Government signals Wildlife Act update following High Court Mt Messenger bypass ruling
The government is signalling changes to the Wildlife Act to prevent delays to infrastructure projects.
As previously DOC (a history of at times very strange, mixed message Conservation organisation ! ) , in a decision which I also wondered at, and disagreed with, had allowed the killing of protected Native species…
It ruled the incidental killing of protected species could only be permitted in the process of trying to protect it, for example, the culling of a diseased animal.
So laws and rules ? NAct1 laughs at them! And werent there also worries about what NAct1 would do with the new bill they were pushing quietly in the background ?
Conservation Minister Tama Potaka said improvements to the Wildlife Act would ensure infrastructure developments and important conservation work could continue while also protecting New Zealand's precious wildlife.
"The court's decision has impacts on how developers and even the Crown and NZTA can operate under the Wildlife Act. There's significant concern particularly about the impacts on the economy because developers and infrastructure providers could now be taken to court if their projects kill any protected wildlife."
Fortunately our NZ Environment has Guardians. ELI is one…
Aaron Packard, spokesperson for the Environmental Lawyers Initiative, which sought the judicial review, said it was alarming that the government's reaction to the court decision was to simply change the law.
"We are very concerned that this is the reaction to a High Court case. We've seen this a couple of times now. The government immediately reacts by saying they'll just change the law.
"And that's concerning when the law has been misunderstood in the first place. We shouldn't be rushing to change the law."
NAct1's Potaki. Its not too hard to see where is main concern is..
"While developers are absolutely expected to make the best possible effort to protect our precious wildlife when getting on with their mahi, they should have confidence they won't be prosecuted if their projects incidentally kill protected wildlife despite having previous authorisation and complying with the conditions set."
ELI's Packard…
"The minister's made the announcement but as yet there's not any detail about what the exact changes are, so it's hard to comment or respond fully until there is more detail."
He said what was more important was that DOC was following up with all the projects it had given section 53 Wildlife Acts authorities incorrectly.
"That really is the work the department should be doing at the moment."
A local council wants/is going to discharge 12,000 cubic metres of treated shit water into a pristine river.
Wastewater to be discharged into the Shotover River from today
As its a bird strike emergency? More on that later..
The council is enacting emergency powers under the Resource Management Act to pump at least 12,000 cubic metres of treated effluent into the river per day, after concerns about bird strike at the nearby airport.
Problems with the water disposal area had caused ponding and an increase in the number of waterfowl flocking to the habitat.
"The use of emergency powers has been confirmed following notification by QAC [Queenstown Airport] of increased waterfowl activity around the ponded field which poses an elevated risk to aircraft operations in the area (including being close to/under the main flight path)," QLDC said in a statement.
QLDC…trust us. (and where have I heard similar before?)
QLDC said the effluent would be highly treated and it was confident water quality would not be impacted.
It said the Shotover and Kawarau Rivers were both safe for swimming and other recreational activities.
Queenstown has had protests and many are angry about QLDC..
Queenstown Lakes Community Action spokesperson Nikki Macfarlane
"It's hugely used for recreational purposes, it's used for fishing, it's a really significant ecological zone and that's out primary concern that the river itself will be damaged or have potential problems because of that," she said.
"Once the effluent moves into the convergence between the Shotover River and the Kawarau River it moves downstream and there are communities within that area that actually get their drinking water from that river. This is a huge issue for the entire community."
Discharge into the Shotover is what occured before QLDC got told that wasn’t on by Ngai Tahu and ORC, so built a cheap disposal field that never had a hope of working. Now everyone is ducking for cover. I’d like to see the design calcs and soakage tests, if they were even done. Suspect the whole thing relys on some heroic assumptions.
Unfortunately QLDC haven’t got much choice other than put it in the Shotover. They did have a choice in how they went about it and chose the cute fuck you option which will come back and bite.
Nicky Gladding should have zipped it and watched it blow up in the Mayor’s face, now they are talking about her sins rather than the miss-management of the whole debacle
On this, there will be blood shit aplenty to come….Mountain Scene ? Not much. ODT? Similar.
I follow the Crux Investigative links.
Re Nicky Gladding? I cant vouch for her thought process….but as with many whistle blowers, I'd say was for the Greater Good. Which I'm picking was for the River, Environment and People.
Special QLDC meeting tomorrow to maybe crucify her. It's public so expecting an almighty shit fight. People here and down river in Cromwell and Alex are not happy.
Peter Newport and the Crux team are doing some good stuff here and in Central, a much more positive relationship with CODC though, we've got issues.
Nicky’s intentions are in the right place, she’s got a strong public interest defence here and a thick hide. Also got most of the town on her side. But still gave Lewers and co a distraction to exploit.
The long term fix for the Whakatipu wastewater disposal will be expensive, there's not much suitable land in the basin, and what there is has development potential, which the owners aren't going to give up without compensation. And it will take 5 – 10 years to secure the land, engineer and build it. So we're going to be putting our treated to some degree shit in the river for some time.
Graeme, thanks muchly for your Local Insight and Input. Gotta say I am dismayed at the situation…..21st Century and still sending shit down rivers.
The (by far) richest town shitting on its poorer cousins down river….
Where was the Future Thinking? Clean and Green? I wonder (if nothing else) what the tourists will think ?
Re Peter Newport and Crux, the exposing of local council QLDC and its dirty dealings, has been staggering. Local Nat MP Joseph Mooney, if not supportive, is certainly not protesting !
Anyway, thanks for being interested and similarly concerned.
Councillor who leaked information claims Queenstown council failing to follow due processes
This isn't the first wastewater fuckup in Whakatipu. Arrowtown had some oxidation ponds built in 70's that never worked, they'd just start to work in March, then winter cold would shut them down, just start working again in December and get shock loaded over the holidays and so on. Got so bad ORC put an enforcement order on and Arrowtown's shit got trucked to Shotover ponds, had a continual convoy of shit trucks from all over SI for 6 months until a pipeline was built to Shotover.
Wide boy consultants and contractors did the deed on the very small, but loaded Arrowtown Borough Council and sold them a scheme that wasn't going to do the job. QLDC had to "upgrade" the Awtn – Shotover pipeline after a couple of year too, due to design deficiencies.
Then there's the Arthur's Point and Sunshine Bay package plants that didn't work, Arthur's Point discharging enhanced sewage (what was coming out was worse than what went in) to Shotover directly opposite Shotover Jet, that got piped over the hill to Qtn vary smartly.
And in mid 80's a grader took the lid off a sewer manhole next to the main water pumping station at One Mile. Sewer blocked, manhole overflowed and several thousand people got the shits or worse, no one died but was very close.
All the result of very small councils, under resourced, overtaken by development and engaging consultants on job by job basis. The district has never had an in house engineering department that has managed to establish control, or even knowledge of what they have. It's improving but has a very long way to go. Fortunately everything is fairly new, apart from around the CBD where any work under ground is guaranteed to find unexpected services and lead to cost and time over runs, sometimes quite major. The new Henry St bypass or Road to Nowhere…( It's not, has actually transformed traffic flows in CBD and revitalised Gorge Road) was an ongoing example.
Aye Graeme, thats some local history knowledge there ! I do recall some similar of that when I was working around Qtown/Arrowtown in the early/mid 90's. QLDC went to private contractors…supposedly to save money? Some ex Managers became the private contractors….
No money saved.
Anyway I see Niki Gladding was hung out as you warned
Queenstown councillor Niki Gladding stripped of roles after revealing confidential plan
The greatest irony in this is that the Kawaru has been crystal clear all summer, and very low. Usually it's discoloured by silt going down the Shotover. This year there's been so few heavy rain events in the headwaters the rivers have been clear for months.
They were all in, hence Freeland's wannabe MAGA maple syrup Conservatives jibe, but they've since positioned themselves as the only party able to secure favourable terms for Canada.
Pretty much. And then the election was handed to the Liberals
At the English-language Liberal Party leadership debate in late February, Carney referred to Poilievre as the worst person to stand up to Donald Trump, because Poilievre “worships” him.
This was not the first time Pierre Poilievre’s ability to negotiate with Donald Trump had been questioned. Furthermore, almost 50% of Conservatives would have voted for Trump in the 2024 U.S. presidential election if they could have.
The most controversial statement of the federal election so far was uttered before the campaign even started — not by a federal politician, but the premier of Alberta.
In an interview taped on March 8 with a right-wing American media outlet, Danielle Smith said that, while there would always be disagreements, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre would be "very much in sync with … the new direction in America" and that Canada and the United States would "have a great relationship" for as long as Poilievre and Donald Trump were in office.
nice to have some good news, and it's heartening to see people shifting voting intention in response to things going way too far. Also, fuck 'em, the ones who were ready to jump to fascism.
What annoys me about the Golriz Ghahraman story is the way the media chooses to be so selective about what it reports. The latest twist is a good example:
We all know Golriz was stalked and threatened online and probably in person as well. We know the reason why. She is Muslim. The threats became so serious she had to be protected 24/7. Add to that her terrifying experiences in Iran as a child, it is no wonder she is dealing with mental health problems now.
If I was in her place, I would be paranoid about everything I did. That would include my supermarket shopping. I would have acquired special zip up bags or something similar, so no-one could pry into my trolley and conjure up some negative story about me. When I reached the check-out I would tip them out on the counter. I suspect that is what she was doing.
Has anyone bothered to ask her about it? You bet they haven't. Or if she has told them they have conveniently forgotten to mention it.
RNZ headline news at noon featured this situation. I see Chloe outing herself on the Herald as a conspiracist: “The central conspiracy here is that the use of such a word on a private account by an MP, before they were an MP, is inherently suspicious,” she said. She could probably do with some media training on the topic to help her explain who's involved in this conspiracy – with clarity.
I see Chloe outing herself on the Herald as a conspiracist: “The central conspiracy here is that the use of such a word on a private account by an MP, before they were an MP, is inherently suspicious,” she said. She could probably do with some media training on the topic to help her explain who's involved in this conspiracy – with clarity.
