actors, consciously or not, apply the logic of Critical Race Theory and its related disciplines to political coverage.
The result is predictable:
- Competence becomes secondary.
- Identity becomes primary.
- Dissenting identities are delegitimised.
- And the public conversation is dragged back into racial essentialism.
New Zealand deserves better than this. It deserves journalism that interrogates power, not journalism that polices identity – Colinxy
The West has been sleepwalking toward its own demise. China’s rapid economic dominance has gone unchallenged and the spread of Islamist ideology and terror has been largely accepted as some kind of tax on living in diverse societies. Authoritarians, dictators, and despots have been unafraid of the West and global bodies and so have acted confidently to expand their interests. Russia has invaded Ukraine, Iranian proxies have attacked Israel, and China has advanced its dominance in the South China Sea and Pacific.
Anti-interventionists might say “so what? They can do their anti-liberal, authoritarian thing over there and we will have liberal democracy over here.” But apart from domestic policy having allowed anti-liberal and anti-West ideologies to embed in the West itself, one only needs to listen to what our adversaries say openly to understand that staying in our own lanes is not an option. A simple search of speeches by the leaders of these regimes will turn up example after example of cries for the death of America and the West. They are explicit in their intentions for world dominance.
With all of our liberal tolerance and “can’t we all get along” attitude, we are headed toward civilisational suicide. We will be rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic when the ship goes down. We can’t all get along because the other side is willing to martyr themselves to take us out. – Ani O’Brien
War is at our door whether we like it or not. It is not necessarily a war over territory (although in some places it is) it is the ultimate culture war. A war over ideology and religion. For non-religious Westerners it might feel like they have no skin in the game, but living under Christianity with its claws removed is very different to Islamist rule. This is about our liberal, tolerant way of life being superseded with a belief system that subjugates women, slaughters homosexuals, and promotes sectarian violence.
If you pearl clutch about the abortion law changes in the US that are largely not happening anyway, it is inconceivable to be unworried about the much larger threat to women’s autonomy globally. Try protesting about women’s rights in Iran, Syria, or Afghanistan and see what happens.
A combination of naivety, distance from the wars against fascism of the 20th Century, and generations of anti-Western indoctrination have resulted in apathetic populations who are not only unwilling to defend our freedoms, but cannot even comprehend that they are worth fighting for. – Ani O’Brien
Yes, war is brutal, expensive, messy, and should be avoided. But not having the stomach for war will not prevent it coming. China, Russia, Iran… they have ignored the West’s words. Our global bodies have been so weak as to give them spots on peace councils and committees. Make no mistake the reason China has not swept through the south seas, Iran hasn’t dropped nukes on everyone, and Russia hasn’t captured all of Eastern Europe is not because we have negotiated nicely with them. It is because the threat of America’s military might has stood behind those conversations.
Westerners have tricked ourselves into thinking we live in times of dignified peace and diplomacy, but without violence none of it would have held. Throughout the entirety of our history as a species it has always been violence and the threat of violence that has been the ultimate currency. That is why anti-Americanism and derision of their military by the educated classes here and elsewhere in the West are such an insult. Like trustfund nepo babies who live off mummy and daddy and then play pretend communist for a while. Our freedoms have depended on American guns this whole time. – Ani O’Brien
This does not mean we cannot criticise America and Donald Trump, or Barack Obama, or whoever comes next. But American frustration with Europe has been building for years, and it is now being expressed with increasing bluntness. From Barack Obama warning of “free riders” within NATO, to Donald Trump openly castigating allies for failing to meet defence spending commitments, to Joe Biden urging burden-sharing, successive presidents have warned that European states are failing to meet their defence obligations, allowing their military capabilities to erode while relying on the United States to guarantee their security. They were ignored and now much of Europe is in the awkward situation of wanting to oppose what Trump is doing while being reluctantly aware of how reliant they are on his country. The lesson is (and we are learning this on multiple fronts at the moment) that nation states must ensure their own sovereignty as much as possible. – Ani O’Brien
New Zealand will always need to rely on bigger, wealthier, better militarily resourced countries to an extent. But (not-so-)Great Britain and much of Europe have learned a harsh lesson. They have allowed their militaries to be underfunded and dysfunctional. Had they not effectively disarmed they could actually engage in discussions with the US about strategy for dealing with common threats, but as lame ducks they don’t really have a leg to stand on. From Washington’s perspective, this is not simply a matter of fairness. It is a question of credibility. An alliance in which one member consistently carries the burden is inherently unstable. The current crisis has sharpened that perception, revealing a Europe that can call for de-escalation but lacks the capacity to enforce it.
Nowhere are these failures more visible than in Iran. – Ani O’Brien
The deeper logic of American strategy is clearer when viewed through a wider lens that captures competition with China. The Middle East is critical for global energy flows, and while the United States is less dependent on those flows than it once was, China is not. A significant share of its energy imports passes through the Strait of Hormuz. Disruption there has had immediate consequences for Beijing.
China has been steadily expanding its presence in the region, deepening ties with Gulf states while also extending its influence into Latin America. Venezuela’s vast oil reserves and economic dependence created an opening for Chinese investment and leverage while Cuba’s proximity to the US gave China intelligence and surveillance opportunities. In the Arctic, Trump’s interest in Greenland reflects a recognition of China and Russia’s interest in the region as melting ice opens new trade routes and exposes untapped resources. See the bigger picture forming? The media has preferred to report as if America’s moves are a matter of isolated, scattergun chaos. But they form part of a broader strategy for managing a network of economic and strategic relationships that challenge American influence across the world. – Ani O’Brien
America has unleashed an integrated framework that aims to contain Iran, secure energy routes, counter Chinese expansion, and reassert influence in areas that have drifted away from American orbit. This is a unified approach built on leverage not a series of disconnected policies. It prioritises leverage over stability and immediate outcomes over longterm certainty. It assumes that adversaries can be compelled into submission through sustained economic and military pressure, and that escalation can be carefully managed rather than spiralling beyond control. It assumes this.
The problem is that this strategy operates within a system that is increasingly unwilling or unable to absorb it. The institutions that once mediated conflict, the United Nations, multilateral trade frameworks, and broader diplomatic structures, have weakened significantly. Trust in these global institutions has been shot to bits. The United Nations rendered itself irrelevant by playing politics in a way that rewarded human rights abusers while punishing or sidelining Western powers. Without global mechanisms, the threat of conflict lacks the buffer it has had in the second half of the 20th century. Conflict is being managed directly through power, and power is being exercised more aggressively. – Ani O’Brien
The shift from deterrence to coercion, from alliances to conditional partnerships, and from containment to confrontation marks a fundamental transformation in how power is exercised.
This new approach can certainly generate pressure, but can it produce sustainable outcomes before that pressure triggers consequences that no one can fully control?
We will have to see if the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and the announcement of a ceasefire will have any lasting impact on the conflict. Because escalation has its limits and sets a trajectory where the only direction left is further escalation. – Ani O’Brien
We cannot alleviate the pressure for everybody, but we do have a framework around timely, targeted, temporary support, which I think most New Zealanders would understand and appreciate. And they also appreciate and understand that we have a job to do to protect their long-term interests and that of the economy too. – Christopher Luxon
I have to protect the long-term future of New Zealanders as well, and actually making sure that we actually aren’t running up inflation and interest rates. – Christopher Luxon
It is understandable that diesel users want relief from rising prices, and we are acutely aware of the pressure that all Kiwis are feeling. But seeking to alleviate that pressure for everyone would be unaffordable and irresponsible. – Christopher Luxon
We recognise that there’s going to be elevated fuel prices for some time, and it just seems like stalling that or deferring that [raising fuel excise tax] will be probably the wisest course of action,” he said, while acknowledging a deferral would cause challenges to the National Land Transport Fund.
“If there is a fall-off in revenue that’s being raised, the reality is we have to be straight with New Zealanders and say we might have to make some choices and trade-offs, and I think that’s OK to do that. – Christopher Luxon
We don’t want to repeat the mistake where we happen to industry. We want to work with industry, because in many ways we see them being quite critical for actually solving some of the challenges we may incur should we get a fuel disruption in the future.
It’s just about making sure that we all have a common understanding of what’s required. We know it’s incredibly difficult, particularly for our diesel users, in particular. That means that many of them, frankly, are having to put fuel surcharges in place and pass those costs on to their customers. – Christopher Luxon
It has been positive to see early planning, strong consultation with relevant firms, clear phases, and a continued reliance on market settings and supply chain expertise before intervention. That discipline matters, particularly for business continuity and economic stability – Katherine Rich
If three separate courts could not agree on what constitutes criminal ‘hate speech’, it’s clear that the category is too broad and subjective to have any coherent meaning. This is before we get to the main point: Räsänen has been criminalised for peacefully expressing her sincerely held Christian views. This is an intolerable assault on free speech and freedom of religion. – Lorcán Price
Hate-speech laws give modern-day European states the power to criminalise dissent. As we have seen time and again, it is a power they wield mercilessly. Räsänen’s verdict underlines the necessity of repealing all such legislation in Finland, the UK and throughout Europe. The failure to do so will only see the continued erosion of the fundamental right to freedom of expression in our societies. – Lorcán Price
Well, I have reflected that never have I felt so dependent on the actions and feelings of one administration and its leaders as New Zealand is right now. And I see the pain that so many New Zealanders are experiencing as a result of this fuel shock, and I wish for it to end.
And the sad reality is that it’s not in New Zealand’s hands that lies in the hands of countries very far away. – Nicola Willis
How do you teach the wellness generation, the influencer youths, the zoomers, that in order to enjoy the comforts of liberal democracy, sometimes you have to fight for them?
That you may have to make sacrifices.
We’ve not been to war. We’ve not experienced war. We don’t even want serious criminals going to boot camps, let alone us!
There’s a general feeling that wars are fought in faraway lands by somebody else, when evidence is mounting that one of these wars might one day soon be fought closer to home and the others might actually be us! – Ryan Bridge
Thirty or 40 years ago, society had a far more limited view of who was considered disabled.
The explanation for this unexpected rise in the number of young disabled people does not lie in the field of epidemiology, but in the realm of a culture that invites people to classify themselves as infirm. It is important to stress that how people cope with negative experiences is strongly influenced by the cultural and historical factors that shape the way people make sense of them. Such cultural factors may increase or reduce the ability of the individual to cope with adverse circumstances.
In recent decades, the meaning of disability has undergone a dramatic semantic shift. This is part of a broader trend by which negative aspects of human experience and behaviour have become medicalised. In addition, an enormous disability lobby has emerged, which constantly demands that a variety of newly discovered disabilities be recognised with a formal diagnosis. The most important achievement of this lobby has been to alter public perceptions of the relationship between ability and disability. It has also succeeded in transforming what used to be characterised as children’s bad or problematic behaviour into medical issues. – Frank Furedi
Disobedience, aggression, disruptive and anti-social behaviour – now defined as ‘oppositional defiant disorder’ – have always posed a challenge to parents and schools. Yet these difficult patterns of behaviour are now often branded as psychological or medical issues. And so they become accepted, rather than something to be amended by adult guidance or firm discipline. – Frank Furedi
Unsurprisingly, over the past 30 or so years, children have internalised the disability narrative. Today’s young people readily communicate their problems in a psychological vocabulary. They describe their feelings in terms of stress, trauma and depression. – Frank Furedi
It is about time that society woke up to the fact that the current epidemic of childhood disability is not a medical problem. It is a cultural failure. Telling children that they are disabled, and unable to cope with the demands of life, is setting them up for a life of dependency and unfulfilled potential. Our children deserve better. – Frank Furedi
Let’s be blunt: if any other country had landed a free trade deal with India, its business community would be loudly promoting it as a strategic win.
