The Jackal

6 Jun 2025

Police Failed to Properly Investigate Michael Forbes

The recent revelations about the right-wing sicko Michael Forbes, former press secretary to Chris Luxon, expose a troubling failure by the New Zealand Police to properly investigate allegations of predatory behaviour. Reports confirm that police seized Forbes’ work and personal phones while probing complaints, including allegations of non-consensual audio recordings of sessions with Wellington sex workers and voyeuristic photography of numerous women in public and private spaces.

Police did not however check Forbes’ computers, which is where he would be storing his peeping-tom photos and recordings. The investigation appears to have not been thorough, leaving victims uninformed and an abuser without any real punishment. This isn’t just a procedural misstep, it’s a betrayal of public trust and a stark reminder of how the system often fails those it’s meant to protect, particularly when men in places of power are involved.

Today, RNZ reported:

 
Police seized work and personal phones of press secretary Michael Forbes while investigating complaints

In a statement to RNZ on Thursday evening, Wellington District Manager Criminal Investigations Detective Inspector John Van Den Heuvel said that, "on examining the phones, Police also found a number of photos and video of women in public spaces, and what appears to be women in private addresses, taken from a distance away.

"Police considered the available evidence and concluded it did not meet the requirements for criminality, and therefore charges could not be filed.

"The individual concerned voluntarily spoke with Police and admitted to taking the images and recordings. He was reminded of the inappropriateness of his behaviour and encouraged to seek help."

Forbes also deleted the images in the presence of Police.

 

Forbes recorded sex workers without consent and was caught by a suspicious madam last year. Under New Zealand law, specifically the Crimes Act 1961, non-consensual recording in private settings falls under section 216H, which prohibits people making intimate visual recordings without consent, carrying a potential penalty of up to three years’ imprisonment.

If Forbes’ alleged photography involved capturing someone in a private act without their consent, it could also breach this section.

216G Intimate visual recording defined

(1) In sections 216H to 216N, intimate visual recording means a visual recording (for example, a photograph, videotape, or digital image) that is made in any medium using any device without the knowledge or consent of the person who is the subject of the recording, and the recording is of—

(a) a person who is in a place which, in the circumstances, would reasonably be expected to provide privacy, and that person is—

(i) naked or has his or her genitals, pubic area, buttocks, or female breasts exposed, partially exposed, or clad solely in undergarments; or
(ii) engaged in an intimate sexual activity; or
(iii) engaged in showering, toileting, or other personal bodily activity that involves dressing or undressing; or

(b) a person’s naked or undergarment-clad genitals, pubic area, buttocks, or female breasts which is made—

(i) from beneath or under a person’s clothing; or
(ii) through a person’s outer clothing in circumstances where it is unreasonable to do so.


It doesn't matter, as the Police have argued, that Forbes was in a public place while taking some of these intimate photographs. People clearly should expect to have privacy in their own homes and workplaces.

Additionally, section 126 of the Crimes Act addresses voyeurism, criminalising observation of private acts with intent to derive sexual gratification, with a maximum penalty of two years. 

Based on the reported behaviour, there’s a clear case for prosecution under these provisions. However, the police’s inaction suggests a troubling reluctance to pursue a high-profile figure. Worse yet, the Police have apparently allowed Forbes to delete evidence (which is technically recoverable), without properly ascertaining the severity of his offending.

Today, 1 News reported:

Police searched phones of former press secretary after complaint

Police have revealed the details of their investigation into a former media advisor for the Prime Minister who was accused of taking covert recordings of sex workers.

In the fresh disclosures, police said officers seized two phones and examined them before allowing the owner to delete the contents.

Today, police said any new information regarding the "serious" and "concerning" alleged behaviour of the press secretary working in the Prime Minister's Office would be "thoroughly considered".

Luxon's acting deputy chief press secretary, Michael Forbes, resigned yesterday after allegations emerged that he made non-consensual audio recordings of sessions with Wellington sex workers last July.

It was also alleged that the former journalist had images on his phone of women exercising at a gym, shopping, and of women getting dressed filmed through a window.