You're not going to get to grips with the story from the midday news. The conspiracy is that Doyle is a paedophile. It was plain to see the conspiracy being manufactured and amplified over the past 3 days. MSM are limited on what they can say, because of libel, but also because of boundaries around the child and just being decent reporters.
CS wasn't being a conspiracist, she just named what we all could easily see if we looked.
Well, I’d like to think that I’m very liberal when it comes to sex and extremely excessive and enthusiastic sexual activity, as long as it’s among actively consenting adults, and not done in the sight of the public.
But, for goodness sakes, an MP referring to their own, or another adults anus as a boy pussy, is a little suspect. Doing it while holding a child, is not in any way a good look. The man is a grown up, this at the best is juvenile immature behaviour.
Weka, I can assure you that if I or one of my work colleagues used that term in the workplace, we would have a discussion about it with management and that’s just for starters. The term bussy, or boy pussy is a highly sexualised term that should not be used in the workplace, it’s usually used in relation to young men/teenage boys.
It’s certainly inappropriate for an adult to use in conjunction with a boy. Even worse when the adult is an MP.
he didn't use it in a workplace (and it was posted before he became an MP). It was his personal account, IG I think, which isn't even shareable, so the people seeing it in their feeds were going to be people that followed him ie friends and relatives, and I assume comfortable with gay bloke culture.
I agree it's inappropriate to use it on SM with a child. I've just seen another one this morning that is problematic.
All those posts should have been removed or hidden when he was nominated for selection. It's his and the Greens' naivety, but also their political ideology that means they probably didn't understand just where this was going (to me it was entirely predictable, because I've been in the conversations about sex positivity and boundaries that they've been blocking).
My question was around your use of the word suspect. What do we suspect here? I see nothing to suggest he is a paedophile. I do think his queer politics mean his ideas about child safeguarding are too loose. Unfortunately because of the rapid RW attack, it will be difficult to have a constructive conversation about that and I expect the Greens will ignore the real issues.
I understand that there is a lot of suggestive sexual slang especially among younger people, irrespective of gender or sexuality. We would have had our own decades ago, when we were young, but we weren’t MP’s, That’s the issue,
An MP using a highly sexualised term in conjunction with young boys, is definitely not a good look. This sort of sloppy indifference to sexual abuse of children is handing ammunition to those who want to attack the political parties on the left, and unfortunately it’s the rainbow community that takes the heat.
yep. And while I understand why the Greens can’t put their hand up and say mea culpa, I do hope they do so internally in the party and sort this out once and for all.
It's not, in itself – in relation to two (or more) consenting adults. However, using a sexualized profile name, is illustrative of severe lack of boundaries when the account contains images of an adult and a child.
Regardless of whether the images and the account date from pre-MP days, all candidate selection committees know that no social media is truly private – and the name of the account should have triggered an investigation, and damage-limitation plans if the candidacy continued.
I understand that until all of this blew up, this account was linked to his profile on the GP website (i.e. his official profile Insta page was both following and being followed by his Bussy account). So not that private.
Agree on both counts, inappropriate no matter who, and the Greens dropping the ball again (imo because they also chose queer culture over feminism, feminists would have warned them on perception of child safeguarding grounds, and thus they have a blind spot).
I'm not sure what Swarbrick means by a private account. Before he was an MP I assume the posts were public. But it is possible they weren't and one of his followers took screenshots. It's the time period between him putting his hand up to be an MP and when he became one that's the party's problem, I had really hoped they would have sorted their shit out by now. Someone on reddit said they've changed their selection process.
the far right were in an absolute feeding frenzy over this for the past 3 days. One of the worst I've seen in a long time. People assuming paedophilia, but it was all politicised and mixed up with them freaking out over gay men's sex. I feel for the child, who doesn't deserve this in anyway. Doyle doesn't either, and he also should have removed the images as he put his hand up for selection. The Greens are naive on this and they really need to get up to speed. Good to see the Herald taking an evenhanded approach.
He has form. After Nicky Hagar's book "Dirty Politics", you would think the creep and his mates wouldn't try it on again, but leopards don't change their spots.
The Greens should have known Slater and Co were digging for dirt on them and taken appropriate action. They are now, but the damage has been done.
Dirty Politics was over a decade ago (seems incredible, I know). There's a whole new voting generation grown up since then who won't fully understand or be aware of just what's going on.
The frenzy (death threats etc) is vile and the enablers should be called out. We know what they're doing (including the deputy PM, alas), the media know, and nobody should pretend there's any good faith in this fake "concern".
Given that the frenzy is sadly predictable, the Greens should have done the most basic preparation job, as with all candidates. Same old story (not just the Greens, previously other parties have failed on this too). Social media is there to be trawled by opponents and will inevitably emerge. Get out in front of it. It is amazing how often parties fail to do this.
But again, a failure to anticipate the vile is nowhere near as bad as being vile. Unfortunately an MP has a name and face, the trolls do not.
The person that kicked it off on Friday has a well known face and name. But her career is already as trashed as its going to be, so.
I've seen another image today that makes me think he shouldn't hold portfolios related to children. Not because I think he's a paedophile, but because he doesn't have good boundaries or sense of what's appropriate and that's just wrong for that job.
For the record, Ghahraman is not Muslim – she's an atheist.
So I’m pretty used to being accused of being Muslim like that’s a crime (for the record I’m atheist and my family left Iran because of what that regime pretended was sharia being imposed on us) but this vileness is exactly what makes mass murder of Muslim possible. This hate, this fake news is what we need to stop to make sure everyone in NZ is safe!
I'm inclined to agree with the prof that there's something rather suspect in the way that our cops have been doing their China tourism extravaganzas:
Police have a crucial role in the government’s cross-public sector counter-foreign-interference programme, which started work in early 2019. Notably, 2019 is the first year that a group of New Zealand police were invited on a subsidised trip to China. The police should know what an influence operation looks like and understand foreign interference. Yet in 2019, they allowed 35 of their staff to go on a political tourism trip to China, with another scheduled for 2020, which was only cancelled due to Covid border restrictions. The visits were deliberately organised outside police channels to avoid reporting requirements.
In 2024, the police again allowed 34 staff to go on a political tourism trip to China, organised “by popular demand.” All the trips were advertised by a senior police officer as cultural competency trips, making them clearly work-related. The trips were heavily discounted compared with similar trips to China. This means they are a disguised form of gift and should be reported. So far, the police have only reported receiving “fridge magnets” from the 2024 trip.
I commend the communists for their sagacity in figuring out that fridge magnets are the key strategy to use to suborn consumerist NZ cops, yet there's a wider social trend away from consumerism due to more people being unable to afford it, due to lack of trickle-down. The regime ought to learn from this and adapt.
The trips were run by China’s government agency for political tourism, the China Travel Service, which ever since the Mao era, has been the CCP government’s official agency for political tourism aimed at developing asset relationships with foreign elites. Xi Jinping has stepped up political tourism efforts. The 2024 trip featured a meeting with a senior Chinese Community Party (CCP) official in charge of political tourism. https://newsroom.co.nz/2025/03/31/inquiry-needed-after-shocking-naivety-by-nz-police-over-china/
Hands across the water between the extreme left and the extreme right clearly appeals to many as the best way to do geopolitics. Luxon would argue that his govt ain't extreme, that political tourism began here under Ardern, and it's totally harmless…
In Gaza, human shields are used by Israeli soldiers at least six times a day.
I served in Gaza for nine months, and first came across these procedures, called "mosquito protocol" in December 2023. It was only two months into the ground offensive, long before there was a shortage of dogs from the IDF's canine unit, Oketz, who were used for this purpose. This became the insane, unofficial excuse for this insane, unofficial procedure. I didn't realize then how ubiquitous using human shields, whom we referred to as a "shawish," would become.
Today, almost every platoon keeps a "shawish," and no infantry force enters a house before a "shawish" clears it. This means there are four "shawishes" in a company, twelve in a battalion, and at least 36 in a brigade. We operate a sub-army of slaves.
You must be kidding Ad. Here is Labour's response from Stuff today:
Labour criticises Government's new ferry deal
The Labour Party says New Zealand will get smaller ferries as a result of the Government's new deal, with no contract or costs forthcoming.
They said the Government has "torpedoed" the original deal, which would have delivered new rail enabled ferries in 2026.
Labour transport spokesperson Tangi Utikere said the new deal comes with additional costs.
“Ultimately this deal will include the ongoing costs associated with the cancellation of iRex, which continue to rise. Additional costs of $1.16 billion could have been avoided if Nicola Willis hadn’t botched the deal – including cancellation of the original deal and ongoing maintenance of the current ferries," he said.
“Due in 2029, all we know is that the ferries are smaller than those Winston Peters was involved with negotiating in the first place. That must have been a hard pill to swallow for the Minister for Rail.
“Now we are shopping for smaller ferries, and a whole lot of cash has been sunk at the bottom of the Cook Strait. That’s all down to the Minister of Finance.
“All Winston Peters has announced today is that New Zealanders will be waiting another three years for ferries and still have no idea how much they’re going to cost," Utikere said.
Exactly gsays….and from what Winnie said today Picton is going to need plenty of wharf work for the ferries he announced today.
The country is probably going to end up with 2 smaller ferries, 3 years later with overall costs that will be more than Labour's ferry plan, when cancellation costs are included.
(Though nobody has any idea what Winston's ferry plan will cost or who will build the ferries. Some announcement.)
It was the oversize ferries which were going to require all of the associated port costs.
Nope. That is just dumb spin if you look at the actualities about what was proposed and why. Most of the cost was for hardening the ports against the big earthquakes that will hit the Cook Strait ports at some point. The last one was in 1855, at 8.2 – when there wasn’t significiant port infrastructure, nor a need to keep the transport links running.
The 2016 was 7.8, complex but not massive compared to the potential quakes that could affect that area. But the effect was scattered over pressure releases in a lot of faults lines – most of which weren’t known about until the quake identified them.
It was a long way from Picton or Wellington ports, but the cluster of 6.x aftershocks did significiant damage. What it highlighted was that 7.x effects at the ports (ie from an expected and overdue remote 8.2 earthquake) were likely to really damage the existing port infrastructure.