Right now, Christopher Luxon’s Government is scrambling to secure fuel inventories, working with industry on a four‑phase response plan for fuel and energy disruption and trying to limit the spillover from global energy volatility into domestic inflation and cost‑of‑living pressures.
In this environment, embracing a free trade deal with India makes sense. It’s one of the few levers New Zealand has to increase what the Prime Minister terms “optionality” – more markets, more partners, more diversified routes for our goods, services, and people. – Fran O’Sullivan
There is a suspicion that with an election pending, Labour will be tempted to play politics to deny National a political win rather than reach across the aisles to secure the passage of the India FTA legislation.
Senior Labour MPs – particularly Hipkins, a former Prime Minister himself, and trade spokesman Damien O’Connor – know that in a world of conflict in the Middle East, the biggest oil shock in a generation, and an increasingly transactional global order, a deeper economic partnership with India is insurance. It is a hedge against precisely the kinds of shocks we are living through. – Fran O’Sullivan
It would be refreshing for chief executives, chairs, and industry leaders to say – clearly and on the record – whether they support the India FTA and why. That includes fronting media, not delegating to anonymous “industry sources”.
Sectors should spell out, in plain language, what the deal will enable: investment decisions that will proceed, jobs that will be created or retained, risks that will be reduced.
If parties on either side of the aisle treat the FTA as a short-term political prop, the private sector should call that out. The same exporters who regularly criticise regulatory flip-flops should be equally vocal when hard-won trade agreements are put at risk for partisan gain.
Small economies do not get to dictate terms in this world.
What we do get is the chance to move quickly when doors open – and to back our own negotiators when they bring home a deal that materially improves our position. – Fran O’Sullivan
Here is an irony for you.
Could it be that the Prime Minister, the one so disliked by the media, is actually so good at his job that his numbers are a result of his excellence? – Mike Hosking
Back here, what has Luxon got to do with it? Well, whether you support the Government or not, he has held together a very successful collab, with three parties for the first time ever in an official arrangement.
They work together and get along together and that has brought faith in the idea that you can have MMP and small parties can not only survive but prosper. All three parties will go to the election this year in good standing.
You have not been able to say that in the MMP era before. – Mike Hosking
The Luxon CEO approach, open to much media derision, has in fact paid dividends, so much so that his own party might have bled support. Such is the confidence he has been able to foster in a mature and adult arrangement, whereas the election draws closer, it isn’t every man for himself.
Ironically, it’s the downside to success. But as I said earlier this week, the days of major parties being well into the 30s is going, if not gone. You can’t have 10-12% smaller players and hold 35%+. – Mike Hosking
If the left ever got a solid third player, Labour would face the same issue.
National won’t be enjoying this truth. But if you’re an MMP fan, the maturity of what we have seen this past two and a bit years cements the future for potentially stable and adult Government.
It’s the model as to how it should be done. – Mike Hosking
Universities should promote diversity of opinion and encourage students to explore new ideas and perspectives. This includes enabling them to hear from invited speakers with a range of viewpoints. – Penny Simmonds
Unpopular views will be heard, and established wisdom will be challenged based on the merits of each argument, not suffocating conformity with the allowable view.
Of course the enemies of free expression will try to find loopholes and undermine the policy, we’d expect nothing more from them. However, the ground is shifting under their feet. The direction is free speech and Act is proud to have driven this change. – David Seymor
Military adventurism has returned to Europe and the Middle East. It seems probable that this contagion will spread to Southeast Asia.
Today it seems unimaginable that we could be compelled back into armed conflict, but the speed with which events have moved in the last week has proved how quickly old certainties can dissolve.
Hug your kids today. They may be drafted tomorrow. – Damien Grant
We’re getting ourselves quite worked up about oil prices. And it’s probably fair.
Despite three decades of climate mumbo jumbo warning us that we need to abandon fossil fuels for the sake of the planet, the events of the last few weeks have highlighted that we’ve made little such progress and we are still heavily reliant on the black stuff. – Bruce Cotterill
Our national balance sheet is overburdened by debt. When times were good we underinvested in infrastructure and the result is that our bridges, roads and hospitals are all less than we need. Our exchange rate will tell you that our purchasing power in the international marketplace is at least 20% less than it was just a few short years ago. It’s great for our exporters.
But it’s a double whammy when you’re buying increasingly expensive oil with a weak dollar. – Bruce Cotterill
Here’s the thing that no one is talking about. The oil crisis has brought a stark realisation into the sharpest of focus. It has highlighted just how ill-equipped New Zealand has become.
So we need to help ourselves. We need to build resilience in our economy where there is currently none. Helping ourselves means making some tough decisions. We’ve proven not to be good at that. – Bruce Cotterill
The debt is too high. The tax grab is already as high as people can afford. And right now, being in government isn’t easy anywhere.
Our problems start with the size of our Government. Simply put, it is costing us too much to run the country. Here’s a couple of facts. For the year ended June 30, 2024, New Zealand’s total government expenditure reached $180.1 billion, or 44% of GDP. On the other side of our nation’s profit and loss, the total tax collections hit $115.4b or 28%.
It’s not that we’re collecting too little tax. The problem is that we’re spending too much money. – Bruce Cotterill
To be fair, the current Government sees this and they’ve focused on growing the economy. As positive as it is to hear the Prime Ministerial passion for “growing the size of the pie” through better trade outcomes and increased productivity, that takes time and it’s likely not enough. Besides, it’s no good growing the income if all the additional revenues go down the drain labelled “wasted government spending”.
Simply put, if we are going to rebuild the resilience in the economy, in a reasonable timeframe, we have to get the national cost base down to a level that enables us to deliver surpluses, repay some debt, and start investing again. – Bruce Cotterill
We need a kamikaze Cabinet. A collection of highly capable Government ministers who care more about fixing the place than they do their re-election chances. Because we need optimal decisions, rather than decision-making on the back of the politics of compromise. – Bruce Cotterill
The last time I looked we had 41 government departments. Singapore has 16. We have 78 government portfolios. We have to take a knife to the bureaucracy. Why not aim to cut 20% of our total government servants? Given that the last Labour-led Government put 16,000 additional people on, that should be achievable. We should aim to do so without impacting frontline education, healthcare or police workers and instead look to the nation’s back offices for savings. Look for technology and AI solutions to assist with productivity of those who remain.
While we’re at it we should freeze government salaries for three years. This week’s release of the Taxpayers’ Union Bureaucrat Salary Leaderboard showed that public service salaries have increased by 21.4% over the last five years. Those salaries now run at $17,600 per year more than people in the private sector.
It might sound harsh, but you have to remember something: we’re broke! Our government debt is growing by almost $60 million per day. – Bruce Cotterill
When you drop people, you’ll also drop the costs they carry. Office rental is a massive cost. That goes down if you have fewer people. Flights is a big one. Meetings and associated catering is another. Meetings shouldn’t require more than eight people and they don’t always need coffee and morning tea. Meetings with 20 people or more are not meetings; they’re communication forums. They don’t need coffee or catering either.
While we’re at it, we can’t afford to spend money on kūmara patches, whale noises or singing lessons for government employees either.
Our kamikaze Cabinet should also do the stuff that countless governments have been afraid to do. – Bruce Cotterill
From Treasury to those international credit agencies we increasingly fear, most observers will tell us that we can’t afford to continue with a retirement age of 65. We need to progressively push it up by two years every decade for the next 40 years. We’ll get a few grizzles, but our kids will have better futures as a result. – Bruce Cotterill
But we need to sort out immigration. The key focus should be on bringing in people whom we need, rather than people who want to come here. It should be a simple fix. But it needs someone with the nerve to make the call.
And by the way, we need every Kiwi, including companies, trusts and tribes to pay their way. No more tax-free status or rates relief. We need all hands on deck.
In fact, there are only two groups of people who shouldn’t be asked to front up. There are those who genuinely can’t help themselves. We have an obligation to do the best we can for those people.
Secondly, retirees have paid their dues and many will rightly think that their lifetime of hard work should leave them better rewarded than they are. – Bruce Cotterill
Capacity. Productivity. Cost reduction. Efficiency. Resilience. These should be the words we hear from our politicians in the lead-up to the election. But we won’t.
Our current Government is slowly making progress. But I wish they were bolder.
Those in Opposition have already decided that, if elected, they will return to borrowing, increasing taxes and spending more. You can probably guess how that will turn out.
Sooner or later we have to stop digging the hole! – Bruce Cotterill
While headlines fixated on National’s 29.8%, the underlying movement in the poll tells a completely different story. Every single coalition party went up. Every single opposition party went down. National lifted 1.4 points, New Zealand First surged 3.9 points, and ACT added another 1.5. Taken together, the coalition bloc is now sitting on 65 seats, up six seats on last month, and comfortably able to govern.
And where were the journalists to eulogise the Greens? They dropped 2.7 points to 7.8% which is a loss of a quarter of their support in a single month. No “what’s gone wrong for the Greens?” think pieces. No hand-wringing over leadership and speculation that Julie Anne Genter and Teanau Tuiono might be “doing the numbers”. Nada.
This asymmetry shapes public perception. One side’s weakness is magnified; the other side’s decline is minimised. That doesn’t mean National is in a comfortable position because it clearly isn’t. But under MMP, governments are built by coalitions, and on that measure, this poll was not a disaster for the Government. – Ani O’Brien
Labour has seized on the fact that Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is in Singapore negotiating a fuel deal and Christopher Luxon is not. They say he should be. This makes for neat social media content, but it is fundamentally misleading because on this Australia is not leading, it is desperately trying to catch up.
New Zealand has already done much of the groundwork through our relationship with Singapore and the pending Agreement on Trade in Essential Supplies. Luxon has pointed out that Australia is only now moving toward arrangements that New Zealand initiated earlier. More importantly, Australia’s position is materially worse. Its fuel supply disruptions have been more acute than ours. – Ani O’Brien
Given this context, some of Labour’s criticism looks pretty performative. Especially when earlier in the week, Helen Clark, who now functions as a de facto Leader of the Opposition, took aim at Winston Peters’ trip to the United States, framing it as an unnecessary distraction. But that trip included meetings with senior figures like Secretary of State Marco Rubio and created opportunities to explore alternative fuel arrangements and broader strategic partnerships.
What this all shows is that we will not be seeing a war of policy this election. It will be a war of narrative. – Ani O’Brien
Same control, “nicer” words.
If you have to rename what you’re doing to make it sound virtuous, you’re probably doing something wrong. 🚩 pic.twitter.com/IIVSdfnsdc
— 🗣 Free Speech Union ✊ (@NZFreeSpeech) April 11, 2026
Woman of the day
11/04/2026Heartbreaking moment, but powerful.
Look at Kosar Eftekhari. The Islamic regime shot her eye out and blinded her during the Women, Life, Freedom revolution. Now she is in Germany, shocked that people there defend the same regime, the same IRGC. She’s asking them: Who are you… pic.twitter.com/P3mAznk8jt
— Masih Alinejad 🏳️ (@AlinejadMasih) April 9, 2026
Policy working
09/04/2026The golden visa policy is working:
A year on from New Zealand launching its ‘golden’ active investor visa, 635 applications have been received, reflecting a potential total minimum investment of NZ$3.7B.
Visas have now been issued for 237 applications, bringing over $1.4B of committed investment into NZ’s economy. pic.twitter.com/5wz8zVKccq— Charted Daily (@Charteddaily) April 7, 2026
Quotes of the week
06/04/2026For years now, New Zealand has been stuck in a messy legal and institutional web where the most basic category underpinning women’s rights (sex) has been treated as optional, subjective, or simply too awkward or “bigoted” to define. But if the law cannot clearly say what a woman is, then it becomes increasingly difficult to justify why women-only spaces, protections, or opportunities should exist at all. Women’s rights exist for a reason and they are grounded in sex-based differences in physical vulnerability, in reproductive biology, and in the long and very real history of discrimination on that basis.