The police’s failure to notify the women whose privacy was violated is particularly egregious. Victims have a right to know when their personal boundaries have been breached, especially in cases involving intimate recordings. The Privacy Act 1993 mandates that individuals be informed of breaches that could cause harm, and the Victims’ Rights Act 2002 requires police to treat victims with respect and keep them updated.

By failing to inform the women involved, police have denied them agency, closure, and the opportunity to seek support or pursue civil remedies. This omission reeks of prioritising optics over justice, especially given Forbes’ proximity to power. The police’s failures undermine accountability and fuels suspicion of a cover-up.

The New Zealand Police executive’s apparent failure to inform Ministerial Services or the appropriate Ministers, including Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, Police Minister Mark Mitchell and Corrections Minister Louise Upston, about the complaint against Michael Forbes is a flagrant breach of the ‘No Surprises’ convention, which mandates that departments promptly brief Ministers on matters of significance, especially those likely to spark public controversy.

The Prime Minister has claimed that he wasn't aware of the allegations against Michael Forbes until contacted by Stuff on June 3, 2025.  If true, this is particularly outrageous given Forbes’ previous role as press secretary to Prime Minister Luxon, making it unthinkable that such a sensitive investigation, involving non-consensual recordings and voyeurism, wouldn’t be flagged earlier.

Current Police Commissioner Richard Chambers has conveniently sidestepped responsibility, claiming he wasn’t in charge at the time, effectively dumping the blame on his predecessor, Andrew Coster, who is also claiming no knowledge until recently of the police investigation into Forbes. This finger-pointing does nothing to restore public trust, instead exposing a shameful lack of accountability within the police executive itself.

If Coster or Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming, who resigned as the country's second most powerful cop last Monday amid a four-month investigation by the IPCA and police, knew and failed to act, it’s a scandal; if they didn’t, it’s a gross failure of oversight that also demands further investigation.

If the Police did inform National Ministers, as is more likely the case, and they chose to try and cover up Michael Forbes’ improprieties in the hope that the public wouldn’t find out, it’s an even bigger scandal, one that has the potential to bring down the corrupt government. Either way, the police have left victims uninformed and the public questioning whether the system prioritises the rights of creeps like Forbes over the rights of victims.

This case demands further action. The police must prioritise investigating Forbes’ apparent criminal behaviour, ensure victims are informed and supported, and provide a public explanation for their operational failures and delays. Anything less erodes trust in the system and leaves vulnerable people without closure and open to further abuse.

5 Jun 2025

ACT Undermines Democracy With Regulatory Standards Bill

With jaw-dropping cynicism, Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour and his ACT Party have plumbed new depths, trampling democratic values in their rush to ram through the Regulatory Standards Bill.

The right-wing government’s rush to force this contentious bill through under urgency, using AI to sift through 23,000 public submissions, isn’t just an affront to democracy, it’s a deliberate ploy to silence New Zealanders’ voices.

Seymour’s baseless claim that 99.5% of submissions are bot-generated is also a shameless dodge to dismiss overwhelming opposition. With the Ministry for Regulation’s summary showing 88% of the 23,000 submissions rejecting his reckless bill, this tactic is not just absurd, it’s a brazen assault on democracy, exposing a government hell-bent on its neoliberal agenda over honest engagement with voters.



Yesterday, RNZ reported:

 
'We have massive problems with regulation' - Seymour defends Regulatory Standards Bill

In an at-times heated exchange with Guyon Espiner, Seymour stood firm on the need for regulatory reform despite New Zealand's high international rankings in governance and legal standards.

Espiner pointed out that New Zealand ranks 99 out of 100 for regulatory quality in the World Bank index, placing it just behind the global benchmark.

Seymour dismissed the ranking, arguing it measured whether a country is "basically a third-world country" and failed to capture the real-world frustrations faced by businesses, particularly in agriculture and construction.
 
...

However, Espiner highlighted that of the 23,000 total submissions, only 76 supported the bill - a support rate of just 0.33 percent.

Seymour dismissed the figure as misleading.

"That quantum reflects nothing more than the fact that it's got easier and easier for people to make really, frankly, fake submissions … They've got bots, they can make a submission."