If there is 8.x or above in the Hikurangi subduction zone or the northern Alpine faults, then the shocks are likely to do even more damage in the complex fault systems near the Cook Strait. Both are likely to happen at similar distances to the Kaikoura epicentre.
Remember that earthquakes scales are logarithmic. Helpful AI did the maths.
The energy released by the 7.8 magnitude earthquake is approximately 0.251 times the energy released by the 8.2 magnitude earthquake.
So roughly 4 times the energy release triggering faults down a heavily faulted zone. Queue some 7.x aftershocks.
In the case of a strait port getting badly damaged, it’d effectively cut the economic ties between the North and South Islands for non-containerised shipping or airfreight. No cars, no trains, no trucks. Probably for several years.
Even in in the 2016 earthquake with remote epicentre, the effects on from the primary and secondary quakes were harmful. Wellington Port did a PR release in 2017 and Picton took more damage that was expected. Both were able to get ferries running rapidly, but it wasn’t too far off serious damage level.
The projected work on the ports wasn’t so much for the size of the new ferries. It was as a results of saying that if we have to rebuild for a long term ferry system, then build it for the next century with the knowledge of the kind of damage that a probable earthquake of 8.2 magnitude within 200-300kms could do to port on the Cook strait.
Now of course that work won’t be done on either side. The central transport funding got cut. The responsibility got pushed to Wellington and Marlborough ratepayers and whatever the money may be left over after planning for some outstandingly useless and blindingly uneconomic motorways. But hey, they’re mostly in politically useful seats for National and NZ First…..
Bugger the economy if we have a probable major earthquake. There isn’t any money left in the EQC funds after a moderate set of earthquakes in Christchurch 15 years ago.
Getting a major internal trade route running for basics like disaster relief and repair directly after a serious earthquake will be pretty impossible – it will take years. But hey, National/Act/NZ First clearly don’t want to plan for anticipated events.
Now talking about anticipated events – who was silly enough to think that we wouldn’t have another power crisis this year? After all climatic weather patterns never tend to repeat for several years.
/sarc
All of which is a reason to promote the rebuilding of the wharf infrastructure as an infrastructure project, not as a ferry replacement one.
And, due to the size of the original ferries, without the wharf infrastructure, they couldn't operate in NZ.
All of which is a reason to promote the rebuilding of the wharf infrastructure as an infrastructure project, not as a ferry replacement one.
I agree. It was a factor about when the ports got hardened, not that it didn't have to be done. The resizing of the ports to accommodate the larger ships just meant that they could have done the hardening at the same time.
If you look at the reports about the costs ballooning on the port, it wasn't the size of the ships that made it balloon. It was earthquake hardening of the port structure and the approaches.
Now that isn't happening. It still has to be done, ideally before the next big earthquake. The 2016 Kaikoura earthquake was 7.8 at the epicentre. Most of the damage at the ports and port cities came from the swarm of 6.x aftershocks it triggered around the strait.
Picton port still needs upgrades to handle the extended length of the new ferries. But as far as I can see nothing has been added to harden the port infrastructure.
So when exactly are those ports, a crucial part of our economic infrastructure, going to get hardened against probable earthquake damage? After the next big one?
Like the 8.2 in 1855. On average, you can expect ones like that at least once a century with the geology surrounding teh cook strait.
So as far as I can see, National are content to have had those ports and the ferries that they service out of commission for months or years because they're too lazy to pay the insurance up front?
Thanks for that detailed analysis lprent. I wasn't aware of many of those facts.
It means that the COC's role in this whole affair is even more heinous than I thought. My guess is the voting public has little knowledge of those facts.
The question now is how can the Left stop this government spinning it at the election. Someone from the shadow cabinet who is senior and eloquent (Edmonds, Woods or McAnulty?) needs to be put in charge of the response on the ferry issue to hammer home in terms that the electorate will understand that this is a major cockup.
Don't forget, despite how it's being hyped up, Winston's comparing a project that included a new Wellington wharf vs one with a revamped wharf.
Saying the Wellington wharf has some life left in it may be true but it is still further in it's economic life and will need replacing sooner than a new one.
Don't worry CentrePort and Port of Marlborough are going to get wrinsed through this. Their facilities are so overdue as per LPrent above.
Such a good problem to have: forcing 2 ports to upgrade their infrastructure, and they've already had a practise run at the design of the upgrade in 2018-9-2023.Also offloading that upgrade off Kiwirail and onto local government is frankly just good politics.
Also offloading that upgrade off Kiwirail and onto local government is frankly just good politics.
Yeah right – politically inspired. Completely stupid. That just means the hardening of a major National transport link won't get done.
Wellington has a relatively small rate payer base and larger immediate problems with aged infrastructure – especially the 3 waters.
It took Auckland over well over 30 years to fix their aged inner city water infrastructure – the Central Interceptor is the last major piece when it opens next year (we hope). They still have work to do on the floodwaters when with our increasing probability of getting storms like Jan 2023 (I still miss my drowned car).
That was with a much larger financial base and easier engineering than Wellington has.
As for Marlborough? They can't pay for it. Just look at the populations.
Wellington region population 550,600 (June 2024).
Marlborough region population 52,300 (June 2024)[
The responsibility for those ports is strategic. It should lie with the Ministry of Transport and NZTA.
Labour's Robertson hadn't agreed to the port rebuild costs. But Kiwirail had signed up the constructor to do it through what is called tie IPAA or Interim Project Alliance Agreement, which is where you are preparing all the costs of the big items, sometimes ordering the big items with really long lead-in times that often need to be imported, and where the methodology to actually build it gets nutted out.
Labour could simply be more honest that they just didn't have strong governance control over Kiwirail through 2021-22.
If that reminds you of the Dunedin Hospital saga going through the Labour cabinet, it probably should.
They are much smaller targets for Labour, regrettably.
The new Crown entity for the ferries will be run by Chris McKenzie and Heather Simpson. Chris McKenzie was the main heavy bureaucratic muscle under Sir Michael Cullen and Heather Simpson was PM Helen Clark's Chief of Staff.
McKenzie was lead negotiator for buying back the entire rail system, and for the 2008 Auckland governance arrangements, and double tracking and electrification of Auckland. Simpson was the key reason there was a unified public service and political order for the 9 years of Clark-Cullen. Between them they know where the bodies are because they buried them.
This is Labour royalty. And of course they will be staying on no matter who is in government.
Winston Peters has not only delivered like the milkman when the rest of this lot can't even make lunch, he's also ensured it will never be a political failure because it can never be attacked.
McNulty or Labour's whomever will have to go find other targets.
Yep agree with you now that Hipkins has come out today saying that maybe in retospect the Mega ferries weren't a good idea, thus pulling the rug out from under his spokesperson on the issue in todays Morning Report interview on RNZ.
Surely these new ferries could be commissioned in April 2028 not some time in 2029? Three years should be enough.
Winston Peters has not only delivered like the milkman when the rest of this lot can't even make lunch, he's also ensured it will never be a political failure because it can never be attacked.
Yeah, he is a effective politician. However what he has done is to separate the ferries from the ports and isolate it so that it gets the ferry system harder to damage by political amateurs like the current National and Act ministers. Which is a good idea.
What he hasn't done is to the secure the transport link. Neither Wellington now Marlborough regions have the capacity to fund the hardening of the ports. If the ports get damaged, then what is the fallback plan?
Run freight ships from Whanganui or New Plymouth to Christchurch? I'm assuming that Napier port would get hammered if there is any major Hikurangi quake. Besides Napier looks like it is only really set up for logs these days.
But notably he has launched the deal on the last day of being Deputy PM.
I read Peters is going to be deputy PM for another two months – has that changed?
After entering into a coalition agreement with National leader Christopher Luxon, Peters serves as Luxon's deputy prime minister from 27 November 2023 to 31 May 2025; he will be succeeded by David Seymour.
SPC-Agree with all of that except I think (unfortunately) that the electric ferry issue will cloud the argument the Left needs to put forward on the ferry debacle.
the implication is that the posts weren’t public (they would have only been visible to followers). But regardless, Doyle should have removed them a long time ago and the Greens should have told him too. It was a long time between selection and becoming an MP.
Even if they were private, some of the pictures are still a problem.
When did it become private and if it was after he was a list candidate, he might have been investigated then (negative campaign research) for later action if and when he became an MP.
Another factor, gay males outing him (possibly as part of their LGB vs LGBT+ activism), thus part of the wider anti-left/woke of the HUAC revival – kulturekampf.
The BBB term is a send up of (both) social conservatives and himself.
A biological male identifying as non binary who has a child.
I’ll leave the Oscar Wilde (whose first girlfriend married Bram Stoker) Bosie D aspect for others more literate to diary about.
Alfred was the butler in Batman – Bram wrote the novel Dracula.
The specific reference to the number of posts taken down, 52, indicated a record of the posts was made for some future purpose (it appears here to be political).
Swarbrick implied that she didn't know when the posts were removed but they would be looking at those thing in the coming days. That's more reassuring. Don't know if they will look at the content of the posts critically.
exactly. It's not like this is the first time. But also, they're naive about perception and how that harms them, which is quite remarkable given we're 8 years on from the fallout from the Turei speech. .
Including (so called) private social media accounts. Nothing is really private on the Internet. If you have anything that your party wouldn't relish seeing on the front page of the Herald – they should know about it in advance.
in the selection process, someone should have gone through his social media and checked it. Either they didn't do that check, or they did and didn't see a problem with the posts.
In that case, it's terminal political naivety – surely they can't be happy with the current stoush (and, if they think that the right aren't up to digging up every slightly questionable issue from left MPs pasts – they're beyond naive.).
Also, while they were going through the Tana saga – their team should have been going over Doyle with a fine-tooth comb to *ensure* there was nothing that could have come back to bite them. They had over 6 months…..
If they didn't see this as a problem, then they must be really, really out of touch, not only with NZ but with a significant portion of their party base. The danger of only interacting within your 'bubble'
My boss used to say – every time you make a decision – you have to think 'Am I prepared to defend this on the front page of tomorrow's newspaper' – Sometimes you have to make borderline calls – but asking that question means that you're on the front foot with the framing.
I don't see the GP have at all been on the front foot with this issue.