New Zealand First’s Bill doesn’t “remove rights” from trans people or from anyone. It simply restores clarity and certainty and reinforces the foundation upon which all of our sex-based rights sit. – Ani O’Brien
On one side, you have frontline firefighters escalating strike action, walking off the job for an hour twice a week after months of stalled negotiations and an Employment Relations Authority finding that FENZ failed to properly consult on sweeping cuts affecting hundreds of roles.
On the other side, at the very moment tensions reach peak hostility, the board signs off on pay rises of up to 79%… FOR THEMSELVES. Seventy-nine percent. The chair jumps more than 40%. This was waved through on the basis that it’s needed to “attract talent” which is a claim that might carry more weight if the organisation wasn’t, by almost every account, struggling to function properly. – Ani O’Brien
Water is made up of countless molecules, each comprising two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. As far as I am aware, no scientific experiment has ever established that water has a spirit or memory. Such beliefs may of course be sincerely held but must not be taught as science in our schools. It is quite incredible that in recent years they have been.
The water cycle, which all children should learn in school, involves water returning to the atmosphere by transpiration from plant life, evaporation from the land, waterways, lakes and seas, and returning to Earth as rain, hail and snow. This continual cycling of water means that there is constant mixing and transfer of water molecules widely from one geographical region or local catchment to another.
As water is constantly precipitated elsewhere through atmospheric processes, it is nonsense to see its “mana” being compromised if it moves to a different catchment. Conversely, arguments about not mixing with other bodies of water of course become valid, but on clear environmental science grounds, if water is contaminated, for example with sewerage or with nitrates from agriculture.
It is a responsibility for everyone to ensure that water quality is preserved. We delegate this responsibility to government and local government, but Iwi do not have special knowledge that is otherwise unavailable through environmental science advisors to our elected officials.
Management of water in our natural environment should not be based on spiritual arguments that rest on a single cultural authority, and which is not representative of the country’s wider population. It must be science- and evidence-based, and this management must not incur costs that rest on cultural or spiritual beliefs. Such beliefs should be respected but not be embedded within our water management policies and processes. – John Raine
The coalition Government was elected with a mandate to restore practical, science-based and cost-effective regulation. This means that the only option in their present deliberations over water is to go for Option 3 and scrap Te Mana o te Wai. The Government must also rein in Councils who are enabling a rentier culture to develop around the nation’s water resources. Ultimately, water is so essential as to be sacred to all of us. No single group in our society should be able to control it on cultural grounds, or derive income from it without adding value. – John Raine
While Kiwi businesses are facing economic uncertainty, the Ministry supposedly responsible for helping businesses has been spending our money on Workplace Waiata – i.e. staff singing sessions in their Wellington offices.
MBIE waiata And this isn’t just a one-off thing: At their swanky Wellington offices, MBIE were hosting 30 minute sessions every work day, every week! MBIE employs 5,892 bureaucrats (it’s grown from 4,676 in 2020), literally being paid to sing, clap, poi, and recite Māori proverbs and hymns. – Rhys Hurley
Management eventually agreed through a “cultural negotiation” that the 30-minute sing-along sessions would not be abolished. Instead, they were reduced from five to three 30-minute sessions per week.
Only in the public service could something so ridiculous require this level of executive time, negotiation, and outcome.
This isn’t about cultural respect, it’s about the priorities of people who are funded by us, the taxpayer. Whether it is religious or cultural, you don’t go to work to be paid to sing along. Let me be crystal clear: this isn’t a criticism of waiata or Māori culture. This is about a Ministry that has lost sight of its purpose. – Rhys Hurley
In fact, we shouldn’t really be shocked that Oxford is now threatening to prosecute locals for pinning their national flag on lampposts. If the past few years have taught Britons anything, it is that the only acceptable expression of national pride is Paddington Bear. – Hugo Timms
None of this is to say that the British establishment doesn’t like flags. It loves them – just as long as they have nothing to do with England or the United Kingdom. – Hugo Timms
There is an even greater irony in Oxfordshire, of all places, issuing a progressive fatwa on the English flag. Every year, millions of tourists descend on Oxford to essentially pay homage to the nation’s history and culture. They can see it all: England’s oldest university (which predates the Aztec Empire), the Radcliffe Camera, Christ Church college, the pub where CS Lewis and JR Tolkien drank – so much that is great about England is on display, except of course the national flag.
There is some consolation in the thought that the war on the English flag is almost certain to end in failure. Because, if the Raise the Colours campaign showed us anything, it is that the English have well and truly had it with the kind of national self-loathing Oxford remains committed to. Patriotism, at long last, is no longer a dirty word. Oxford should get with the programme. – Hugo Timms
How can it be that, as a child here, it almost never crossed my mind not to be openly and fearlessly Jewish, and yet I now wait in trepidation for the day one of my young children returns home from school or an outing, asking me to explain Jew hatred? Naomi Firsht
Anti-Semitism has had a rebrand and, honestly, activists have done a fantastic PR job. Say whatever you like about the Jews and carry out as many petty acts of anti-Semitism as you please – as long as you take care to use today’s euphemisms of ‘anti-Zionism’ or ‘Israel criticism’, you’ll get away with it. – Naomi Firsht
The Jewish community does not have the privilege of looking away. While I can shield myself from terrifying video footage of anti-Semitic murder and destruction, I cannot avoid reckoning with the daily reality of life for Jews in Britain today.
This week, Jews celebrate the festival of Passover, when we recall how Moses led us to freedom from slavery in Egypt. It is one of our most important festivals. It celebrates the privilege of not just freedom itself, but also the ability to live freely as Jews. It is a message that has always resonated strongly with me. But this year I find myself asking: when does living with unease become living in fear? In the past, I always believed myself to be truly free, as a person, as a Jew. Today, I’m not so sure. – Naomi Firsht
‘We’re not anti-Semitic, we’re anti-Zionist’, they’ll say. The irritation of Greens for Palestine at having to say Zionist rather than Jew surely explodes that crap once and for all. But more to the point, what do people mean when they say they’re anti-Zionist, not anti-Semitic? All I hear is: ‘I don’t hate Jews, I just want to deprive them of a right enjoyed by every other people and bring about the destruction of their homeland so that they will once again be scattered across the Earth.’ – Brendan O’Neill
I’m sick of pussyfooting around this: if you dream of the Jewish nation’s destruction, and chant for the death of Jewish soldiers, and demonise Jewish nationalism as uniquely barbarous, then you have a problem with Jews. It might take 10 years, maybe 30, perhaps longer, but I am confident we will one day look back at the people who said, ‘I’m an anti-Zionist’, in the same way we look at those who said, ‘Round up the Jews’. – Brendan O’Neill
The credibility of Labour Party leader Chris Hipkins has taken yet another blow.
On Friday, the Herald exclusively revealed on its front page that Hipkins, the former Covid Response Minister, was made aware of the potential vaccine risks in March 2022, when tens of thousands of 12- to 17-year-olds had yet to get a second jab.
Hipkins had earlier claimed he never got the advice. – NZ Herald
In isolation, this Cabinet paper being revealed brings Hipkins’ credibility into question.
But it also follows a string of other incidents involving the former Prime Minister, who hopes to be in the top job again come November. – NZ Herald
Before Friday’s Cabinet paper scandal, this newspaper said Labour had to win back the middle ground to win the election. That job has only become more difficult with Hipkins at the helm.
Ultimately, each swing voter will ask themselves in the ballot box: can we trust Hipkins? – NZ Herald
From a timeline perspective, we now have three conflicting positions sitting side by side in official messaging. The Ministry of Health determined “standard”13 spacing was six weeks in August, then in early October it said “optimal”14 spacing was six to eight weeks, but then on 6 October operational urgency was used to justify returning to a three week minimum so that people could be “fully vaccinated sooner.”
The timing of this sudden halving of the recommended interval between doses appeared to come out of nowhere and is puzzling considering elsewhere in the world the trend was that intervals were being elongated. New Zealand was back to three weeks between doses when the UK was waiting four times as long.
It is difficult not to somewhat cynically note that the Health Ministry later described Super Saturday as the culmination of a “10-day campaign launched by Minister Hipkins at the 1pm stand-up on Wednesday 6 October,” aimed at increasing uptake.15 – Ani O’Brien
In fact, on 21 December 2021, Chris Hipkins declared that COVID-19 “far outweighs” risk of myocarditis in response to questions about 26 year old Dunedin plumber Rory Nairn who died from myocarditis caused by the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine.21
This is significant also because just this week Chris Hipkins claimed to have never given the public medical advice.
In reality, Chris Hipkins frequently gave medical advice and asserted to the public that the Pfizer vaccine was “very safe,” arguing that “any small risk associated with the vaccine is by far outweighed by the risk of getting Covid-19” and that taking the vaccination was “absolutely the best course of action.”23 This reflects the orthodox public health position at the time, but contradicts the regulatory expectations of New Zealand’s medicines law. – Ani O’Brien
No pharmaceutical company could dream to get away with anything like the sweeping and emphatic claims about the efficacy and safety of the vaccine. Especially since, by mid 2021, both domestic and international authorities had identified a specific, non-trivial pattern of risk of myocarditis.
The issue, then, is whether repeatedly describing the vaccine as “very safe,” while collapsing the risk discussion into a generalised comparison with COVID-19, met the standard of balanced communication required under the Act. The obligation is to communicate risk with sufficient specificity that individuals, especially those in higher-risk groups, can make an informed decision. Instead, the Minister for the COVID-19 Response mandated that a double dose of the vaccine was required in order to partake in public life.
What this paper trail shows is a sequence of decisions made in full view of evolving evidence, where the known trade-offs were increasingly clear, and the policy response consistently favoured speed, targets, and compliance over caution. – Ani O’Brien
The issue is no longer whether they knew everything. It is whether, given what they did know, they chose to act in a way that minimised risk or simply in a way that maximised vaccination numbers. – Ani O’Brien
You couldn’t ask for a better state-of-the-nation snapshot than the one coming out of Clapham in south-west London right now. Those clips of young, dumbfounded cops trying and failing to stop a mob of masked TikTok twats from running riot is Britain summed up. The dystopic vision of families barricaded inside shops as entitled delinquents swarm the streets for sport speaks to our crisis of social order. To see what lunacies the corrosion of adult authority can unleash, look no further than Clapham. – Brendan O’Neill
There were serious incidents. Three girls were arrested on suspicion of assaulting an emergency worker. Mistreating public servants is proper lowlife behaviour. The same group were also arrested for shoplifting. In one video, smoke can be seen billowing from Clapham Common: the fires of asocial arrogance. The police lamented the ‘disorder’ and issued a dispersal order for the youths. But I won’t be the only one wondering if those clips of masked brats escaping the clutches of floundering officers tell a worrying story about the state in the 21st century. – Brendan O’Neill
We must not turn a blind eye to such a brazen display of contempt for social norms. It speaks to a simmering nihilism among sections of our youth, one likely emboldened by adult society’s wilful abandonment of its duty to discipline, reprimand and guide the next generation.