Despite dismissing the opposing voices as fake, Seymour maintained that what mattered was not the opposition but the quality of the legislative framework, which is non-binding in its nature, thus not enforceable - despite the bill's $20 million price-tag.

Seymour argued the Regulatory Standards Bill was about transparency, not enforcement. He compared it to the Public Finance Act and the Reserve Bank Act - also non-binding in nature, but important for government accountability.



Seymour’s cries of “bots” in the submission process are laughably hypocritical, given his own digital sleight-of-hand. In 2020, his Instagram account ballooned overnight with thousands of faceless, inactive followers, clear hallmarks of bot-driven inflation. His deflection then, blaming Meta while offering no proof, mirrors his current dodge, exposing a pattern of deceit. 

When questioned about this, Seymour deflected, claiming ignorance and demanding answers from Meta. However, no credible explanation followed. This convenient amnesia undermines his credibility to cry “bots” now, exposing a double standard that cannot be ignored.

Deploying AI to cherry-pick just 1,000 of 23,000 submissions—likely discarding the rest as “spurious”—guts New Zealand’s democratic process. As Labour’s Duncan Webb rightly slammed, this “coalition of chaos” renders public input a hollow sham.

Seymour’s assertion that the “quality of ideas” matters more than quantity is a thinly veiled excuse to ignore the 88% submissions in opposition, prioritising his deregulatory zeal over public interest. This approach, coupled with the bill’s rushed first reading under urgency, reeks of a government determined to steamroll their agenda through while gaslighting voters.

Seymour’s cozy ties to the Atlas Network, a billionaire-funded libertarian think tank, taint his fitness as Deputy Prime Minister. His pre-parliamentary training with Atlas-linked Canadian think tanks and ACT’s murky connections, fueled by donors like Alan Gibbs, whose daughter chairs Atlas meetings, betray an allegiance to corporate interests over New Zealand’s common good.

The Regulatory Standards Bill, with its focus on property rights over collective goods like environmental protections or Treaty obligations, mirrors the Atlas Network’s playbook of prioritising profit over people.

Such affiliations, which Seymour has lied about despite well documented ties, should disqualify him from wielding influence over such legislation that could reshape New Zealand’s regulatory landscape.

Seymour's charade isn't just undemocratic, it’s a betrayal of the public’s trust. By dismissing the vast number of submissions that are opposing this bill as bot-driven and outsourcing their analysis to AI, Seymour and his coalition partners reveal their contempt for the democratic process, a contempt that is undermining public opinion in our house of representatives.

New Zealanders deserve better than a Deputy Prime Minister who scorns their voices while bowing to global corporate puppeteers. The Regulatory Standards Bill, like Seymour’s leadership, is a glaring red flag of autocratic drift. His gaslighting of public submissions isn’t just an assault on democracy...it’s an abuse of power that demands fierce resistance.

Coalition’s Climate Cop-Out Risks $2 Billion Export Hit

New Zealand’s National-led coalition of chaos government has once again proven its inability to tackle the climate crisis with even a shred of competence. The world is watching, and the verdict is damning: Aotearoa is failing to curb CO2 emissions by any meaningful measure and the National-led government's 2025 Budget is kicking the climate change can down the road, prioritising carbon capture fantasies over genuine climate action.

Let’s start with agriculture, which accounts for nearly half of New Zealand’s greenhouse gas emissions, largely methane from livestock. Despite earlier promises to include agriculture in the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) by 2025, the coalition has delayed this to 2030, bowing to pressure from farming lobbyists. This exemption, plus other pro-farming policies that will increase pollution, ensures that the sector responsible for 43.5% of our current methane emissions faces no real accountability.

The 2025 Budget, which will make any reductions harder to achieve, is a grim reflection of the government’s cowardice to curb agricultural emissions in any meaningful way. Instead, it allocates $200 million to fossil fuel developments at gas fields while slashing $56 million for electric buses. They're also cutting $100 million from climate resilience projects for the Pacific. Meanwhile, the coalition scrapped incentives for electric vehicles and cycleways, undermining low-emission transport. Then there’s the government’s losing bet on the lame horse that is carbon capture.