I think they are really out of touch. This is what happens when you suppress dissent in a party (thinking here of the GCFs who would have seen red flags around those posts). Queer culture has a core tenet of dismantling boundaries. No-one in the Greens is going to want to remove child safeguarding, but I think many won't see what the problem is here. It's not that Doyle is sexually abusing children (there's not more evidence of that than of any other MP). It's that he's got poor judgement and boundaries. They have a massive blindspot, it was the same with their involvement in the Albert Park violence.
I don't think it's terminal. I've seen one person today talking about how they recently amended their selection process to be more vigorous (presumably as a consequence of Tana). But they do seem to be stuck in a kind of naivety that stems from core kaupapa around trusting people and making relationships central. I think they need to get people from outside the party to help them sort that out.
I'm also highly confident there will be people in the party feeling very frustrated but unable to say anything, because you can't critique queer culture.
I've been following how these dynamics played out in the UK, and while I didn't know about Doyle's account, it's very predictable.
We've got the ultra conservatives yelling 'peverts' on one side, the ultra liberals yelling 'they're angels you bigots' on the other. Women in the middle who've been trying to have a meaningful conversation about child safe guarding have either been branding bigots by the liberals, or co-opted by the conservatives. It's the same with drag queen story hour. It's very difficult to have the conversation, and the Greens won't be being exposed to conversation that isn't polarised.
The tenor of Swarbrick's commentary implies that the posts have only recently (i.e. after the Peters announcement and subsequent furore) been removed.
Swarbrick said she understood why some of Doyle's posts were being removed if they were being used to spread "misinformation".
…
Asked whether it was true Doyle had removed a large number of posts, Swarbrick said it was Doyle’s response “to feeling as though their child was in immediate danger”.
I don't use IG a lot, but on SM generally, if you lock your account, your followers can see your posts, but the public can't. The only way to have avoided this would be to delete the posts before selection. Which is what should have happened, but it's still possible someone would have a copy. My guess is the right are keeping tabs on lots of accounts of anyone who might be in a position of power in the future.
they’re screenshots of his Instagram posts, and those post contained both images, text and emojis. Most likely explanation is the screenshots were indeed taken after he put his hand up to be an MP but before he became one. Something like 1.5 years?
But was clearly in existence (and surely was disclosed) when he became a candidate.
As we teach our kids nothing is private once it's released on the Internet. Once information is out there, it's out there.
The Bussy social media account (up until this week) follows and was followed by his official parliamentary Insta one – so not exactly keeping the two at arms-length.
The posts have only (apparently) been deleted once all the furore blew up. So, it seems clear that neither Doyle (as a politician) nor the GP saw any issue with them prior to this. Which makes one question their political instincts.
Not sure if this is visible without an account, but a GP member is saying here that the candidate selection committee will have much greater vetting powers. So they may have had constraints on what they could do before.
the account was locked when be became an MP and in the past few days he's been deleting posts (because his followers will still be able to see them, and he has concerns for the child)
It seems Google AI is saying that bussy comes from boy, rather than butt, and this is being weaponised by those with an anti LGBTQ+ agenda to infer some danger from queer culture and gender identity to children.
This was once done to argue against same sex couples having access to child adoption.
I've always agreed with multiculturalism, and I see the rainbow community as a natural part of the whole. I'm naturally heterosexual, so the various sagas around alternative sexuality tend to come across as mystifying sometimes – I rationalise them as examples of biodiversity and move on. Madeleine Chapman has this take on the latest:
Why anyone would get so aggro as to issue death threats against Doyle baffles me but I could rationalise that as due to mental illness I suppose.
Plunket asked Peters point blank if he thought Green MP Benjamin Doyle was promoting paedophilia because Peters had just tweeted suggesting as much after looking at three screenshots of Instagram posts from Doyle’s private, personal account.The airing of private social media activity in order to attack an MP also sets a dangerous precedent and suggests that anything is fair game if you can get your hands on it.
The public interest lies in whether a hacker made those private images public before Winston got them, huh? I await info on that technical point. He (being a lawyer) probably did not expose them to the public so they may not yet be in the public domain.
Yet she has seen them. So the media ought to clarify if those images are still private or not, lest the twilight zone capture the public imagination by default.
Really? Unless they have a crystal ball to the future, it's difficult to see how they (or, rather Reid Research who will be doing the actual polling) will be a significant improvement.
Comparing the latest Talbot Mills and Curia (two most recent polls) – there is nothing to choose between them. TM has National lower and ACT higher, Curia the other way around – and all the rest are within the margin of error. [Well, you could argue that there was a significant difference in the TPM result (2%) – but I tend to discount all TPM polling as notoriously inaccurate (none of the pollster tools measure this group well)]
ACT's plan to change workplace health and safety requirements will likely appeal to some business owners' feelings of resentment at being expected to run businesses with workers' safety as a major consideration.
As usual ACT MPs, along with their Coalition partners, ignore the advice of experts, researchers and others involved.
"But the chair of the Institute of Safety Management said the government had squandered "a golden opportunity to improve [the country's] poor health and safety performance".
Mike Cosman said the 50-70 people that died in workplace accidents each year was more than four times the rate of workplace deaths than in the UK.
He said the proposed changes would do little to address that.
"The reforms are focused instead on costs to businesses of prevention and not the much greater costs of harm.
"This seems to be looking through the wrong end of the telescope to us because the cost of our poor health and safety record is north of $4.9 billion per year to say nothing of the impact on workers and their families," Cosman said….
He said van Velden had ignored recommendations by employers, experts, unions, academics, and representatives of high risk sectors provided to the government in October….".
Brooke van Velden's intention to "create a hotline to enable reporting of overzealous road cone use" seems malicious. Thiswill most likely increase the threats and verbal abuse road workers receive, many of whom are reportedly suffering mental health problems as a consequence.
"One in four road workers is verbally abused by motorists on a daily basis, and one in three says it is taking a toll on their mental health, a survey by NZTA Waka Kotahi has found
The survey also found one in five is thinking about looking for another job because of the ongoing abuse – at a time of record road repairs when workers are badly needed.
NZTA Auckland and Northland manager Jacqui Hori-Hoult says it is a growing problem…."
Van Velden's plan seems a transparent attempt to appeal to some drivers' anger towards road workers and to create further divisions among NZers.
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Progressing a holistic strategy to unlock the potential of New Zealand’s geothermal resources, possibly in applications beyond energy generation, is at the centre of discussions with mana whenua at a hui in Rotorua today, Resources and Regional Development Minister Shane Jones says. The Coalition Government is in the early stages ...
New annual data has exposed the staggering cost of delays previously hidden in the building consent system, Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk says. “I directed Building Consent Authorities to begin providing quarterly data last year to improve transparency, following repeated complaints from tradespeople waiting far longer than the statutory ...
Increases in water charges for Auckland consumers this year will be halved under the Watercare Charter which has now been passed into law, Local Government Minister Simon Watts and Auckland Minister Simeon Brown say. The charter is part of the financial arrangement for Watercare developed last year by Auckland Council ...
There is wide public support for the Government’s work to strengthen New Zealand’s biosecurity protections, says Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard. “The Ministry for Primary Industries recently completed public consultation on proposed amendments to the Biosecurity Act and the submissions show that people understand the importance of having a strong biosecurity ...
A new independent review function will enable individuals and organisations to seek an expert independent review of specified civil aviation regulatory decisions made by, or on behalf of, the Director of Civil Aviation, Acting Transport Minister James Meager has announced today. “Today we are making it easier and more affordable ...
The Government will invest in an enhanced overnight urgent care service for the Napier community as part of our focus on ensuring access to timely, quality healthcare, Health Minister Simeon Brown has today confirmed. “I am delighted that a solution has been found to ensure Napier residents will continue to ...
Health Minister Simeon Brown and Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey attended a sod turning today to officially mark the start of construction on a new mental health facility at Hillmorton Campus. “This represents a significant step in modernising mental health services in Canterbury,” Mr Brown says. “Improving health infrastructure is ...
Finance Minister Nicola Willis has welcomed confirmation the economy has turned the corner. Stats NZ reported today that gross domestic product grew 0.7 per cent in the three months to December following falls in the June and September quarters. “We know many families and businesses are still suffering the after-effects ...
The sealing of a 12-kilometre stretch of State Highway 43 (SH43) through the Tangarakau Gorge – one of the last remaining sections of unsealed state highway in the country – has been completed this week as part of a wider programme of work aimed at improving the safety and resilience ...
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Winston Peters says relations between New Zealand and the United States are on a strong footing, as he concludes a week-long visit to New York and Washington DC today. “We came to the United States to ask the new Administration what it wants from ...
Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee has welcomed changes to international anti-money laundering standards which closely align with the Government’s reforms. “The Financial Action Taskforce (FATF) last month adopted revised standards for tackling money laundering and the financing of terrorism to allow for simplified regulatory measures for businesses, organisations and sectors ...
Associate Health Minister David Seymour says he welcomes Medsafe’s decision to approve an electronic controlled drug register for use in New Zealand pharmacies, allowing pharmacies to replace their physical paper-based register. “The register, developed by Kiwi brand Toniq Limited, is the first of its kind to be approved in New ...
The Coalition Government’s drive for regional economic growth through the $1.2 billion Regional Infrastructure Fund is on track with more than $550 million in funding so far committed to key infrastructure projects, Regional Development Minister Shane Jones says. “To date, the Regional Infrastructure Fund (RIF) has received more than 250 ...
[Comments following the bilateral meeting with United States Secretary of State, Marco Rubio; United States State Department, Washington D.C.] * We’re very pleased with our meeting with Secretary of State Marco Rubio this afternoon. * We came here to listen to the new Administration and to be clear about what ...
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Improving access to mental health and addiction support took a significant step forward today with Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey announcing that the University of Canterbury have been the first to be selected to develop the Government’s new associate psychologist training programme. “I am thrilled that the University of Canterbury ...
Health Minister Simeon Brown has today officially opened the new East Building expansion at Manukau Health Park. “This is a significant milestone and the first stage of the Grow Manukau programme, which will double the footprint of the Manukau Health Park to around 30,000m2 once complete,” Mr Brown says. “Home ...