To me, the events in Clapham flow from the breakdown of adult authority. Everywhere now, discipline is frowned upon as a borderline fascistic pursuit. Parenting experts warn mums and dads not to scold their littl’uns. Schools long ago abandoned their core duty of admonishing bad behaviour, replacing the stern telling-off with a therapeutic hand on the shoulder. And out in the wild, in everyday society, you hardly ever see adults giving kids an earful. Teens yell and swear and play their tinny music, and few if any of their elders bark: ‘BEHAVE.’ – Brendan O’Neill
There was an infrastructure of discipline that extended from the home to the school to the world itself.
That’s gone now. It feels like adults have been decommissioned, subtly instructed by society that their wisdom and firmness are no longer wanted. This mad deactivation of yesteryear’s social custodians has let infantile antics flourish. Even petty crime is now pretty much permissible. – Brendan O’Neill
If they have got the message that they can do whatever they like, whose fault is that? A society that refuses to say ‘NO’, loudly and resolutely, has no right to be shocked when its members behave like entitled children, even after childhood. Whether it’s the boy in a skirt who thinks he has the right to waltz into the girls’ bathroom or the boy in a mask who shuts down Boots for a laugh, this is what happens when we fail to tell the young to get a fucking grip.
It has bizarrely become a ‘progressive’ virtue to be anti-discipline. So what if youths steal beer or don’t pay their Tube fare – it’s no biggie, say the hipster nihilists of the bourgeois left. – Brendan O’Neill
As Slavoj Žižek says, there is unquestionably a ‘growing decay of manners’, and it really matters. Such ‘everyday insecurity hurts the poor much more than the rich who live calmly in their gated communities’, Žižek says. Well, now one of London’s better-off boroughs has been targeted by the post-manners madness stoked by the faux-progressivism of the elites. Clapham confirms that when adults vacate the terrain of moral guidance, they normalise mob behaviour. We need to get a grip before we can tell the kids to. – Brendan O’Neill
Except for Africa, the panic about population is now about its decline, not its increase. Whether this panic is more justified than was the one about overpopulation, I leave to people of the future to decide.
Two things are certain, however. The first is that mankind cannot get anything just right. The second is that man is the only species that derives pleasure from contemplating its own extinction. – Theodore Dalrymple
You do not have to agree with Sean Plunket. You do not have to like The Platform. But a four-person Wellington panel, armed with a statute older than the World Wide Web, should not be deciding what New Zealanders can say on the internet. Parliament has been declining to give the BSA this power for over 20 years. The BSA has now simply helped itself – Jillaine Heather
The BSA cannot have it both ways. If the technology is irrelevant, it is irrelevant for YouTube too. If clicking play on The Platform is not on demand, what exactly is clicking play on Netflix? The gymnastics required to claim jurisdiction over some internet publishers but not others is, to borrow a phrase, mumbo jumbo. – Jillaine Heather
The BSA has also helpfully explained that there is no audience to which it is appropriate to direct misleading and materially inaccurate information. Translation: the BSA would like to be the body that decides what counts as true. That is not the job of a broadcasting standards regulator. It is not the job of any regulator. – Jillaine Heather
If New Zealand wants to regulate online speech, that is a decision for elected representatives. Not an unelected panel reinterpreting a law from the year the Berlin Wall came down. – Jillaine Heather
From our “don’t waste a crisis” file, is it possible this Government’s handling thus far of oil events might well see them rewarded with an increased level of support as the election draws closer? – Mike Hosking
As I said last week, New Zealand v Australia in terms of messaging, organisation, reaction, and action is not even a contest. Australia is a hot mess of confusion, claim and counterclaim, and a growing bitch session between state and Canberra.
Here, it would seem close to faultless.
For those upset over the lack of free money, you might not agree with it, but you can’t blame the messaging or say it hasn’t been explained. – Mike Hosking
The oil numbers yesterday seem reassuringly well organised. We are clearly hustling and so far, it’s clearly working.
There’s messaging about what it isn’t, i.e. this isn’t Covid, this isn’t about sourdough, or animals in windows. This isn’t about hugs and kindness and all the other BS.
It’s about adults, and organisation, and getting stuff done as best you can in an environment that is largely beyond your control and in a country that is at the end of a very long supply chain at the bottom of the world.
Although we wouldn’t wish any of this on our worst enemy, it’s so far so good from what looks like a seriously competent Government and one that might get some support simply because when it hit the fan they were up for it and not making it up. – Mike Hosking
The Broadcasting Standards Authority’s interlocutory decision in WK v The Platform Media NZ Ltd (Decision No. ID2025-063, 31 March 2026) has attracted controversy for good reason. In finding that it has jurisdiction to regulate The Platform’s internet livestream under the Broadcasting Act 1989, the Authority has made an interpretive leap that is difficult to reconcile with the text of the Act, its legislative history, and basic principles of statutory interpretation.
The decision is not, as some have portrayed it, a straightforward application of a purposive approach to a technologically evolving medium. It is a significant — and arguably ultra vires — expansion of regulatory power that raises serious questions about institutional overreach, rule of law, and the proper role of an administrative tribunal. – David Harvey
Beyond the doctrinal problems, the decision raises broader concerns about institutional legitimacy.
The Authority has been calling on Parliament to update the Broadcasting Act for over twenty years. It openly acknowledges there is currently no code of broadcasting standards for online content. It has not sought levies from online content providers. It has not issued any guidance specifically applicable to internet broadcasters.
And yet it now asserts jurisdiction over an online media entity based on an expansive reading of a 1989 statute — in the context of a specific, politically contentious complaint, after the complainant’s name was released and he received threats. But a tribunal’s jurisdiction cannot expand or contract based on the sympathetic nature of the complaint before it. – David Harvey
If the law genuinely covered internet broadcasting, one would expect the Authority to have acted on that position consistently over the past two decades.
Instead, it explicitly declined to seek levies from online providers and described its 2019/2020 position as provisional and subject to legislative reform. The now-abandoned policy of waiting for Parliament is difficult to reconcile with the claim that jurisdiction over online content was always clear under existing law. – David Harvey
None of this is to say that there is no public interest in regulating online broadcasting. The Platform’s talkback content reaches a substantial audience. The comments that prompted this complaint — described as “unacceptable racist” — are precisely the kind of content that broadcasting standards are designed to address. And the complainant’s experience, including having his name published and receiving threats, illustrates the real-world harm that can flow from unmoderated online content.
But the remedy for a regulatory gap is legislation, not interpretive expansion by a statutory tribunal. – David Harvey
The Broadcasting Act 1989 was enacted for a different technological era. Its language reflects that era’s assumptions about how content reaches audiences. Applying it to a 2025 internet livestreaming operation requires the kind of legislative recalibration that only Parliament can legitimately provide.
The Authority’s decision, however well-intentioned, substitutes the Authority’s policy preferences for Parliament’s role — and in doing so, undermines the institutional foundations on which its own authority rests. – David Harvey
The obvious problem with the BSA starting to redraw its own boundaries is that it may continue to do so whenever the spirit takes hold.
What if the next outrageous complaint that lands at the BSA is a popular podcast? Will it change the rules again to catch that complaint?
The fact that the BSA is trying to find work to do tells you that it is already irrelevant. – Heather du Plessis-Allan
The BSA is irrelevant. If Minister for Media and Communications Paul Goldsmith had the courage, he’d shut it down to save us all the admin costs of dealing with the body.
He doesn’t. It will continue to exist. But it is like a pair of leg warmers. A great idea in the 80s that – no matter how you try to contort it – no one wants any more. – Heather du Plessis-Allan
Slipperier than Teflon
01/04/2026A new drug that enables people to avoid censure and protects them from their own failings is being trialled.
One of its promoters , Mucky Sharlatan, says that it was developed as an aid to public figures who need protection from criticism.
“In several instances those who take it have been proven to be even slipperier than Teflon. The drug’s non-stick properties and ability to resist heat from all manner of personal and political attacks have confounded the critics,” she said.
“It’s fantastic for people whose careers might be derailed by the truth.”
Ms Sharlatan brushed over questions about its addictive properties and the way it could enable users to avoid taking responsibility.
“That would only be a problem if the wrong people took it. We’re prescribing it carefully and ensuring it is only available to a very few people whose philosophy and policies align with ours.”
The drug has been named Hipkinsonium.
“It was originally designed to lose its potency at midday today but we’re so delighted with its effectiveness we will probably make it available until at least November 7th,” Ms Sharlatan said.
“Depending on what happens then, we may or may not have to extend its use.”
Woman of the day
30/03/2026Woman of the Day Agnes Campbell Macphail born OTD in 1890 in Ontario, the first and only woman to be elected in 1921 – the first year that women could vote in national elections in Canada – as a Member of Parliament in the Canadian House of Commons.
The young Agnes disliked… pic.twitter.com/laf1wm3AFN
— Lily Craven (@TheAttagirls) March 24, 2026
Quotes of the week
30/03/2026The former Prime Minister, the former Health Minister, the leader of the Labour Party has to go. His position is simply untenable. Chris Hipkins has consistently maintained he never received advice telling him there was a risk involved in requiring 12 to 17-year-olds to have a second Covid vaccination. As the Herald headline says this morning, a Cabinet paper shows otherwise. – Kerre Woodham
Hipkins says look, we had to make tough decisions under extraordinary pressure and a rapidly changing environment. Of course he did. But New Zealanders surely expect their Minister of Health during a public health crisis to stay abreast of changing information, to stay abreast of data and advice around vaccines, especially when people were concerned about a nationwide vaccination programme, about the fact that we couldn’t do anything, go anywhere until we were all vaccinated up the ying yang. When people had concerns about how quickly the vaccines were being developed and you know, I read what I read around the research around that and was happy enough to take the risk. Other people, all people wanted to know was the information, and I do not think it is unreasonable to expect the Minister of Health to be on top of all that. – Kerre Woodham
Chris Hipkins claims when he was Minister of Health he did not see information around potential health risks around vaccinating teenagers. So he’s either incompetent or he’s a liar. Either way, he cannot stay on. – Kerre Woodham
Parents will rightly ask whether ministers raised questions at the time concerns were raised with them on the two-dose mandate for 12 to 17-year-olds.
“When concerns are raised with a minister, particularly relating to clinical safety, the responsibility does not end with simply receiving that advice. It requires active questioning, careful consideration, and clear accountability. – Simeon Brown
This is a time for people to pull together – to forget about political differences and work towards a common solution for the good of the country. But as Chris Hipkins demonstrates, he is not up for that. And by so demonstrating he is not up for anything else. – David Harvey
But let’s face it – Hipkins acts and behaves just as he is – a peevish schoolboy. – David Harvey
That is not leadership. It is not even competent opposition. It is the political equivalent of turning up to a job interview and declining to answer the questions on the grounds that you don’t actually work there yet. – David Harvey
We are very aware that almost all Kiwi businesses and families are feeling price pressures as a result of the global shockwaves hitting New Zealand, but equally we know that responding with large, untargeted Government spending programmes could make things worse for Kiwis by adding more pressure to inflation and debt. We are making careful choices in order to protect New Zealand’s economic future.
The Government is conscious that a careless response to this crisis could have long-lasting and painful consequences. We saw this in the aftermath of Covid, where excessive spending more than doubled debt and sent inflation soaring and mortgage rates skyrocketing. Kiwis are still grappling with the effects of that today.
That is why we are focused on temporary, timely support that is targeted to the workers who need it most, while continuing to manage the public finances carefully. – Nicola Willis
Every election cycle, like clockwork, Opportunity (TOP) reappears. It refreshes its branding, gets a new leader, rolls out a new slate of candidates, and the media, just as predictably, froths over them. – Ani O’Brien
TOP is treated less like the minor party polling at less than 1% and fighting for relevance, and more like a recurring idea of the sensible alternative, the one that might break through this time, the one that represents politics done properly. There is always a tone of enthusiasm in the media coverage, a sense that perhaps this time the ignorant voters will finally recognise its value. And sitting underneath that optimism is the same false central claim that TOP exists outside the tired binary of Left and Right, guided not by ideology but by evidence.