In May, RNZ reported: 

 
Climate solution all but buried before it begins

The CCS project - led by Todd Energy and backed by the government - aims to capture carbon dioxide from industrial processes and inject it deep underground in Taranaki, at the Kapuni gas field, locking it away for centuries.

The start date has been pencilled in for around 2027, and from then until 2030 it is expected to store a million tonnes of CO₂, with a further almost million tonnes stored over the following five years.

It is a big part of the government's broader plan to meet its legal obligations to cut emissions by 2030 - about a third of the carbon savings needed.

But Gibson tells The Detail the project's future is now uncertain unless Todd Energy gets "more money or less liability or a combination [of both]".

"There is a whole raft of things that have changed, one is the carbon price is low compared to other countries ... then there is the issue of the liability regime, so if there is a leak 15 years after you have filled up a field and closed it off, who is responsible for that ... so there is wrangling going on around the rules."

Globally, CCS has a mixed track record. Some projects, like Norway's Sleipner, have stored CO₂ safely for decades. Others have failed spectacularly, costing billions and storing less than promised.


Nicola Willis’ austerity budget also fails to bolster the ETS, which excludes agriculture and relies on a flawed cap that doesn’t prioritise gross emissions reductions. Instead, it pours funds into unproven carbon capture and sequestration technologies that are just pipe dreams. The Climate Change Commission projections showed the government won’t deliver any meaningful cuts, rendering younger generations to a future of climate chaos. Christopher Luxon's idiotic approach bets on “immature technologies” that may never be commercially viable, wasting resources that could be better spent on already consented solar and wind projects that are waiting in the wings.

Internationally, New Zealand’s backsliding is raising eyebrows. Our free trade agreements with the EU and UK, which include robust climate commitments, are at risk. The EU-NZ FTA, for instance, explicitly ties trade to Paris Agreement obligations, yet our reversal of the offshore oil and gas exploration ban and failure to cut agricultural emissions could breach these terms.

Breaching our FTA climate commitments could cripple New Zealand’s export sectors, with estimated losses of $1-$2 billion annually. Agriculture, contributing $29 billion to exports in 2023, faces the greatest risk. Dairy and meat exports to the EU, valued at $5.2 billion, could see tariff reinstatements costing $435-$870 million yearly, while trade disputes and penalties might add hundreds of millions more. Reputational damage in climate-conscious markets like the EU and UK could further erode demand for our “clean, green” products, threatening the economic backbone of our nation.

Climate campaigners, like 350.org Aotearoa, have slammed the coalition’s “pathetic” 2035 NDC target (51-55% emissions cuts below 2005 levels, barely a 1-5% improvement over the 2030 goal) calling it a “disgrace” compared to the UK’s 81% cut. But it’s not just New Zealand organisations that are noticing the National-led government’s climate failures.


On Tuesday, RNZ reported:

 
Climate change scientists accuse government of 'ignoring scientific evidence'

The prime minister has dismissed international climate scientists as "worthies" for criticising the government's approach to methane.

But the Green Party says New Zealand appears to be on a "climate denial bandwagon" and needs to end the speculation over what it plans to do about the country's single biggest source of emissions.

Christopher Luxon received a letter from 26 international climate change scientists accusing the government of "ignoring scientific evidence" over plans to lower its methane target.

New Zealand has one of the highest per-capita methane rates in the world because of its farming exports and the current target is reducing methane by between 24 and 47 percent by 2050.

Farmer lobby groups are demanding the government lower the target, and back away from any plans to put a price on methane.


What’s even worse, the government’s rhetoric is once again flirting with climate denial like the science isn't already settled. Coalition of chaos Minister’s have recently downplayed methane’s impact, with Agriculture Minister Todd McClay dismissing offshore carbon credits, saying they are unnecessary despite an 84-million-tonne shortfall in our Paris targets.

The government's head-in-the-sand approach not only impacts our potential for a clean and green economy but tarnishes our global image, which will affect not just our export sector, but also our already struggling tourism industry as well. The world is noticing, and New Zealand’s climate inaction will cost us dearly, both environmentally and economically.