The Government will boost anti-crime measures across central Auckland with $1.3 million of funding as a result of the Proceeds of Crime Fund, Auckland Minister Simeon Brown and Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee say. “In recent years there has been increased antisocial and criminal behaviour in our CBD. The Government ...
The Government is moving to strengthen rules for feeding food waste to pigs to protect New Zealand from exotic animal diseases like foot and mouth disease (FMD), says Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard. ‘Feeding untreated meat waste, often known as "swill", to pigs could introduce serious animal diseases like FMD and ...
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi held productive talks in New Delhi today. Fresh off announcing that New Zealand and India would commence negotiations towards a Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement, the two Prime Ministers released a joint statement detailing plans for further cooperation between the two countries across ...
Agriculture and Trade Minister Todd McClay signed a new Memorandum of Cooperation (MOC) today during the Prime Minister’s Indian Trade Mission, reinforcing New Zealand’s commitment to enhancing collaboration with India in the forestry sector. “Our relationship with India is a key priority for New Zealand, and this agreement reflects our ...
Agriculture and Trade Minister Todd McClay signed a new Memorandum of Cooperation (MOC) today during the Prime Minister’s Indian Trade Mission, reinforcing New Zealand’s commitment to enhancing collaboration with India in the horticulture sector. “Our relationship with India is a key priority for New Zealand, and this agreement reflects our ...
Attorney-General Judith Collins today announced the appointment of two new Family Court Judges. The new Judges will take up their roles in April and May and fill Family Court vacancies at the Auckland and Manukau courts. Annette Gray Ms Gray completed her law degree at Victoria University before joining Phillips ...
Health Minister Simeon Brown has today officially opened Wellington Regional Hospital’s first High Dependency Unit (HDU). “This unit will boost critical care services in the lower North Island, providing extra capacity and relieving pressure on the hospital’s Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and emergency department. “Wellington Regional Hospital has previously relied ...
Namaskar, Sat Sri Akal, kia ora and good afternoon everyone. What an honour it is to stand on this stage - to inaugurate this august Dialogue - with none other than the Honourable Narendra Modi. My good friend, thank you for so generously welcoming me to India and for our ...
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Matthew Heaslip, Senior Lecturer in Naval History, University of Portsmouth How the Shuqiao barges may be used to ferry troops ashore. X (formerly Twitter) China’s intentions when it comes to Taiwan have been at the centre of intense discussion for years. ...
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Staff at Kāinga Ora face restructuring, with a Green MP claiming another 500 jobs are set to go and staff are worried front line housing services will suffer. ...
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NAct1….changing our NZ Environment rules to suit.
As previously DOC (a history of at times very strange, mixed message Conservation organisation ! ) , in a decision which I also wondered at, and disagreed with, had allowed the killing of protected Native species…
So laws and rules ? NAct1 laughs at them! And werent there also worries about what NAct1 would do with the new bill they were pushing quietly in the background ?
Fortunately our NZ Environment has Guardians. ELI is one…
NAct1's Potaki. Its not too hard to see where is main concern is..
ELI's Packard…
Cmon, DOC..who and what..are you supposed to protect?
Good on ELI, Forest and Bird, et al…speaking and standing up for what cant !
A local council wants/is going to discharge 12,000 cubic metres of treated shit water into a pristine river.
As its a bird strike emergency? More on that later..
QLDC…trust us. (and where have I heard similar before?)
Queenstown has had protests and many are angry about QLDC..
Local Knowledge Crux..real Investigative Journalism !
Discharge into the Shotover is what occured before QLDC got told that wasn’t on by Ngai Tahu and ORC, so built a cheap disposal field that never had a hope of working. Now everyone is ducking for cover. I’d like to see the design calcs and soakage tests, if they were even done. Suspect the whole thing relys on some heroic assumptions.
Unfortunately QLDC haven’t got much choice other than put it in the Shotover. They did have a choice in how they went about it and chose the cute fuck you option which will come back and bite.
Nicky Gladding should have zipped it and watched it blow up in the Mayor’s face, now they are talking about her sins rather than the miss-management of the whole debacle
On this, there will be
bloodshit aplenty to come….Mountain Scene ? Not much. ODT? Similar.I follow the Crux Investigative links.
Re Nicky Gladding? I cant vouch for her thought process….but as with many whistle blowers, I'd say was for the Greater Good. Which I'm picking was for the River, Environment and People.
Special QLDC meeting tomorrow to maybe crucify her. It's public so expecting an almighty shit fight. People here and down river in Cromwell and Alex are not happy.
Peter Newport and the Crux team are doing some good stuff here and in Central, a much more positive relationship with CODC though, we've got issues.
Nicky’s intentions are in the right place, she’s got a strong public interest defence here and a thick hide. Also got most of the town on her side. But still gave Lewers and co a distraction to exploit.
The long term fix for the Whakatipu wastewater disposal will be expensive, there's not much suitable land in the basin, and what there is has development potential, which the owners aren't going to give up without compensation. And it will take 5 – 10 years to secure the land, engineer and build it. So we're going to be putting our treated to some degree shit in the river for some time.
Graeme, thanks muchly for your Local Insight and Input. Gotta say I am dismayed at the situation…..21st Century and still sending shit down rivers.
The (by far) richest town shitting on its poorer cousins down river….
Where was the Future Thinking? Clean and Green? I wonder (if nothing else) what the tourists will think ?
Re Peter Newport and Crux, the exposing of local council QLDC and its dirty dealings, has been staggering. Local Nat MP Joseph Mooney, if not supportive, is certainly not protesting !
Anyway, thanks for being interested and similarly concerned.
This isn't the first wastewater fuckup in Whakatipu. Arrowtown had some oxidation ponds built in 70's that never worked, they'd just start to work in March, then winter cold would shut them down, just start working again in December and get shock loaded over the holidays and so on. Got so bad ORC put an enforcement order on and Arrowtown's shit got trucked to Shotover ponds, had a continual convoy of shit trucks from all over SI for 6 months until a pipeline was built to Shotover.
Wide boy consultants and contractors did the deed on the very small, but loaded Arrowtown Borough Council and sold them a scheme that wasn't going to do the job. QLDC had to "upgrade" the Awtn – Shotover pipeline after a couple of year too, due to design deficiencies.
Then there's the Arthur's Point and Sunshine Bay package plants that didn't work, Arthur's Point discharging enhanced sewage (what was coming out was worse than what went in) to Shotover directly opposite Shotover Jet, that got piped over the hill to Qtn vary smartly.
And in mid 80's a grader took the lid off a sewer manhole next to the main water pumping station at One Mile. Sewer blocked, manhole overflowed and several thousand people got the shits or worse, no one died but was very close.
All the result of very small councils, under resourced, overtaken by development and engaging consultants on job by job basis. The district has never had an in house engineering department that has managed to establish control, or even knowledge of what they have. It's improving but has a very long way to go. Fortunately everything is fairly new, apart from around the CBD where any work under ground is guaranteed to find unexpected services and lead to cost and time over runs, sometimes quite major. The new Henry St bypass or Road to Nowhere…( It's not, has actually transformed traffic flows in CBD and revitalised Gorge Road) was an ongoing example.
Aye Graeme, thats some local history knowledge there ! I do recall some similar of that when I was working around Qtown/Arrowtown in the early/mid 90's. QLDC went to private contractors…supposedly to save money? Some ex Managers became the private contractors….
No money saved.
Anyway I see Niki Gladding was hung out as you warned
I'll be watching what Peter Newport and Crux follows up with.
Again, thanks for your input too.
…soon to be renamed Shitover River…
Sadly…its probably become locally known as. An indictment on an inept (toxic?) Council.
CleanandGreen,The greatest irony in this is that the Kawaru has been crystal clear all summer, and very low. Usually it's discoloured by silt going down the Shotover. This year there's been so few heavy rain events in the headwaters the rivers have been clear for months.
The polling trend change in Canada for the upcoming federal elections is something else!
https://newsinteractives.cbc.ca/elections/poll-tracker/canada/
Donald Trump has turned the Canadian federal election into a Kakhi election and has saved the Liberals in the process.
What’s the Conservative position on Trump?
Not as good as the Liberals.
Chrystia Freeland:
https://x.com/liberal_party/status/1836439688741064802
ok, but how does that relate to Trump's threats to Canada?
They were all in, hence Freeland's wannabe MAGA maple syrup Conservatives jibe, but they've since positioned themselves as the only party able to secure favourable terms for Canada.
do you mean they were all keen on Trump until he started talking about annexing Canada?
Pretty much. And then the election was handed to the Liberals
At the English-language Liberal Party leadership debate in late February, Carney referred to Poilievre as the worst person to stand up to Donald Trump, because Poilievre “worships” him.
This was not the first time Pierre Poilievre’s ability to negotiate with Donald Trump had been questioned. Furthermore, almost 50% of Conservatives would have voted for Trump in the 2024 U.S. presidential election if they could have.
https://cultmtl.com/2025/03/pierre-poilievre-is-the-worst-person-to-stand-up-to-donald-trump-he-worships-the-man-liberal-party-leadership-debate/
The most controversial statement of the federal election so far was uttered before the campaign even started — not by a federal politician, but the premier of Alberta.
In an interview taped on March 8 with a right-wing American media outlet, Danielle Smith said that, while there would always be disagreements, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre would be "very much in sync with … the new direction in America" and that Canada and the United States would "have a great relationship" for as long as Poilievre and Donald Trump were in office.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/poilievre-trump-smith-analysis-1.7496125
nice to have some good news, and it's heartening to see people shifting voting intention in response to things going way too far. Also, fuck 'em, the ones who were ready to jump to fascism.
What annoys me about the Golriz Ghahraman story is the way the media chooses to be so selective about what it reports. The latest twist is a good example:
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/foodstuffs-security-guards-texts-on-golriz-ghahraman-supermarket-incident-revealed/2Q6FDUJMLNBY5HWXC3Z3P37WIU/
We all know Golriz was stalked and threatened online and probably in person as well. We know the reason why. She is Muslim. The threats became so serious she had to be protected 24/7. Add to that her terrifying experiences in Iran as a child, it is no wonder she is dealing with mental health problems now.