It is a compelling story, particularly for a certain kind of politically engaged voter who is frustrated with the major parties and attracted to the idea that there might be a “more rational” way of doing things. But it is also, of course, a total fiction. “Evidence-based” is not a political position, it is a rhetorical device. Ask Chloe Swarbrick who has been repeating it ad nauseum all term, but taken seriously by very few people.
In any case, all parties claim to rely on evidence. The real dividing lines in politics are not about whether you use data, but about what you prioritise, what trade-offs you are willing to make, and what outcomes you consider desirable. – Ani O’Brien
The language TOP uses, the issues it elevates, and the solutions it proposes sit squarely within the worldview of the contemporary Left. Climate transition, inequality, child poverty, biodiversity, housing equity, “regenerative” economic systems, co-governance, and a persistent critique of “short-term politics”. This is a standard issue framework of modern Leftist politics, but delivered in a tone designed to sound above it all. There is a moral narrative underpinning it that systems are failing, outcomes are unjust, the current model is unsustainable, and the answer lies in structural reform guided by experts to produce fairer and more equitable results.
None of this is inherently illegitimate. But it is not ideologically neutral. It is a more polished, less confrontational version of the same arguments that animate Labour and the Greens. – Ani O’Brien
It is not at all a balanced roster designed to operate across political blocs. It is a roster that reflects a particular set of assumptions about how the world works and what should be done about it and that is absolutely fine. The problem is in the clear attempts to deceive voters into believing they would be willing and able to work with the current Government parties. – Ani O’Brien
The Rule of Law is not a bureaucratic abstraction. It is the foundational promise that the law applies equally to all, that decisions made in the name of the public are accessible to the public, and that no one — not even the state — is above accountability. Central to that promise is something deceptively simple: people must be able to find the law.
That is why the recent decision by New Zealand’s court system to abandon X in favour of Bluesky deserves far more scrutiny than it has received. The shift was announced quietly, without explanation, and without apparent concern for its implications. That silence is itself revealing. – David Harvey
New Zealand’s courts exist to serve New Zealanders — all of them, not a self-selected subset who have migrated to a niche platform that most people in this country have never heard of.
When a court issues a judgment of public significance, the goal of notifying the public is defeated if the notification reaches only those who already inhabit a particular digital corner of the internet. – David Harvey
By choosing Bluesky over X, New Zealand’s court system and the Office of the Clerk have, whether they intended to or not, signalled a preference. They have chosen the platform of one political sensibility over another.
They have, in effect, communicated that official court announcements will be found more readily by those with progressive sympathies than by those without.
For a commercial company, this would be an unremarkable business decision. For institutions that exist to serve all New Zealanders equally, it is a serious problem. – David Harvey
When public institutions — particularly the courts, whose legitimacy depends on the perception of impartiality, having neither power of the purse nor the sword — are seen to align themselves, even in small ways, with one side of a cultural or political divide, the damage to that perception is real and cumulative.
There is every reason to suspect that this decision reflects, at some level, an ideological preference within the public service — a view that X is a platform associated with the wrong kind of politics, and that Bluesky represents something more congenial.
If that is the case, it is a use of institutional power that those public servants had no mandate to exercise. Their job is to serve the public, not to curate which segment of it receives official communications most conveniently. – David Harvey
The goal is reach. The goal is access. The goal is ensuring that when a significant judgment is published, as many New Zealanders as possible are in a position to know about it.
That goal is best served by using every major platform available, not by making a quiet political statement through the abandonment of the one with by far the largest audience.
The Rule of Law demands that justice not only be done, but be seen to be done — and in the digital age, that means it must also be found. New Zealand’s court system has made that harder. – David Harvey
A law written for the age of paper files cannot survive unchanged in the age of AI.
If we fail to adapt it, the growing cost and complexity of the system will become the excuse to weaken it.
And if that happens, New Zealand will drift back to where we were when I first entered Parliament – when the Government was a secret organisation. – Richard Prebble
Kindness is a virtue when practised privately. It is a vice when wielded politically. – Colinxy
The best of stories contain truth – point at truth – reflect the truth – preserve essential truth. They could be true, should be true; they resonate hopes and dreams and express the truth of many witnesses.
Storytellers are not investigative journalists. Nor are they the purveyors of fake news or outright lies. The inventive twist of humor that talented stand-up comedians put on common life elevates the commonwealth.
If you are present in a comedy club audience, and the comedian holds up the mirror of truth, and you laugh because you recognize yourself, don’t forget to notice the laughter of all those around you.
You are not alone.
That’s the power of storytelling. – Robert Fulgham
The public sector is no longer drifting into activism. It is already there.
The only question left is whether anyone in government is willing to pull it back — or whether we will continue pretending that a bureaucracy which openly funds political campaigns is still “neutral.” – Colinxy
A Cabinet paper, in Hipkins’ own name, shows that by March 2022 he was explicitly aware of advice that a second dose of the Pfizer vaccine “may add unnecessary risk” of myocarditis in under-18s. This was formal advice from the Covid-19 Vaccine Technical Advisory Group, referenced in material put in front of Cabinet. Hipkins’ claims are now plainly untenable.
His defence has shifted though. First it was we were never told. Now it is I don’t recall the paper, and anyway it didn’t materially change anything. This is either a failure of memory so significant it raises questions about competence, or it is an attempt to rewrite the record after the fact.
He also stated in a media stand-up yesterday that he is “not a health practitioner” and left medical advice to officials. Wasn’t he the guy fronting daily press conferences, setting mandates, locking us down, and requiring us to comply? – Ani O’Brien
In the space of one week, Labour has served up a mayoral hopeful who couldn’t reliably front her own campaign obligations and a candidate with direct ties to the hardest-left failed experiment in modern British Labour politics. – Ani O’Brien
In the 2023 election, the Greens won 23.97% of the party vote in affluent, student-heavy Auckland Central. Just 23 kilometres away in the industrial heartland of Manurewa, they won 5.86%. That gap tells a lot. When a low-income household is choosing between heating the home and paying the power bill, the Green message about emissions reduction targets and just transitions does not land with the same urgency as promises of cost-of-living relief and tax cuts. The Greens have never been the party of the factory floor, the freezing works or the construction site. They argue for working-class interests without being of working-class culture. They speak for communities they do not fully speak to. – Claire Robinson
Labour has to look like a government-in-waiting, not an opposition in hiding. And there’s a real question about whether it is match-fit for the campaign ahead, let alone for government.
This is not just a problem for them, because it could derail them from winning the election. It’s a problem for all of us, because – well – they still might. – Ben Thomas
While Hipkins gets credit for holding Labour together after its devastating election loss, it’s starting to seem the appearance of peace within caucus may be less from a cohesive sense of purpose, and more from a drowsy torpor. –
It’s hard to think of issues that Labour’s MPs have stood up and prosecuted successfully for more than a day or two. – Ben Thomas
Nicola Willis is having a very good crisis. You may think the Government should be doing more or less or something different, but it is hard to watch her talk about it without getting the sense she is across the issue, concerned about it without panicking, and thinking through several ways the crisis could go from here. She is unafraid to be nuanced – to explain that just because she is preparing for some very bad scenarios, that does not mean those scenarios are likely. She is happy to say that the US/Israel invasion of Iran and its fallout are hurting Kiwis. She has very slowly let the temperature turn up on her response – showing that she is taking the emerging problem seriously without prompting undue panic. – Henry Cooke
Buy all the EVs you want and cycle until you are blue in the face. The cold, hard truth is that solar and batteries do not, nor I suspect will they ever in our lifetime, run a country.
Diesel runs a country. You put oil in tractors and trucks and in factories. We can be grateful our power is mostly renewable and that means we are better off than most of the world, including Australia. – Mike Hosking
Oil has been an issue in the 70’s and early 2000’s.
Did we change because of it? No.
Did we say we should, or would? Probably. But we didn’t.
And you know why? Because we can’t. Until the combine harvester runs on wind and the plane takes off using batteries and every factory, farmer and person who produces anything we wear, or eat, or live with does it differently, oil is it.
The whole renewables argument has been blown sky high. The world has never used, nor needed, more fossil fuels.
Four weeks of a scrap in one country has laid theory vs reality bare. – Mike Hosking
NZ First leader Winston Peters told Centrist he is talking specifically about the Labour Party “with Hipkins leading it” when he says he will not deal with Labour, and does not want that position interpreted beyond the current facts.
Peters said he had already made clear in November 2022 that Labour were “cheaters and liars” and that he would not go with them in 2023. He said he later reinforced that position because Chris Hipkins was part of the “cabal” that “lied” to him, and said he has “got no intention of ever dealing with them again”.
When asked whether that position should be read more narrowly as applying to the present Labour leadership line-up, Peters agreed, saying the issue is “the Labour Party with Hipkins leading it”. He said he was not prepared to answer hypothetical questions about scenarios that do not currently exist. – Centrist
While we are all bending over backwards in gratitude to the International Olympic Committee (IOC), how ridiculous that we have to be grateful just to have women’s sport returned to women. What an insane position that the IOC adopted in the first place, presuming that somebody who identified as the opposite sex had no advantage. If there is no biological difference between men and women, then there is no point at all in having separate male and female categories. Except everyone knows that this difference exists.
For far too long, fairness has been disposable for women. Since the IOC took sex screening away in the 1990s, it has taken more than 25 years just to return to the point of common sense. Issues affecting men’s sport, such as shark skin swimsuits or Paralympians wanting to compete at the Olympics, were resolved within months – not a quarter of a century. We have had a decade of allowing people to self-identify, of basing rules on feelings rather than science.
Now that science has won the day, the next hurdle is to make sure these changes apply to all women, not merely the elite. There is no way you can turn around and say that to people at grass-roots levels, to juniors and even recreational athletes, that certain women are not worthy of fair sport. Every woman is worthy of fair sport. Otherwise, it is direct sex discrimination – Sharron Davies
Why were we talking about whether the Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins knew about the risks of double-dose vaccination of young people in March 2022 when the risk of myocarditis in young people, particularly after a second dose, was already being formally discussed and managed within the government health system at least eight months earlier? How could Chris Hipkins have lived and breathed our Covid-19 response and been completely unaware of whether there was any truth to one of the most often spoken about claims about vaccine harm? How could he have been confident in refuting what he called “misinformation” if he had never inquired with experts about whether it was true? – Ani O’Brien
In other words, the issue was well known in medical circles in July 2021. It was being studied and monitored around the world. Dr Kvalsvig was one of the most prominent voices from medical academia during New Zealand’s Covid-19 response. She has co-authored papers with Dr Michael Baker and is quoted in many news articles throughout the pandemic. The point is not that Amanda Kvalsvig briefed ministers directly. It is that a prominent public health voice was openly discussing myocarditis risk in adolescent males at the same time official advisory bodies were doing the same internally. The idea that this issue existed everywhere except the ministerial orbit is increasingly implausible.4 – Ani O’Brien
The government was actively weighing whether to use Pfizer to vaccinate children at all, and myocarditis risk was part of that discussion. Risk-benefit decisions depend on both sides of the equation. If COVID risk is low, even a rare vaccine side effect carries more weight. I find it very difficult to believe that this very important trade-off consideration, which led to them at least initially suggesting that only “at risk” young people get vaccinated, was not on the Minister’s radar. Even if we accept that these highly qualified and clearly fastidious officials did not think to mention to the minister that they were weighing up the risk of vaccinating “at risk” young people versus all young people, is it likely that the Minister still did not know some five or six months later in early 2022?