Michael Forbes’ Sex Worker Exploitation Shames Government

In a shocking revelation, the National Party's deputy chief press secretary to Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has resigned amidst allegations of recording sex workers without their consent. According to numerous reports, Michael Forbes allegedly amassed a large number of audio recordings and photographs of women in compromising situations, including sex workers, women at the gym, and even those changing in private spaces.

Police apparently investigated after a Wellington brothel raised concerns in July last year, though they deemed it below the threshold for criminal prosecution, perhaps a result of the offender’s position of power and associations rather than any limitation of the law. However, this sordid scandal exposes not just questions about individual moral bankruptcy, or who knew what and when and why the police failed to act expediently, but a broader systemic political failure under a clearly misogynistic right-wing government.
 

Yesterday, RNZ reported:

Prime Minister's deputy chief press secretary Michael Forbes resigns after reportedly recording sex workers without consent

The Prime Minister's deputy chief press secretary has resigned after allegedly recording audio of sessions with Wellington sex workers and taking intimate photos of women in public.

A Stuff investigation reported that Michael Forbes, a former journalist, allegedly recorded audio of multiple sessions with Wellington sex workers, and amassed a gallery of women working out at the gym, shopping, and being filmed through a window getting ready to go out.

A Wellington sex worker told Stuff she realised while Forbes was in the shower that his phone's voice recorder was allegedly activated back in July 2024.

She told the outlet she and other sex workers working that night asked Forbes for his phone PIN code and they went through his phone. They claim to have found multiple audio recordings of sessions with sex workers, albums full of photos of women, and videos of women getting ready to go out, filmed through a window at night.


Let’s cut through the spin: New Zealand’s Prostitution Reform Act 2003 decriminalised sex work to protect workers’ rights and safety, a world-leading move championed by the likes of the New Zealand Prostitutes’ Collective. Yet, under this government’s austerity-driven agenda, we’re seeing a grim reality unfold. Savage cuts to welfare, housing support, and health services, coupled with a cost-of-living crisis, are ensuring young women, particularly Māori and Pasifika, are being forced into desperate work they wouldn’t normally undertake.

The data is stark: Māori women, who make up only 9% of the population, account for 31.7% of those working as prostitutes, often in the riskiest street-based sector. Many enter under the legally required 18-years of age, driven by poverty and a lack of options, not choice.

There is no question that the coalition’s policies are socially destructive, slashing the safety net that keeps young women from falling through the cracks. Rising housing costs, stagnant wages, and gutted social services create a perfect storm where survival for young women often means turning to sex work. The hypocrisy is galling: a government that claims to champion “law and order” employ a press secretary who preys on the very women their policies are endangering.


Christopher Luxon’s recent lament about declining birth rates in New Zealand rings hollow when his government’s policies are fuelling poverty and inequality…conditions that stifle family formation. The Coalition’s austerity measures undermine young people’s ability to build stable relationships, save for a first home, or afford children. Instead, these policies are pushing more young women and men into precarious work, including sex work. Michael Forbes’ reprehensible actions represent a vile abuse of power, mirroring a broader culture of entitlement and entrenched misogyny that flourishes when society devalues its most vulnerable.

Critics of decriminalisation, like Family First, might argue for criminalising certain aspects of sex work, but they miss the point. Don't get me wrong...the oldest profession in the world has benefited from Labour's legalisation. The issue isn’t the legal framework; it’s the economic and social conditions forcing women into prostitution against their will in the first place. Survivors like Sabrinna Valisce have called out the “rosy rhetoric” of decriminalisation, noting how it can mask coercion and exploitation when structural inequalities persist, which is exactly what the National-led government has further ensured with their socially destructive policies.

Michael Forbes, whose scripted apology and sob story shouldn’t be believed, was providing advice to Chris Luxon to apparently “communicate the government’s priorities, milestones and successes to New Zealanders,” while exploiting sex workers that he had a vested interest in controlling, both physically and arguably through the government's legislative changes. His type of abusive mentality is clearly on display throughout the coalition's policy direction, which is designed to keep young women poor and desperate. The government’s refusal to fund robust exiting services for sex workers for instance or address poverty head-on suggests a tacit acceptance of this exploitation, or worse, a conscious effort to ensure young women have no other option.