If I was in her place, I would be paranoid about everything I did. That would include my supermarket shopping. I would have acquired special zip up bags or something similar, so no-one could pry into my trolley and conjure up some negative story about me. When I reached the check-out I would tip them out on the counter. I suspect that is what she was doing.
Has anyone bothered to ask her about it? You bet they haven't. Or if she has told them they have conveniently forgotten to mention it.
As you know, there is an election next year Anne (unless Winston calls one earlier).
The Herald will spend the next 18 months attacking the Greens in any way it can, justified or unjustified.
Just up on site:
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/politics/green-mp-benjamin-doyle-faces-immense-death-threats-and-abuse-over-social-media-account/JGFVVTGZY5D5VBCX6YXGO52IJU/
RNZ headline news at noon featured this situation. I see Chloe outing herself on the Herald as a conspiracist: “The central conspiracy here is that the use of such a word on a private account by an MP, before they were an MP, is inherently suspicious,” she said. She could probably do with some media training on the topic to help her explain who's involved in this conspiracy – with clarity.
[What RNZ headline? – Incognito]
Mod note
Because I heard it on the radio, the only way to answer your question is to follow up with this: https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/556706/call-for-prime-minister-to-step-in-over-winston-peters-comments-about-green-mp
You're not going to get to grips with the story from the midday news. The conspiracy is that Doyle is a paedophile. It was plain to see the conspiracy being manufactured and amplified over the past 3 days. MSM are limited on what they can say, because of libel, but also because of boundaries around the child and just being decent reporters.
CS wasn't being a conspiracist, she just named what we all could easily see if we looked.
Well, I’d like to think that I’m very liberal when it comes to sex and extremely excessive and enthusiastic sexual activity, as long as it’s among actively consenting adults, and not done in the sight of the public.
But, for goodness sakes, an MP referring to their own, or another adults anus as a boy pussy, is a little suspect. Doing it while holding a child, is not in any way a good look. The man is a grown up, this at the best is juvenile immature behaviour.
how is the word bussy suspect?
I understand it is a portmanteau word for "boy pussy".
indeed. Just not sure how that's suspect.
Weka, I can assure you that if I or one of my work colleagues used that term in the workplace, we would have a discussion about it with management and that’s just for starters. The term bussy, or boy pussy is a highly sexualised term that should not be used in the workplace, it’s usually used in relation to young men/teenage boys.
It’s certainly inappropriate for an adult to use in conjunction with a boy. Even worse when the adult is an MP.
he didn't use it in a workplace (and it was posted before he became an MP). It was his personal account, IG I think, which isn't even shareable, so the people seeing it in their feeds were going to be people that followed him ie friends and relatives, and I assume comfortable with gay bloke culture.
I agree it's inappropriate to use it on SM with a child. I've just seen another one this morning that is problematic.
All those posts should have been removed or hidden when he was nominated for selection. It's his and the Greens' naivety, but also their political ideology that means they probably didn't understand just where this was going (to me it was entirely predictable, because I've been in the conversations about sex positivity and boundaries that they've been blocking).
My question was around your use of the word suspect. What do we suspect here? I see nothing to suggest he is a paedophile. I do think his queer politics mean his ideas about child safeguarding are too loose. Unfortunately because of the rapid RW attack, it will be difficult to have a constructive conversation about that and I expect the Greens will ignore the real issues.
I understand that there is a lot of suggestive sexual slang especially among younger people, irrespective of gender or sexuality. We would have had our own decades ago, when we were young, but we weren’t MP’s, That’s the issue,
An MP using a highly sexualised term in conjunction with young boys, is definitely not a good look. This sort of sloppy indifference to sexual abuse of children is handing ammunition to those who want to attack the political parties on the left, and unfortunately it’s the rainbow community that takes the heat.
yep. And while I understand why the Greens can’t put their hand up and say mea culpa, I do hope they do so internally in the party and sort this out once and for all.
It's not, in itself – in relation to two (or more) consenting adults. However, using a sexualized profile name, is illustrative of severe lack of boundaries when the account contains images of an adult and a child.
Regardless of whether the images and the account date from pre-MP days, all candidate selection committees know that no social media is truly private – and the name of the account should have triggered an investigation, and damage-limitation plans if the candidacy continued.
I understand that until all of this blew up, this account was linked to his profile on the GP website (i.e. his official profile Insta page was both following and being followed by his Bussy account). So not that private.
Agree on both counts, inappropriate no matter who, and the Greens dropping the ball again (imo because they also chose queer culture over feminism, feminists would have warned them on perception of child safeguarding grounds, and thus they have a blind spot).
I'm not sure what Swarbrick means by a private account. Before he was an MP I assume the posts were public. But it is possible they weren't and one of his followers took screenshots. It's the time period between him putting his hand up to be an MP and when he became one that's the party's problem, I had really hoped they would have sorted their shit out by now. Someone on reddit said they've changed their selection process.
the far right were in an absolute feeding frenzy over this for the past 3 days. One of the worst I've seen in a long time. People assuming paedophilia, but it was all politicised and mixed up with them freaking out over gay men's sex. I feel for the child, who doesn't deserve this in anyway. Doyle doesn't either, and he also should have removed the images as he put his hand up for selection. The Greens are naive on this and they really need to get up to speed. Good to see the Herald taking an evenhanded approach.
Two words : Cameron Slater.
He has form. After Nicky Hagar's book "Dirty Politics", you would think the creep and his mates wouldn't try it on again, but leopards don't change their spots.
The Greens should have known Slater and Co were digging for dirt on them and taken appropriate action. They are now, but the damage has been done.
damage done, again.
Just seen a GP member on reddit say that the rules for selection (candidate screening) have been extended. Thankfully.
Dunno if CS is involved, but there are plenty of others willing to do the same shit.
Dirty Politics was over a decade ago (seems incredible, I know). There's a whole new voting generation grown up since then who won't fully understand or be aware of just what's going on.
Agree (with Weka). In order of importance:
But again, a failure to anticipate the vile is nowhere near as bad as being vile. Unfortunately an MP has a name and face, the trolls do not.
The person that kicked it off on Friday has a well known face and name. But her career is already as trashed as its going to be, so.
I've seen another image today that makes me think he shouldn't hold portfolios related to children. Not because I think he's a paedophile, but because he doesn't have good boundaries or sense of what's appropriate and that's just wrong for that job.
Not only being a Muslim but also she is an intelligent attractive women, which makes her even more a target.
Its the first article online so get used to the smears and false narratives from gerson's granny.
Its only going to get worse.
For the record, Ghahraman is not Muslim – she's an atheist.
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=583950318783158&id=104871873357674&set=a.254657198379140
Yes I know – sometimes agnostic – but the majority of people probably don't know it.
…. because it suits the purposes of the MSM never to point it out.
I'm inclined to agree with the prof that there's something rather suspect in the way that our cops have been doing their China tourism extravaganzas:
I commend the communists for their sagacity in figuring out that fridge magnets are the key strategy to use to suborn consumerist NZ cops, yet there's a wider social trend away from consumerism due to more people being unable to afford it, due to lack of trickle-down. The regime ought to learn from this and adapt.
Hands across the water between the extreme left and the extreme right clearly appeals to many as the best way to do geopolitics. Luxon would argue that his govt ain't extreme, that political tourism began here under Ardern, and it's totally harmless…
How the most moral army in the world rolls.
In Gaza, human shields are used by Israeli soldiers at least six times a day.
I served in Gaza for nine months, and first came across these procedures, called "mosquito protocol" in December 2023. It was only two months into the ground offensive, long before there was a shortage of dogs from the IDF's canine unit, Oketz, who were used for this purpose. This became the insane, unofficial excuse for this insane, unofficial procedure. I didn't realize then how ubiquitous using human shields, whom we referred to as a "shawish," would become.
Today, almost every platoon keeps a "shawish," and no infantry force enters a house before a "shawish" clears it. This means there are four "shawishes" in a company, twelve in a battalion, and at least 36 in a brigade. We operate a sub-army of slaves.
https://archive.li/m6U7v (haaretz)
Big shoutout to Winston Peters for landing the 2 new rail-enabled ferries.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/politics/360634368/stuffpoliticsliveblog
Yes he's a grumpy old codger who is in electioneering way too early.
But notably he has launched the deal on the last day of being Deputy PM.
And the delivery schedule and port upgrade are proposed for this side of a second National-NZFirst term.
Without Peters leading this we would have seen Seymour really get stuck in and sell off the whole of the Interislander business.
So well done Winston. Now could you please just retire.
You must be kidding Ad. Here is Labour's response from Stuff today:
Labour criticises Government's new ferry deal
The Labour Party says New Zealand will get smaller ferries as a result of the Government's new deal, with no contract or costs forthcoming.
They said the Government has "torpedoed" the original deal, which would have delivered new rail enabled ferries in 2026.
Labour transport spokesperson Tangi Utikere said the new deal comes with additional costs.
“Ultimately this deal will include the ongoing costs associated with the cancellation of iRex, which continue to rise. Additional costs of $1.16 billion could have been avoided if Nicola Willis hadn’t botched the deal – including cancellation of the original deal and ongoing maintenance of the current ferries," he said.
“Due in 2029, all we know is that the ferries are smaller than those Winston Peters was involved with negotiating in the first place. That must have been a hard pill to swallow for the Minister for Rail.
“Now we are shopping for smaller ferries, and a whole lot of cash has been sunk at the bottom of the Cook Strait. That’s all down to the Minister of Finance.
“All Winston Peters has announced today is that New Zealanders will be waiting another three years for ferries and still have no idea how much they’re going to cost," Utikere said.
Smaller ferries is a feature, not a bug. It was the oversize ferries which were going to require all of the associated port costs.
That's disingenuous.
The port costs were in part related to the current age and lack of seismic integrity.
Exactly gsays….and from what Winnie said today Picton is going to need plenty of wharf work for the ferries he announced today.
The country is probably going to end up with 2 smaller ferries, 3 years later with overall costs that will be more than Labour's ferry plan, when cancellation costs are included.