These minutes alone undermine any claim that the issue of risk to young people had not been identified or considered at the time decisions were being shaped. Is Chris Hipkins lying then? Or was he so detached from the actual decision making that he was allowing officials to run the show while he did press conferences? – Ani O’Brien
Most tellingly, officials note that information on symptoms of myocarditis had already been distributed to vaccinators. Does this mean we are supposed to believe that important information about a serious (but rare) side effect was communicated to everyone except the Minister in charge of the entire response?
Come on. You do not issue clinical guidance, track dose-specific risks, and brief frontline staff unless you have accepted that a side effect is real and requires active management. And if it needs active management the Minister should know about it because he is making the decisions around whether to make it mandatory for anyone, but especially under-18s to have a double dose. – Ani O’Brien
These documents do not contain smoking guns that say that the vaccine was totally unsafe and should not have been used. The medical professionals involved clearly support the use of the Pfizer vaccine. What is important here is that the Government mandated it. And if the Government is going to force a medical treatment on people and take away their ability to make informed (or ill-informed) decisions about their health and their children’s, then the bar is even higher for safety. – Ani O’Brien
At minimum, the documents show that the Ministry and its advisory bodies were grappling with this issue long before December 2021. The remaining question is whether that knowledge failed to reach ministers, or whether ministers are now pretending it didn’t. – Ani O’Brien
If ministers were continuously seeking expert advice on safety, then myocarditis, a risk already identified, tracked, and formally discussed within the system, should have been front and centre. He cannot claim both active oversight and total ignorance.
The Cabinet Paper in his name shows he knew in March 2022 and yet did not immediately lift the mandate or advise the public. If he didn’t know even then as he seems to be alleging in some comments to media, someone was writing Cabinet Papers for him (likely) and he was submitting them without reading (unacceptable). – Ani O’Brien
For his claims of ignorance to be true, multiple things would all have to fail simultaneously. Either the advice never left the advisory layer (STA and CV TAG), or it was actively filtered out before reaching ministers (by MOH/Dr Bloomfield?), or ministers ignored or didn’t read briefing material tied to Cabinet decisions.
The system would have had to be in a full-blown conspiracy to keep the information from him or it is evidence that he was nothing more than a bloke on a stage making jokes about spreading your legs while the people behind the scenes made all of the decisions. – Ani O’Brien
What makes this even harder to swallow is the retrospective rewriting of history. We’re now told by Chris Hipkins that he never gave out medical advice and that it was down to doctors to advise patients about risks, as if New Zealanders were making fully informed, free choices. As if he didn’t stand on a podium almost every day and tell us when we were allowed to leave our houses and that we had to wear face masks into restaurants, but could remove them once seated. – Ani O’Brien
Even the most generous interpretation that no single briefing paper landed on his desk spelling this out in bold with flashing neons signs does not resolve the problem. Ministers are not just passive recipients of isolated memos that they dutifully just sign off on. They are accountable for the systems they oversee and Chris Hipkins is accountable for the system he says kept this massive secret from him. “I didn’t know” is not a defence when the machinery of your government demonstrably did.
This is not a case of “hindsight is 20/20”. The documents show early awareness, ongoing monitoring, formal consideration in policy settings, and eventual operational response, before the public conversation caught up. The issue is not whether myocarditis risk existed (it did) or whether officials knew (they did). It is that the timeline presented to the public does not align with the timeline that can be found in the shallowest of dives into the documents. – Ani O’Brien
They say it is never the “crime” that gets you. It’s the cover up. And so it is true for Chris Hipkins in that this is no longer about a public health question (should he have mandated double dose vaccination for 12-17 year olds). It is rather a question of what his repeated claims to have not known about the risk that accompanied that mandate say about his willingness to be accountable, his honesty, and his integrity.
The paper trail shows that the risk was known earlier, discussed more explicitly, and managed more actively than has been publicly admitted. Whether that knowledge reached him through formal briefings, Cabinet papers, or the wider system he was responsible for, the claim of ignorance is no longer credible.
He knew. – Ani O’Brien
Riddle me this: –
If men aren’t women in the Olympics, why are they women in public toilets and changerooms?
This is the beginning of the end for ‘trans’, and it only took people cheering men on as they punched women to the head and body for Olympic Gold.
— Janet Inglis (@ThatAussieWoman) March 26, 2026
Woman of the day
29/03/2026Woman of the Day feminist and author Caroline Norton born OTD in 1808 in London whose intense lobbying of Parliament and Queen Victoria was instrumental in the passing of three Acts of Parliament that gave married women long overdue legal rights for the first time.
It was the… pic.twitter.com/EjMqqCL9Ih
— Lily Craven (@TheAttagirls) March 22, 2026
Woman of the day
28/03/2026Edinburgh doctor Elsie Inglis (1864–1917) offered the services of fully trained women doctors to the British War Office in 1914.
The reply? “My good lady, go home and sit still.”
To see one half of the human race excluded by the other from all participation in the defence of… pic.twitter.com/hO39BpsOHS— Women o’ Scotland (@WomenOScotland) March 20, 2026
More than 100 years later, women in Afghanistan are not only not allowed to be doctors, they are prohibited from going to male doctors.
Incompetence or worse?
27/03/2026Derek Cheng writes : Chris Hipkins says he never got the ‘unnecessary risk’ advice on teens and Covid vaccine. This Cabinet paper shows otherwise:
Then-Covid Response Minister Chris Hipkins received advice about the potential risks of a second Covid-19 vaccine dose for teenagers at a time when tens of thousands of them had yet to get a follow-up jab.
The Phase Two report from the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Covid-19 response said the advice was never delivered to ministers, but the Herald has unearthed a Cabinet paper, in Hipkins’ name, from March 2022 that includes the advice in question.
It was from the Covid-19 Vaccine Technical Advisory Group (CV TAG), on December 9, 2021, and it covered the possibility of “unnecessary risk” of myocarditis (inflammation of the heart) following a second dose of the Covid vaccine for under 18s.
It recommended considering changing the requirements of existing vaccine mandates – for the 12-17 age group – from two vaccine doses to one. . .
Labour’s response to pressure from the Government has leaned on the Royal Commission’s report, which said: “Ministers we interviewed could not recall receiving that advice, nor is there any evidence it was provided to them in the material we obtained from agencies.”
But Hipkins’ Cabinet paper indicates he knew of the advice, which was shared with Cabinet colleagues in a Cabinet Social Wellbeing Committee meeting (Hipkins is not listed in the minutes as being present at that March 2022 meeting).
Hipkins declined a request for an interview, and did not directly address the issue of making the advice public. . . .
What is known is how Hipkins responded once he was aware of the advice in question – in March 2022, when it was in his Cabinet paper, including how two doses “may add an unnecessary risk of myocarditis in this [12-17] population”.
He did not make any recommendations to change vaccine mandates based on that specific advice, nor was it shared with the public. . .
Did he not read the paper? Did he read it and not understand? Did he read it and ignore the advice?
The risk was low but that is no excuse to not tell the public and to continue to require a second vaccination.
At the very least this looks like incompetence, if not something worse.
Woman of the day
27/03/2026
Glaswegian author Marion Reid (1815-1902) watched men argue for days at the 1840 World Anti-Slavery Convention to stop women speak: “To see one half of the human race excluded by the other from all participation of govt, is a political phenomenon which…is impossible to explain.” pic.twitter.com/kBc5XVVgaa
— Women o’ Scotland (@WomenOScotland) March 20, 2026
More than 180 years later there are still parts of the world where women aren’t permitted to speak in public, or to vote.
Woman of the day
26/03/2026Artist Ethel Moorhead (1869-1955), the first Scottish suffragette to be forcefed, said, “You Scotsmen used to be proud of Burns; now you have taken to torturing women.”
How long must we wait until the Scottish government accepts the Supreme Court ruling that the legal definition… pic.twitter.com/wLiwCuyoiq
— Women o’ Scotland (@WomenOScotland) March 19, 2026
Woman of the day
25/03/2026Woman of the Day pioneering suffragist and abolitionist Matilda Joslyn Gage of Cicero, New York, died OTD 1898, aged 71. The Matilda Effect – the phenomenon in which the achievements of women scientists are claimed or stolen by their male colleagues – is named for her because she… pic.twitter.com/KQnkL2ouXQ
— Lily Craven (@TheAttagirls) March 18, 2026
Will Tamaki go blue again?
24/03/2026Act Party deputy leader and Minister Brooke van Velden has announced she will be retiring from parliament at this year’s election.
She won the Tamaki electorate three years ago.
The last election was a contest between a liberal woman and a very conservative man with the former winning.
National’s candidate this year, Mahesh Muralidhar, was selected last month, giving him a head start.
Will the seat go blue again? That National won 52. 41 % of the party vote in the seat and Act trailed in third place with around only 1/4 of National’s support should give him a good chance.
Quotes of the week
23/03/2026I’m very reluctant to adopt the role of the schoolma’am telling people what to do with their own lives.
People will make their own choices. People’s circumstances vary considerably. Their budgets vary considerably. Their needs vary considerably. Their work obligations, their family obligations vary considerably.
People are mindful, and New Zealanders are sensible. – Nicola Willis
So many women are hurt by high profile men who just do what they want with no consequences.
We get told all of the time that if we speak out then our lives will be ruined, our kids will be impacted.
We get labeled as ‘crazy’ or defamatory when we tell the truth.
Today I have had enough. – Jade Paul
Does the Talbot Mills poll out yesterday blow wide open the overt and corrupt actions of the parts of the media that went to town last week, and the week before, on the Prime Minister?
Does the Talbot Mills poll out yesterday with National on 32% also build on evidence that they are not 28%, nor were they ever 28%, therefore there was never a need to go to town last week, and the week before, on the Prime Minister? – Mike Hosking
The political media only have a grab bag of questions around the same theme – are you quitting? Are you safe? Is a coup brewing? Are you going home to consider your options?
The problem with so many of them being as inexperienced as they are, is they lack any form of institutional knowledge and, as such, haven’t really seen proper political drama. A rogue poll and a rogue ex aren’t it.
Mix that with the fact they are overtly biased against the Government and all you need is one ropy poll at 28% and it’s Operation Epic Fury: Gallery style. – Mike Hosking
Yesterday’s poll starts to expose very clearly that the Government has two oppositions – one made up of Labour, the Greens, and the Māori Party, and the other made up of a decent chunk of the media, some of whom are funded by the taxpayer.
If that doesn’t worry you in election year, nothing does. – Mike Hosking
If you spent too much time looking at your screens right now, you would be deeply troubled.
As individuals, there is much that is out of our hands.
However, as a country, there are many things New Zealand can control to put itself in a better position to cope with what it can’t control. – Struan Little
GDP is one of the last indicators to be reported, is often revised up or down, and can be volatile. So, while 0.2 percent is the headline number, Treasury looks more deeply and widely to judge the health of the economy. And there is richness that supports this growth story.
For example, the most recent stats show that while unemployment has ticked up to 5.4 percent, below that, the Household Labour Force Survey shows positive employment growth of 0.5 percent in the December quarter, after five previous quarters of flat or falling employment. That means an additional 15,000 people are now working, which supports Treasury’s view that the economy has entered a growth phase. Also, dwelling consents increased 5.5% in the December quarter, and business confidence has improved.
So, we are seeing a growing range of data and measures of sentiment supporting the GDP. – Struan Little
A growing economy provides resilience but the situation in the Middle East looks to test that resilience. – Struan Little
A rule of thumb is that every US$10 increase per barrel of oil roughly translates to 10 cents a litre extra for New Zealanders at the petrol pump. Therefore, prices at around US$100 a barrel mean a 40 cents a litre increase in New Zealand.