Let’s not mince words: Chris Luxon’s government is complicit in a system that funnels young women into prostitution, then turns a blind eye when they’re abused and violated. Forbes’ alleged abuse of sex workers is a clear indication that he was advising the PM to further entrench targeted policies that strip away women’s rights. Cuts to social services and women’s refuges aren’t just to save the government money…they’re a manifestation of the right wing’s need to disempower and control women. This isn’t just negligence; it’s a deliberate design to keep young women vulnerable, ripe for exploitation by wealthy men in places of power.

This government’s failure to prioritise economic justice and social support is a betrayal of our most vulnerable, condemning young women to a cycle of desperation and abuse. No right-minded New Zealander should stand for this entrenched system of financial exploitation. It’s time to demand accountability, dismantle the policies that trap women in economic servitude, and build a society that truly values people’s dignity, no matter what type of employment they choose to undertake.

4 Jun 2025

A Roundup Of Right-Wing Propagandists

New Zealand’s political landscape is often full of noise from conservative commentators preaching free speech, family values, and fiscal restraint. Their propaganda criticises progressive policies, while dodging coalition of chaos failures, campaigning that reeks of double standards. This post cuts through their hypocrisy, exposing the cracks in their so-called principles.

 

Ani O’Brien

Ani O’Brien, a gender-critical commentator and Free Speech Union Council member, is a vocal advocate for women’s rights and free expression, frequently opposing transgender policies and what she terms “cancel culture.”

In 2025, she publicly criticised online pile-ons, decrying their harm to open discourse, yet paradoxically fuelled a controversy by making untrue claims labelling a Green MP a “pedophile,” amplifying a divisive narrative without evidence.

Her critique of the Waitangi Tribunal’s role misrepresents its legal scope, falsely suggesting it oversteps its advisory mandate, which clashes with her proclaimed commitment to evidence-based arguments. 

Furthermore, her opposition to transgender rights disregards medical consensus supporting gender-affirming care, undermining her claims of a principled, rational stance. This selective approach reveals a tendency to prioritise ideological culture war battles over consistent adherence to factual integrity and fairness.


Barry Soper

Barry Soper, Newstalk ZB’s senior political correspondent, delivers right-leaning commentary on New Zealand politics, often targeting Labour’s governance while defending the policies of the National-led coalition.

In his 2024 reports, he praised National’s tax cuts as providing essential economic relief for families, yet downplayed their detrimental impact on public service funding, such as cuts to healthcare and education, which contradicts his vocal calls for balanced and transparent reporting.

His long-standing advocacy for journalistic integrity, frequently highlighted in NZ Herald profiles, is undermined by his selective focus on left-wing missteps while sparing coalition policies similar scrutiny. This bias reveals a pattern of prioritising ideological alignment with centre-right agendas over the impartiality he claims to uphold, casting doubt on his commitment to objective journalism.

 

Bob McCoskrie

Bob McCoskrie, director of Family First NZ, is a prominent advocate for traditional family values, consistently opposing progressive social policies such as abortion law reforms and gender education in schools.

His 2024 polls, widely shared through Family First’s platforms, pushed conservative narratives to influence public opinion on social issues. While championing parental rights, he supports policies like ACT’s school bans on gender-affirming practices, which restrict youth autonomy, creating a contradiction in his advocacy for family empowerment.

In 2025, his anti-transgender rhetoric ignored Family First’s own data highlighting a youth mental health crisis, particularly among marginalised groups, undermining his claims of prioritising family welfare. This selective moralising reveals a focus on ideological purity over addressing the broader social implications of his advocacy.

 

Brian Tamaki

Brian Tamaki, founder of Destiny Church and leader of Vision NZ, promotes Christian nationalism, anti-government sentiment, and conservative values through his fiery public persona.

His 2024 X posts vehemently opposed COVID-19 restrictions, framing them as tyrannical overreach that threatened personal freedoms. Yet, his demand for religious freedom is contradicted by his enforcement of rigid church doctrines, which stifle dissent within his congregation and limit individual choice.