(Though nobody has any idea what Winston's ferry plan will cost or who will build the ferries. Some announcement.)
And in part related to the size of the replacement ferries.
Still, a feature, not a bug in the government's eyes.
Nope. That is just dumb spin if you look at the actualities about what was proposed and why. Most of the cost was for hardening the ports against the big earthquakes that will hit the Cook Strait ports at some point. The last one was in 1855, at 8.2 – when there wasn’t significiant port infrastructure, nor a need to keep the transport links running.
The main issue on both sides of the Cook Strait for the work was fixing the geological and construction issues identified by the Kaikoura earthquake in 2016. By the look of the bullshit coming from the government, none of that work is going to done.
The 2016 was 7.8, complex but not massive compared to the potential quakes that could affect that area. But the effect was scattered over pressure releases in a lot of faults lines – most of which weren’t known about until the quake identified them.
It was a long way from Picton or Wellington ports, but the cluster of 6.x aftershocks did significiant damage. What it highlighted was that 7.x effects at the ports (ie from an expected and overdue remote 8.2 earthquake) were likely to really damage the existing port infrastructure.
If there is 8.x or above in the Hikurangi subduction zone or the northern Alpine faults, then the shocks are likely to do even more damage in the complex fault systems near the Cook Strait. Both are likely to happen at similar distances to the Kaikoura epicentre.
Remember that earthquakes scales are logarithmic. Helpful AI did the maths.
So roughly 4 times the energy release triggering faults down a heavily faulted zone. Queue some 7.x aftershocks.
The changes to the building codes were just as profound for the ports and approaches to the ports as they were for buildings.
In the case of a strait port getting badly damaged, it’d effectively cut the economic ties between the North and South Islands for non-containerised shipping or airfreight. No cars, no trains, no trucks. Probably for several years.
Even in in the 2016 earthquake with remote epicentre, the effects on from the primary and secondary quakes were harmful. Wellington Port did a PR release in 2017 and Picton took more damage that was expected. Both were able to get ferries running rapidly, but it wasn’t too far off serious damage level.
The projected work on the ports wasn’t so much for the size of the new ferries. It was as a results of saying that if we have to rebuild for a long term ferry system, then build it for the next century with the knowledge of the kind of damage that a probable earthquake of 8.2 magnitude within 200-300kms could do to port on the Cook strait.
Now of course that work won’t be done on either side. The central transport funding got cut. The responsibility got pushed to Wellington and Marlborough ratepayers and whatever the money may be left over after planning for some outstandingly useless and blindingly uneconomic motorways. But hey, they’re mostly in politically useful seats for National and NZ First…..
Bugger the economy if we have a probable major earthquake. There isn’t any money left in the EQC funds after a moderate set of earthquakes in Christchurch 15 years ago.
Getting a major internal trade route running for basics like disaster relief and repair directly after a serious earthquake will be pretty impossible – it will take years. But hey, National/Act/NZ First clearly don’t want to plan for anticipated events.
Now talking about anticipated events – who was silly enough to think that we wouldn’t have another power crisis this year? After all climatic weather patterns never tend to repeat for several years.
/sarc
All of which is a reason to promote the rebuilding of the wharf infrastructure as an infrastructure project, not as a ferry replacement one.
And, due to the size of the original ferries, without the wharf infrastructure, they couldn't operate in NZ.
Size of the ferries was a factor.
This is demonstrably untrue, and you were and are still wrong to make this false claim.
Apologies, My bad for making the mis-statement.
I agree. It was a factor about when the ports got hardened, not that it didn't have to be done. The resizing of the ports to accommodate the larger ships just meant that they could have done the hardening at the same time.
If you look at the reports about the costs ballooning on the port, it wasn't the size of the ships that made it balloon. It was earthquake hardening of the port structure and the approaches.
Now that isn't happening. It still has to be done, ideally before the next big earthquake. The 2016 Kaikoura earthquake was 7.8 at the epicentre. Most of the damage at the ports and port cities came from the swarm of 6.x aftershocks it triggered around the strait.
Picton port still needs upgrades to handle the extended length of the new ferries. But as far as I can see nothing has been added to harden the port infrastructure.
So when exactly are those ports, a crucial part of our economic infrastructure, going to get hardened against probable earthquake damage? After the next big one?
Like the 8.2 in 1855. On average, you can expect ones like that at least once a century with the geology surrounding teh cook strait.
So as far as I can see, National are content to have had those ports and the ferries that they service out of commission for months or years because they're too lazy to pay the insurance up front?
Thanks for that detailed analysis lprent. I wasn't aware of many of those facts.
It means that the COC's role in this whole affair is even more heinous than I thought. My guess is the voting public has little knowledge of those facts.
The question now is how can the Left stop this government spinning it at the election. Someone from the shadow cabinet who is senior and eloquent (Edmonds, Woods or McAnulty?) needs to be put in charge of the response on the ferry issue to hammer home in terms that the electorate will understand that this is a major cockup.
Don't forget, despite how it's being hyped up, Winston's comparing a project that included a new Wellington wharf vs one with a revamped wharf.
Saying the Wellington wharf has some life left in it may be true but it is still further in it's economic life and will need replacing sooner than a new one.
Don't worry CentrePort and Port of Marlborough are going to get wrinsed through this. Their facilities are so overdue as per LPrent above.
Such a good problem to have: forcing 2 ports to upgrade their infrastructure, and they've already had a practise run at the design of the upgrade in 2018-9-2023.Also offloading that upgrade off Kiwirail and onto local government is frankly just good politics.
Yeah right – politically inspired. Completely stupid. That just means the hardening of a major National transport link won't get done.
Wellington has a relatively small rate payer base and larger immediate problems with aged infrastructure – especially the 3 waters.
It took Auckland over well over 30 years to fix their aged inner city water infrastructure – the Central Interceptor is the last major piece when it opens next year (we hope). They still have work to do on the floodwaters when with our increasing probability of getting storms like Jan 2023 (I still miss my drowned car).
That was with a much larger financial base and easier engineering than Wellington has.
As for Marlborough? They can't pay for it. Just look at the populations.
Wellington region population 550,600 (June 2024).
Marlborough region population 52,300 (June 2024)[
The responsibility for those ports is strategic. It should lie with the Ministry of Transport and NZTA.
True Thinker. Apples and oranges.
But Winston is the master of bluster and spin. He never lets facts or the truth get in the way.
Labour's Robertson hadn't agreed to the port rebuild costs. But Kiwirail had signed up the constructor to do it through what is called tie IPAA or Interim Project Alliance Agreement, which is where you are preparing all the costs of the big items, sometimes ordering the big items with really long lead-in times that often need to be imported, and where the methodology to actually build it gets nutted out.
Labour could simply be more honest that they just didn't have strong governance control over Kiwirail through 2021-22.
If that reminds you of the Dunedin Hospital saga going through the Labour cabinet, it probably should.
That is history Ad….Labour has to deal with the ferry issue moving forward…see my response to lprent above.
They are much smaller targets for Labour, regrettably.
The new Crown entity for the ferries will be run by Chris McKenzie and Heather Simpson. Chris McKenzie was the main heavy bureaucratic muscle under Sir Michael Cullen and Heather Simpson was PM Helen Clark's Chief of Staff.
McKenzie was lead negotiator for buying back the entire rail system, and for the 2008 Auckland governance arrangements, and double tracking and electrification of Auckland. Simpson was the key reason there was a unified public service and political order for the 9 years of Clark-Cullen. Between them they know where the bodies are because they buried them.
This is Labour royalty. And of course they will be staying on no matter who is in government.
Winston Peters has not only delivered like the milkman when the rest of this lot can't even make lunch, he's also ensured it will never be a political failure because it can never be attacked.
McNulty or Labour's whomever will have to go find other targets.
Yep agree with you now that Hipkins has come out today saying that maybe in retospect the Mega ferries weren't a good idea, thus pulling the rug out from under his spokesperson on the issue in todays Morning Report interview on RNZ.
Surely these new ferries could be commissioned in April 2028 not some time in 2029? Three years should be enough.
I've got a spade you can hold if you like.
Yeah, he is a effective politician. However what he has done is to separate the ferries from the ports and isolate it so that it gets the ferry system harder to damage by political amateurs like the current National and Act ministers. Which is a good idea.
What he hasn't done is to the secure the transport link. Neither Wellington now Marlborough regions have the capacity to fund the hardening of the ports. If the ports get damaged, then what is the fallback plan?
Run freight ships from Whanganui or New Plymouth to Christchurch? I'm assuming that Napier port would get hammered if there is any major Hikurangi quake. Besides Napier looks like it is only really set up for logs these days.
I read Peters is going to be deputy PM for another two months – has that changed?
Ah you're right May not April.
It is better than NACT would have delivered.
The ferries will be smaller and still cost more – the deal they had was good and all costs have increased since that price was agreed.
Will they be designed to diminish wash impact (or will smaller size manage that), will they be part electric with an ability to go all electric?
Treasury failed to differentiate the new earthquake resilient wharves from the cost of the (larger ferries aspect) project.
And given the cancellation costs involved, one wonders about their involvement and influence in all this.
SPC-Agree with all of that except I think (unfortunately) that the electric ferry issue will cloud the argument the Left needs to put forward on the ferry debacle.
When is social media really private?? The Peters/Doyle controversy seems to hinge on the answer to this question.
As a non-participant I'm intrigued by the blur. Is there a genuine twilight zone between public and private or merely the semblance of one?
I’m blurred by your intrigue as a ‘non-participant’; it sounds nihilistic and empty.
the implication is that the posts weren’t public (they would have only been visible to followers). But regardless, Doyle should have removed them a long time ago and the Greens should have told him too. It was a long time between selection and becoming an MP.
Even if they were private, some of the pictures are still a problem.
3 April 2023 on the list.
https://www.greens.org.nz/green_party_releases_initial_candidate_list_for_2023_election
When did it become private and if it was after he was a list candidate, he might have been investigated then (negative campaign research) for later action if and when he became an MP.
Another factor, gay males outing him (possibly as part of their LGB vs LGBT+ activism), thus part of the wider anti-left/woke of the HUAC revival – kulturekampf.