In that scenario, and assuming the conflict runs for three months with an elevated oil price, the impact on CPI would be around 0.5 percentage points – that is around 3.1 – 3.2% instead of 2.7% in the baseline in the year to June 2026.
Importantly, growth is expected to continue this year, but not as strongly as in the baseline forecast.
I stress this is just one scenario. – Struan Little
The conflict is not only cataclysmic for those directly affected by it, but it compounds the heightened sense of unpredictability and upheaval in the world. The global landscape is becoming more, rather than less, fragmented as old alliances break down. The stability of the rules-based order can no longer be taken for granted. Where there used to be assurance and certainty, there is now complexity and doubt.
Shocks are occurring more frequently and on a larger scale. – Struan Little
It has always been true that resilient countries are better placed to cope with shocks. While New Zealand has some vulnerabilities, it faces challenges with some real strengths that should give New Zealanders confidence that we are better placed than many others to weather this event.
New Zealand’s political stability, tolerant society, skilled workforce, reputation as a dependable and predictable partner and strong institutions are valuable assets in navigating these times.
There is another asset that helps countries get through and recover from situations like this, and that is having the fiscal headroom to borrow or to absorb the inevitable costs that come with a shock.
So, while the economy is growing again, the current situation is a reminder that New Zealand’s considerable economic and fiscal challenges in the medium and long-term are at least as important as the short-term challenges.
Treasury’s advice is not to let the price of 91 at the pump today distract us all from the cost of net core Crown debt tomorrow. – Struan Little
Productivity has been stubbornly resistant to attempts to lift it over many years and under many governments.
In 2023, New Zealand was ranked 31st out of 38 OECD member countries for GDP per hour worked.
There is no single fix, but Treasury has identified five areas that are critical for long-term impact. Briefly they are in capital intensity, skills, improving global connections, innovation, and regulation. – Struan Little
In preparing long-term forecasts 20 years ago, we anticipated that by now, net core Crown debt would be around 23% of GDP. We were wrong. Instead, it’s more like 43%.
You can ask, “how did that happen?” A substantial part of the answer is that the Global Financial Crisis, the Canterbury earthquakes and then Covid – came one after the other in that period.
Each was hugely expensive and governments borrowed to support New Zealanders through those crises. – Struan Little
The problem is that shocks are costing, on average, 10% of GDP per decade and in the intervening years, the books do not fully recover before the next shock arrives. We can see it in the debt curve.
The definition of shocks is that you don’t get to pick when they occur.
As we are experiencing right now, they will come and New Zealand can and should prepare for them fiscally. Treasury has been consistent in its advice about the need to rebuild fiscal buffers, so the next shock is more affordable. – Struan Little
According to the IMF, New Zealand is running one of the largest structural deficits among advanced economies. That is not an accolade New Zealand wishes to retain.
A starting point is returning to surplus, and a surplus is expected by 2029/30. – Struan Little
Our second lesson is that fiscal consolidation needs to continue to be a priority in the next term of Parliament to ensure that the forecast decline in debt is realised.
Treasury’s very clear message is a sense of urgency.
The longer the delay in bending the curves, the fewer the choices and the greater the muscle that will need to be applied. – Struan Little
On top of expenditure and revenue measures, it’s vital to achieve better management of the Crown’s balance sheet with improved performances of both assets and liabilities.
I say that word “assets” with trepidation because there’s a tendency for debate to quickly narrow to asset sales. But small gains achieved by better managing the Crown’s $598 billion of assets, or its $409 billion of liabilities offer huge potential fiscal benefits. – Struan Little
The fourth lesson is that managing the public finances well has never been more important.
The balance sheet is large, markets are more diffuse and complex, global uncertainty is heightening risk, and risk is becoming more expensive.
Debt servicing is now the fourth-largest line item on the Government’s books. As the Minister of Finance noted in last year’s Budget speech, the interest bill has gone from $3.6 billion in 2014 to $8.9 billion in 2024, which is more than annual expenses for Police, Corrections, the Ministry of Justice, Customs and the Defence Force combined.
Looking at debt servicing on a per capita basis, by 2029/30, finance costs are expected to be $13.4 billion, which is equivalent to around $2,500 per New Zealander. – Struan Little
The path forward means strengthening fiscal resilience, preserving market confidence, and preparing for the next shock. Current events only highlight the salience of preparation. It’s achievable.
Recovery is taking hold and New Zealand’s transparency, predictability, reliability, strong institutions and credible long-term fiscal planning are strengths and strategic assets in a world where stability is increasingly sought and valued. – Struan Little
All manner of insults have been hurled at oil and gas in recent decades. Supposedly, it is ‘dirty’, ‘unsustainable’ and, we have been increasingly told, ‘irrelevant’. The war in Iran shows that there was a word missing in the environmentalists’ lexicon: ‘essential’. – James Woudhuysen
Oil and gas aren’t just essential to our energy needs. They are also a critical ingredient in everyday medication, much of which is life-saving. Our Net Zero-loving MPs might have forgotten this, but fortunately, doctors and pharmacists have not. – James Woudhuysen
What about medical equipment? Petrochemicals are the feedstock for polypropylene, polyethylene and polyvinyl chloride. As cheap, light, strong and easily sterilised plastics, these are widely used in medical devices and accessories – including disposable syringes and needles, catheters, intravenous tubing, blood bags, membranes for dialysis and implants. On top of this, carbon fibre is used to build imaging equipment such as MRI machines, CT scanners and X-ray machines. It is in surgical instruments, wheelchairs and prosthetics. Also dependent on carbon fibre are blister packs, bottles for pills, sterile packaging film and tamper-proof seals that protect drugs from contamination and degradation. – James Woudhuysen
It isn’t just medicine and fuel that rely on fossil fuels, either. In agriculture, petrochemicals are key to fertilisers, pesticides and overall mechanisation. Fertilisers for crops, such as wheat, rice, and maize, are made with natural gas and coal. Also derived from fossil fuels are herbicides, insecticides and fungicides. And tractors, pumps and pipes for irrigation, crop storage systems and food packaging all rely on fossil fuels – either to make them or to power them, or both.
The ongoing war waged on fossil fuels by the UK’s political establishment doesn’t only defy logic. It defies humanity, too. If ever there was a time to rethink our blind rush to a Net Zero future, this is it. In the meantime, let’s hear it for carbon. It’s about time the stigma was removed from fossil fuels. Without them, we’d mostly be dead. – James Woudhuysen
There’s some serious planning and risk management the Government needs to be doing right now.
It sounds like they are doing it.
I think the Finance Minister Willis is doing a good job, striking a balance between revealing the kind of plans that reassure and the kind of plans that induce panic. – Liam Dann
But more broadly, I am concerned about the risk that Kiwis catastrophise our way into a self-fulfilling downturn.
Obviously, I can’t be 100% certain that everything will be all right in the end.
But what I can say is that overly pessimistic forecasts were part of the story in the Global Financial Crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic.
They didn’t help. – Liam Dann
Talk of supply shortages and travel restrictions is emotionally triggering so soon after the pandemic.
And things may yet get worse before they get better.
But if we take a breath, step back and look at the scale of problems we really face, I think we’ll be okay.
We might even find that, after the Covid experience, we are stronger and more resilient than we realise. – Liam Dann
Every farmer knows that if your cows are happy and healthy, they’re more productive. So you’ve really got to work with the animal. – Craig Piggott
Agriculture’s been underserved by technology for a long time, so there’s a lot of opportunity there. – Craig Piggott
When you grow up on a farm you’re taught the value of hard work and grit, and those are definitely the core traits of our culture. – Craig Piggott
You might not know half the things you need to know, but you’ll learn that. Be bold, do hard things, be ambitious. That’s what Rocket Lab taught me, and I hope we can teach people at Halter that.
It’s obviously intimidating and scary, but I think if you’re willing to work hard and if you’re determined, then you’ll always find a way. – Craig Piggott
The proliferation of Sharia courts is an affront to equality before the law. It is the embodiment of two-tier justice. As ever, it is women who suffer the most from the indifference of our politically correct rulers. – Stephen Sydney
New Zealand’s policy settings should, according to the OECD, produce GDP per capita 20 per cent above the OECD average. The actual figure is more than 20 per cent below it, a puzzle economists have taken to calling the productivity paradox. When the Reserve Bank raised interest rates to kill post-pandemic inflation, the economy buckled because there was no underlying productive strength to absorb the hit.
New Zealand generates over 80 per cent of its electricity from renewables, yet the prime minister had to declare an “electricity crisis” in 2024 when a dry winter collided with gas shortages.
Why has none of this been fixed? Every politician in Wellington knows the diagnosis. The Productivity Commission, the OECD, the IMF and the think tank I lead have all published it, repeatedly. – Oliver Hartwich
A prime minister who attempts bold reform and fails pays the price at the next election, or sooner. One who changes nothing can govern for a decade and retire popular. Few voters lose sleep over a widening productivity gap. – Oliver Hartwich
The public service expanded by 30 per cent under Ardern, but nobody would seriously claim it became more effective. A more politicised bureaucracy proved no better at delivering basic services and remained remarkably skilled at diluting ministerial ambitions until they were unrecognisable. – Oliver Hartwich
The 1984 reformers had the political luxury of catastrophe. Their successors have had three decades of muddling through, and New Zealand’s long slide down the OECD rankings, briefly interrupted by the reforms of the 1980s, has resumed. – Oliver Hartwich
The Strait of Hormuz may yet do what three decades of reports and recommendations could not. If the crisis drags on and oil stays above a hundred dollars a barrel, the damage to both countries could be severe enough to break through the comfortable inertia that has defined them for a generation. Catastrophe, after all, is the one thing that has historically made reform possible.
If only there were a less painful way to get there. – Oliver Hartwich
Diversity is our strength.’ One hears this, or myriad variants of the same idea, unrelentingly. Certainly I work in an Australian university where the extent of higher-ups pushing this notion does indeed qualify as unrelenting, even matching totalitarian state levels of propaganda. But even outside the hallowed halls of impartial, politically balanced academia (did I write that with a straight face?) the mantra or cliché that diversity somehow delivers a stronger balance sheet or a more cohesive society or just better outcomes is pervasive in today’s democracies that have committed themselves to multiculturalism and to the various neo-Marxist versions of feminism. Sure, those spouting these ‘diversity is a panacea’ nostrums never cash out the claim. They never tell us precisely how ‘diversity’ is making society better or wealthier or more unified. We are all just supposed to take it on faith, as it were. We’re just to believe the bureaucratic, political and various professional bodies’ elites who push this line, and believe it simply because they are the ones telling us it’s so.
But you and I both know there isn’t a lot of evidence to support this cliché. Worse, if you’re like me you’re thinking that these are the same elites who massively failed us by imposing thuggish, illiberal lockdowns that weaponised the police, closed schools, infringed all sorts of free speech criticisms and also transferred huge wealth from poor to rich and from young to old (think asset inflation after steroidal money printing and unchecked government spending). You’re remembering these are the same elites who likewise failed us by not being willing to stand up to a transgender lunacy lobby that makes those with IQs over 130 unable to say what a woman is. The same elites, too, who failed us by abandoning all scepticism and critical thinking around our changing weather, willingly impoverishing us in the patent untruth that renewables are cheaper all-up. Like me you’re wondering what the odds are that these same people are likely to be right about anything. Hint: Not bloody high. And certainly not very high that they are right about some motherhood-type slogan meant to silence debate about large-scale immigration and about their efforts to take merit out of any and all hiring and ‘who gets into university’ decisions. This looks a lot like one of those Mark Twain situations of being quietly coerced to ‘believe what you know ain’t so’. – James Allan
It gets worse because the whole ‘diversity’ (often thrown in with ‘equity’ and ‘inclusion’) edifice is chock full of contradictions. We are sold the idea that proponents of diversity welcome everyone into their fold. It matters not what you bring to the table. But if you doubt the worth of diversity itself? You are out. Just look at the huge push for ‘diversity, equity and inclusion’ in universities. You know which people have disappeared from our universities? Conservatives. The people who are sceptical about this anti-merit, ‘equality of outcome’ worldview. They aren’t hired. Promotions are harder. The data on this are astounding. A recent report looking at the political donations and survey answers to academics’ political views reported that there was not a single Trump Republican academic working at Yale. Not one! And remember the Voice campaign here? We have some 38 law schools. There were four legal academics in the entire country who publicly opposed the Voice and myriad numbers in favour.