In 2025, Tamaki’s claims of government overreach clashed with his support for policies like Māori ward referenda, which undermine minority representation by imposing restrictive democratic processes. This hypocritical stance on freedom, shifting to suit his political agenda, reveals a selective advocacy that prioritises his influence over consistent principles of liberty and fairness.


Cameron Slater

Cameron Slater, a polarising right-wing blogger behind Whale Oil and The Good Oil, champions conservative causes and free speech, often using his platforms to launch vitriolic attacks on political opponents with provocative, sensationalist rhetoric.

In 2014, he falsely claimed Labour plotted to kill him, later retracting the baseless accusation, and in 2025, he peddled a debunked myth about Auckland schools installing cat litter boxes, amplifying misinformation for attention.

His defamatory posts against Matt Blomfield, ruled false by courts, starkly contradict his defence of acting in the public interest, exposing a pattern of reckless behaviour. Slater’s sensationalism, prioritising clicks over credibility, undermines his claims of principled advocacy, revealing a consistent disregard for factual accuracy in pursuit of influence.

 

Chantelle Baker

Chantelle Baker, a conservative commentator and former reality TV contestant, promotes anti-establishment views and free speech through her X posts and media appearances, aligning with populist sentiments.

Her 2024 posts amplified unverified claims about Māori elite influence in governance, fueling division without evidence, while she simultaneously demanded transparent and honest discourse.

Her advocacy for individual freedoms, particularly in critiquing government overreach on Māori issues and COVID-19 policies, clashes with her support for policies restricting minority rights, such as the coalition’s Māori ward referenda. This selective stance prioritises ideological point-scoring over consistent principles, revealing a tendency to exploit populist narratives for attention rather than fostering genuine evidence based debate grounded in fairness.


Damien Grant

Damien Grant, a libertarian columnist for Stuff and former co-host of the now disbanded Working Group podcast, is a vocal champion of free-market policies and minimal government intervention, frequently critiquing progressive economic and social measures.

In a 2024 Stuff column, he opposed Labour’s tax policies as anti-business, arguing they stifled economic growth, yet he avoided addressing National’s corporate subsidies, which distort market fairness, undermining his anti-government stance.

His 2023 role as MC at a Taxpayers’ Union debate, where he challenged candidates on cultural issues like Māori representation, clashed with his economic liberty focus, revealing a selective libertarianism that leans into populist rhetoric. This inconsistency suggests a prioritisation of ideological posturing over a cohesive commitment to minimal government across all domains.


David Farrar

David Farrar, a National Party-aligned blogger and pollster behind Kiwiblog and Curia Market Research, promotes classical liberalism and evidence-based policy critique through his influential platforms.

He blamed Labour’s health reforms for doctor departures, conveniently ignoring global workforce trends that contributed to the issue, and in 2018, he hosted a climate denialist post, undermining his claims of fostering informed debate. In 2024, a biased question in one of his polls triggered Curia’s exit from the Research Association of New Zealand, exposing a stark contradiction to his proclaimed commitment to polling integrity.

Farrar’s selective rigour, prioritising partisan narratives over objective analysis, reveals a tendency to align with National Party agendas while maintaining a veneer of independent critique.


Dieuwe de Boer

Dieuwe de Boer, a New Conservative board member and editor of Right Minds NZ, fervently advocates for Christian conservatism, nationalism, and anti-progressive policies through his outspoken online presence.

His 2023 X posts endorsed far-right events, amplifying extremist rhetoric that alienated moderate audiences. While decrying “left-wing” cultural mandates, he supported real estate licensing courses in 2024 that incorporated conservative biases, contradicting his opposition to ideological imposition.

His staunch anti-immigration stance, framing migrants as a cultural threat, starkly contrasts with his praise for British colonial heritage, which relied on migration, exposing selective historical cherry-picking. This inconsistency undermines his ideological coherence, prioritising nationalist rhetoric over a principled engagement with New Zealand’s complex history.