The BBB term is a send up of (both) social conservatives and himself.
A biological male identifying as non binary who has a child.
I’ll leave the Oscar Wilde (whose first girlfriend married Bram Stoker) Bosie D aspect for others more literate to diary about.
Seems like we need to clarify the public/private social media interface since it is being weaponised.
Alfred was the butler in Batman – Bram wrote the novel Dracula.
The specific reference to the number of posts taken down, 52, indicated a record of the posts was made for some future purpose (it appears here to be political).
yes political, and also homophobia and general hatred of gender non-conformity.
My best guess is that he and the party selection people didn't think the posts were a problem. And that's a problem.
Swarbrick implied that she didn't know when the posts were removed but they would be looking at those thing in the coming days. That's more reassuring. Don't know if they will look at the content of the posts critically.
The Green Party should vet social media before announcing people on the list (sort of obvious now).
exactly. It's not like this is the first time. But also, they're naive about perception and how that harms them, which is quite remarkable given we're 8 years on from the fallout from the Turei speech. .
and they shut down the feminists and others who would have known this was going to be a problem.
Including (so called) private social media accounts. Nothing is really private on the Internet. If you have anything that your party wouldn't relish seeing on the front page of the Herald – they should know about it in advance.
it's possible they did know and didn't think it was a problem.
More likely, they advised their list candidates to make (personal) social media private and run a public social media for political purposes.
in the selection process, someone should have gone through his social media and checked it. Either they didn't do that check, or they did and didn't see a problem with the posts.
In that case, it's terminal political naivety – surely they can't be happy with the current stoush (and, if they think that the right aren't up to digging up every slightly questionable issue from left MPs pasts – they're beyond naive.).
Also, while they were going through the Tana saga – their team should have been going over Doyle with a fine-tooth comb to *ensure* there was nothing that could have come back to bite them. They had over 6 months…..
If they didn't see this as a problem, then they must be really, really out of touch, not only with NZ but with a significant portion of their party base. The danger of only interacting within your 'bubble'
My boss used to say – every time you make a decision – you have to think 'Am I prepared to defend this on the front page of tomorrow's newspaper' – Sometimes you have to make borderline calls – but asking that question means that you're on the front foot with the framing.
I don't see the GP have at all been on the front foot with this issue.
I think they are really out of touch. This is what happens when you suppress dissent in a party (thinking here of the GCFs who would have seen red flags around those posts). Queer culture has a core tenet of dismantling boundaries. No-one in the Greens is going to want to remove child safeguarding, but I think many won't see what the problem is here. It's not that Doyle is sexually abusing children (there's not more evidence of that than of any other MP). It's that he's got poor judgement and boundaries. They have a massive blindspot, it was the same with their involvement in the Albert Park violence.
I don't think it's terminal. I've seen one person today talking about how they recently amended their selection process to be more vigorous (presumably as a consequence of Tana). But they do seem to be stuck in a kind of naivety that stems from core kaupapa around trusting people and making relationships central. I think they need to get people from outside the party to help them sort that out.
I'm also highly confident there will be people in the party feeling very frustrated but unable to say anything, because you can't critique queer culture.
I've been following how these dynamics played out in the UK, and while I didn't know about Doyle's account, it's very predictable.
We've got the ultra conservatives yelling 'peverts' on one side, the ultra liberals yelling 'they're angels you bigots' on the other. Women in the middle who've been trying to have a meaningful conversation about child safe guarding have either been branding bigots by the liberals, or co-opted by the conservatives. It's the same with drag queen story hour. It's very difficult to have the conversation, and the Greens won't be being exposed to conversation that isn't polarised.
We sort of covered this issue Thread 5 on 29 March
The adult and age appropriate.
https://thestandard.org.nz/open-mike-29-03-2025/#comment-2030087
The tenor of Swarbrick's commentary implies that the posts have only recently (i.e. after the Peters announcement and subsequent furore) been removed.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/politics/green-mp-benjamin-doyle-faces-immense-death-threats-and-abuse-over-social-media-account/JGFVVTGZY5D5VBCX6YXGO52IJU/
RNZ is saying that CS said that, the social media went private before he became an MP.
both happened. He set his personal account to private when he became and MP, and since the whole thing blew up he's been deleting posts.
Before he became an MP, deleting posts recently – presumably because his private social media was not secure.
PS It may have been "transcripted/photo image" when still public (after he was on the list and before it went private).
what is that?
I don't use IG a lot, but on SM generally, if you lock your account, your followers can see your posts, but the public can't. The only way to have avoided this would be to delete the posts before selection. Which is what should have happened, but it's still possible someone would have a copy. My guess is the right are keeping tabs on lots of accounts of anyone who might be in a position of power in the future.
Copying the posts, either text or text and images.
they’re screenshots of his Instagram posts, and those post contained both images, text and emojis. Most likely explanation is the screenshots were indeed taken after he put his hand up to be an MP but before he became one. Something like 1.5 years?
But was clearly in existence (and surely was disclosed) when he became a candidate.
As we teach our kids nothing is private once it's released on the Internet. Once information is out there, it's out there.
The Bussy social media account (up until this week) follows and was followed by his official parliamentary Insta one – so not exactly keeping the two at arms-length.
The posts have only (apparently) been deleted once all the furore blew up. So, it seems clear that neither Doyle (as a politician) nor the GP saw any issue with them prior to this. Which makes one question their political instincts.
yes.
Not sure if this is visible without an account, but a GP member is saying here that the candidate selection committee will have much greater vetting powers. So they may have had constraints on what they could do before.
https://www.reddit.com/r/newzealand/comments/1jnoqhe/comment/mklw1lu/?context=3
the account was locked when be became an MP and in the past few days he's been deleting posts (because his followers will still be able to see them, and he has concerns for the child)
This is relevant.
It seems Google AI is saying that bussy comes from boy, rather than butt, and this is being weaponised by those with an anti LGBTQ+ agenda to infer some danger from queer culture and gender identity to children.
This was once done to argue against same sex couples having access to child adoption.
https://centrist.nz/greens-ece-spokesperson-posts-sexualised-child-images-online-peters-asks-wheres-the-media/
Woke beer! How dare they!
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/companies/manufacturing/lion-nzs-auckland-brewery-to-be-partly-solar-powered/ZRZQ7ZVE5FGJJNUSJAY4YWBEFU/
Fletcher Building closing home building factory because of a market downturn
https://archive.li/frLHI#selection-4669.0-4689.53
https://www.oneroof.co.nz/news/tony-alexander-rental-markets-dramatic-turn-why-landlords-are-worried-47246
https://thestandard.org.nz/open-mike-29-03-2025/#comment-2030080
That Tony Alexander article is interesting.
If true the COC's central strategy for the election of raising house prices to create a feel-good situation among voters could be in tatters.
I've always agreed with multiculturalism, and I see the rainbow community as a natural part of the whole. I'm naturally heterosexual, so the various sagas around alternative sexuality tend to come across as mystifying sometimes – I rationalise them as examples of biodiversity and move on. Madeleine Chapman has this take on the latest:
Why anyone would get so aggro as to issue death threats against Doyle baffles me but I could rationalise that as due to mental illness I suppose.
The public interest lies in whether a hacker made those private images public before Winston got them, huh? I await info on that technical point. He (being a lawyer) probably did not expose them to the public so they may not yet be in the public domain.
Yet she has seen them. So the media ought to clarify if those images are still private or not, lest the twilight zone capture the public imagination by default.
On Checkpoint just now (4.56pm) the deputy political editor said that RadioNZ will release its own political poll tomorrow morning.
Apparently RNZ are going to do regular political polls.
Yup, announced 10 days ago: https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/545555/rnz-to-run-new-series-of-political-polls.
ah thanks Incog…I was overseas then and missed that announcement.
The RNZ poll has to be more accurate than Farrar's.
Really? Unless they have a crystal ball to the future, it's difficult to see how they (or, rather Reid Research who will be doing the actual polling) will be a significant improvement.
Comparing the latest Talbot Mills and Curia (two most recent polls) – there is nothing to choose between them. TM has National lower and ACT higher, Curia the other way around – and all the rest are within the margin of error. [Well, you could argue that there was a significant difference in the TPM result (2%) – but I tend to discount all TPM polling as notoriously inaccurate (none of the pollster tools measure this group well)]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_New_Zealand_general_election
cool, will see if we can put up a post. Links appreciated as they become available.
ACT's plan to change workplace health and safety requirements will likely appeal to some business owners' feelings of resentment at being expected to run businesses with workers' safety as a major consideration.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/556728/govt-to-cut-health-and-safety-requirements-for-smaller-businesses
As usual ACT MPs, along with their Coalition partners, ignore the advice of experts, researchers and others involved.
"But the chair of the Institute of Safety Management said the government had squandered "a golden opportunity to improve [the country's] poor health and safety performance".
Mike Cosman said the 50-70 people that died in workplace accidents each year was more than four times the rate of workplace deaths than in the UK.
He said the proposed changes would do little to address that.
"The reforms are focused instead on costs to businesses of prevention and not the much greater costs of harm.
"This seems to be looking through the wrong end of the telescope to us because the cost of our poor health and safety record is north of $4.9 billion per year to say nothing of the impact on workers and their families," Cosman said….
He said van Velden had ignored recommendations by employers, experts, unions, academics, and representatives of high risk sectors provided to the government in October….".
Brooke van Velden's intention to "create a hotline to enable reporting of overzealous road cone use" seems malicious. This will most likely increase the threats and verbal abuse road workers receive, many of whom are reportedly suffering mental health problems as a consequence.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/547515/road-workers-abused-and-threatened-we-really-need-to-do-better-as-a-society
"One in four road workers is verbally abused by motorists on a daily basis, and one in three says it is taking a toll on their mental health, a survey by NZTA Waka Kotahi has found
The survey also found one in five is thinking about looking for another job because of the ongoing abuse – at a time of record road repairs when workers are badly needed.
NZTA Auckland and Northland manager Jacqui Hori-Hoult says it is a growing problem…."
Van Velden's plan seems a transparent attempt to appeal to some drivers' anger towards road workers and to create further divisions among NZers.