Diversity always and everywhere boils down to a diversity of skin pigmentation or type of reproductive organs, or other favoured inherited group characteristic. But it never, ever involves pushing for a diversity of political or worldview opinions. And if you are opposed to, say, any affirmative action type programmes for women, Aborigines, non-heterosexuals, anyone thinking he was born in the wrong body (an incoherent claim, by the way), well, you are not welcome. Full stop. And the facts in terms of who is employed and gets to the top show that to be blatantly true. – James Allan
Diversity divas are divisive. They shun and exclude non-believers in the name of the insipid faith they are proselytising. Deep down they don’t believe in merit (save, ironically, their own because those imposing implicit quotas all, remarkably, believe that they themselves got their on merit). This whole diversity (and equity and inclusion) mantra is a disaster. – James Allan
Governments and law can protect and promote freedom. Or they can curtail freedom. Choices must be made. They ought to be made in a principled way based on an understanding of the individual human’s need for freedom. – Gary Judd
The New Zealand media have reacted to the allegations involving Chris Hipkins as though they are confronting an entirely new ethical dilemma. As if the situation is a sudden, unprecedented intrusion into the private lives of politicians, driven by the unruly forces of social media. News platforms have lined up to solemnly declare that they will not publish “unsubstantiated” claims, positioning themselves as the last line of defence against rumour, gossip, and digital mob justice. Cool story, but complete nonsense.
The idea that this represents some kind of novel departure from past practice is both ahistorical and deeply hypocritical. Forever, journalists in this country and elsewhere, have made editorial judgments about when private conduct becomes a matter of public interest and those judgments have not always erred on the side of caution. Quite the opposite, in fact. Allegations, insinuations, and personal details have frequently been aired, amplified, and litigated in the court of public opinion long before anything resembling “substantiation” was established. – Ani O’Brien
My argument is not that the media shouldn’t have published these stories. I have opinions about how they went about it in some cases, but I fundamentally believe that politics is somewhere between a battlefield and a jungle. A battle in the jungle? Those brave souls who sign up to join the fray do so knowing that they are exposing themselves to an immense amount of scrutiny.
It is quite paradoxical that a profession which requires a decent degree of ruthlessness, hunger for power, and frankly psychopathy, also holds its members to high standards of behaviour and character that are inevitably not met. The character, judgment, and behaviour of those in power are legitimate matters of scrutiny. Especially if their behaviour and character do not match the persona they are portraying to the public. Many a pious and pure politician has been taken down over an affair, a dalliance, a dabble, simply because the public cannot stomach the hypocrisy of it. – Ani O’Brien
What is most odd about the media’s behaviour this week is not that they have at times crossed into the personal. It’s that they are pretending that they never have before. There have been far far more stories published this week in which they tut at social media and interrogate those they have decided have agendas than any stories on whether the allegations have any truth to them. It is easier to lift unsubstantiatedconspiracies off X than to leave one’s desk to do some journalism.
They have convinced themselves that they have always exercised restraint and social media has killed a golden age where journalists politely averted their eyes from anything not fully proven and neatly packaged.
The Golden Age did not exist. – Ani O’Brien
Intrusion into politicians’ private lives did not begin with Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, or Substack. Gossip, scandal, and intrigue are not innovations of the digital age. Or the industrial age. Nor a product of the invention of the printing press. They are features and bugs of political journalism as it has long been practiced. I highly suspect that the rudimentary scratchings on cave walls also contained an element of social drama.
Furthermore, the media seem to have memory-holed their own trawling of social media and dredging up of old posts and comments in order to land political hits. If we look at just the previous election in 2023, several candidates were taken out by media hits leveraging previous social media content. – Ani O’Brien
Media used social media to hunt down ‘thought criminals’ and candidates who had opinions different from what they considered acceptable. If it is deplorable for people to share and discuss a post made by the ex-wife of the leader of the opposition, then what does that make rummaging around in the comment sections looking for mud to sling?
So what is the problem? Why are the media so keen to charge social media with the crime of poisoning the hitherto good name of journalism?
In my opinion, the problem lies not in that social media created the behaviours, but in the fact that it has democratised them. It has broken the media’s monopoly on what gets aired and when. Stories that would once have been filtered, shaped, or strategically released through traditional outlets can now surface instantly, publicly, and beyond the control of editors and producers. Media are in effect not identifying a new phenomenon, but reacting to a loss of control over an old one. They never consistently applied the standards they now invoke, but they were once the sole arbiters of when those standards could be bent. Not so in 2026. – Ani O’Brien
It has been fascinating to observe the media’s treatment of allegations against Labour leader Chris Hipkins by his ex-wife.
The first thing to note was the uniformity of the coverage. It was as if the political editors of the mainstream news outlets hurriedly got their heads together when the news broke yesterday and decided on a common approach.
The stories were all brief and couched in “nothing to see here, folks” language. They all made the same points: that the claims were “unsubstantiated” and that no one was accusing Hipkins of doing anything unlawful. – Karl du Fresne
Labour’s media team couldn’t have asked for a more obliging response. It has been a masterclass in damage control, and for all we know the Labour PR apparatchiks didn’t have to do a thing. –
The tone of the media coverage was summed up by a headline on the RNZ website: “Chris Hipkins’ ex-wife makes series of unsubstantiated claims about him”. It accompanied a relatively brief story by RNZ’s deputy political editor Craig McCulloch.
It was a very peculiar headline in which the key word was “unsubstantiated”. It’s a word I don’t think I’ve seen before in hundreds of stories reporting accusations against politicians.
It neatly shifted the focus from the claims themselves to the fact that they were “unsubstantiated”. This could have been read as meaning they had no basis in fact (which is in itself unsubstantiated), or at the very least that they lacked credibility.
But “claims” are, by their very nature, unsubstantiated, and the media are not in the habit of inserting this loaded word in stories about allegations relating to politicians. – Craig McCulloch
The claims against Hipkins presented the media with a crucial test. Public trust in journalists, as measured by opinion polls, has never been lower. That low level of trust is at least partially attributable to the public perception that journalists overwhelmingly lean left and that they give politicians of the left a free pass.
This perception was cemented during Jacinda Ardern’s prime ministership, when Beehive press conferences were an exercise in sycophancy and voices of dissent against the government were marginalised, ignored and shunned as pariahs. Bizarrely, National in opposition was subjected to harsher scrutiny – some of it merciless – than the party that was in power.
The government has since changed, and with it the tone of political reportage. Journalists and broadcasters who were obsequious toward the former government are notable for having magically rediscovered their killer instincts. Government politicians and policies are subjected to a level of aggressive scrutiny that was markedly absent during the Ardern years.
The disclosures by Hipkins’ ex-wife gave the media a chance to redeem themselves – to restore public faith in the willingness of political journalists to apply the blowtorch to the left as well as the right. And they blew it. – Craig McCulloch
There is a crucial matter of public interest here, and I don’t mean mere idle curiosity about the private lives of party leaders.
The accusations against Hipkins go to the heart of his character. New Zealanders are entitled to know what sort of man is putting himself forward to lead the country.
The claims against him may be false or unfair, but in other comparable countries – Australia, Britain and the US – you can be sure they would have been all over the front page. The public would have been told what he was accused of, Hipkins would have been given ample opportunity to defend himself and in due course the court of public opinion would have reached a verdict.
But no, not in New Zealand. Here the media try to extinguish the story as a non-event and expect the public to accept soothing assurances by a leading female Labour MP, Barbara Edmonds, that “marriage break ups are hard”, the implication being that Jade Paul has lashed out in anger because she’s hurting. – Craig McCulloch
I don’t know whether Jade Paul’s claims are true, although to me they have the ring of truth. They don’t strike me as the sort of stories someone would make up. But the bottom line is that the public are entitled to know what she has alleged, and it’s the media’s duty to tell them. – Craig McCulloch
Morally it was entirely justifiable to attack the Islamic Republic of Iran. Many will disagree honourably because of concern that the international order, represented by sovereign states with recognised borders respecting each others territorial integrity, is fundamental to international peace and security. They believe that this order protects peace and supports negotiation and diplomacy as the path to dispute resolution. However, it is a defensible position that the Islamic Republic of Iran (distinct from Iran the nation) is not deserving of that protection or recognition, because it does not afford that to some other sovereign states.
It is a regime that has spent its entire history calling for death to the USA and Israel, and used terrorist proxies in Lebanon, Israel and Yemen to spread its evil poisonous misanthropic ideology of ultra-conservative Islamist theocracy. – Liberty Scott
Whether or not it was tactically correct for the US and Israel to take on Iran only history will tell. As much as those against the war will be wanting Trump to lose, to embarrass him, this is a very narrow and suicidal position. The very last thing anyone who supports liberal democracy, rule of law, individual freedom, human rights and civilisation should want is for the Islamic Republic of Iran to defeat the US, Israel and by proxy, the Gulf states as well.
Overthrowing the regime would be a success, weakening it so it fails due to domestic pressure (including from the Kurdish north) would be a partial success, but emboldening it even if its ability to project abroad is significantly weakened, would be seen as a victory for the regime, and a victory for its proxies.
For it would embolden Iran and its proxies to attack not just in the Middle East, but beyond, endangering Americans, Jews (don’t even think Iran separates Zionists from Jews). This would make us all less safe, it would embolden Islamists across the world to promote their ideology, and for a few to be willing to use force to terrify us all. – Liberty Scott
While it’s entirely possible (and probable) the Iranian regime could be replaced by one that is far from ideal (see Iraq, Libya and Syria), it is also likely it could be better. Better is not wanting to destroy other countries, better is not wanting to fund, train and arm multiple terrorist proxies across the Middle East, and across the world to “globalise the intifada” against the infidels.
Better is not expounding an ideology that is a fundamentalist misanthropic dark-ages view of humanity, as serving a supreme religious leader who sends people to their deaths for the sake of Allah, who restricts music, literature, art, apparel, human relationships and human expression, for the sake of blasphemy. Humanity, and in particular Europe and the Western world have been spending centuries unshackling themselves from the tyranny of theology.
The end of the Islamic Republic of Iran wont remove this, as there are plenty of others expounding such a view, including some it is attacking, but it will remove the most toxic, virulent and violent example embodied in a outwardly aggressive state. For it to “win”, survive and double down on militarising itself and securing weapons of mass destruction would be dangerous to us all. – Liberty Scott
A justice system that delivers different outcomes based on ancestry cannot command public confidence, and a Parliament whose laws can be rewritten by judicial preference cannot claim to be sovereign.
If the rule of law is to mean anything in this country, the creeping judicial elevation of tikanga must be dismantled. The integrity of our legal order, and the equality of every New Zealander before the law, depends on it. – Muriel Newman
Leftism
18/03/2026Rowan Atkinson on Leftism👇 pic.twitter.com/28mxYUVPED
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