Don Brash

Don Brash, the former Governor of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and founder of Hobson’s Pledge, has been a vocal advocate for a “one law for all” approach, as evident in his 2024 Hobson’s Pledge posts, which argue against policies specifically benefiting Māori.

He positions himself as a champion of equality, emphasising a unified legal framework for all New Zealanders. However, his stance conveniently sidesteps the historical breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi, which have systematically disadvantaged Māori communities through land confiscations and cultural suppression.

In 2025, Brash’s criticism of initiatives promoting the Māori language, such as increased funding for te reo education, stands in stark contrast to his earlier tenure as National Party leader, where he publicly endorsed cultural diversity to appeal to a broader electorate. This apparent shift reflects a move toward populist rhetoric, prioritising political expediency over a consistent commitment to inclusive principles, raising questions about the coherence of his ideological framework.

Duncan Garner

Duncan Garner, a well-known former broadcaster and journalist, has built a reputation through hosting The AM Show and Radio Live, using his platforms to promote centre-right perspectives through columns and media appearances.

His critiques often target progressive policies and perceived government inefficiencies, such as Labour’s economic strategies. In a 2018 Stuff column, Garner endorsed Simon Bridges’ leadership of the National Party while condemning the divisive tactics of Jami-Lee Ross, yet he failed to address similar internal power struggles within National, exposing a selective outrage that undermines his impartiality.

In 2024, his vocal criticism of Labour’s economic management, particularly around inflation and public spending, contrasted sharply with his silence on the National-led coalition’s austerity measures, such as cuts to public services, which disproportionately affect vulnerable communities. This inconsistency casts doubt on his claims of balanced journalism, suggesting a bias toward centre-right agendas.

Elliot Ikilei

Elliot Ikilei, previously the deputy leader of the New Conservative Party, is a vocal advocate for Christian conservatism, emphasising family values and opposing progressive policies like gender education in schools and vaccine mandates.

His 2024 YouTube videos labeled the government’s COVID-19 response as authoritarian overreach, resonating with libertarian sentiments. However, his support for restrictive social policies, such as limiting youth access to gender-affirming care, contradicts his rhetoric of personal freedom, revealing a selective application of his principles.

In 2025, Ikilei’s anti-immigration stance, which framed migrants as a burden on society, ignored New Zealand’s economic dependence on migrant labor in sectors like healthcare and agriculture. This selective focus undermines his “pro-family” advocacy, as it disregards the contributions of migrant families, exposing a contradiction driven by ideological rigidity rather than practical consistency.

Eric Crampton

Eric Crampton, chief economist at The New Zealand Initiative, is a staunch advocate for free-market policies, frequently criticising government overreach in areas such as competition law and housing regulation.

In a 2024 NZ Herald column, he pushed for reforms to the Commerce Act to reduce barriers to market entry, arguing that excessive regulation stifles innovation. While he consistently critiques regulatory burdens, his 2025 call for deregulation in the housing sector overlooks how such measures could deepen inequality by favouring developers over low-income communities. This omission clashes with his rhetoric of fairness and economic efficiency, as deregulation risks exacerbating housing affordability issues for marginalised groups.

Crampton’s selective focus on market freedom without addressing its social consequences reveals a gap between his ideological advocacy and the broader implications of his proposals.



Francesca Rudkin
Francesca Rudkin, host of Newstalk ZB’s Weekend Collective, promotes centre-right perspectives, often critiquing progressive cultural policies while emphasising personal responsibility.

In 2024, her interviews with figures like Ben Elton challenged what she described as “woke” trends in media, positioning herself as a defender of cultural pragmatism. However, her silence on the National-led coalition’s cuts to arts funding, which threatened cultural institutions, contradicts her advocacy for cultural engagement.

In 2025, Rudkin’s praise for economic deregulation as a driver of prosperity overlooked its adverse effects on low-income communities, such as reduced access to public services. This selective lens undermines her community-focused rhetoric, suggesting an alignment with centre-right priorities that prioritises economic ideology over the social cohesion she claims to support.



Hannah Tamaki
Hannah Tamaki, co-leader of Vision NZ alongside her husband Brian, is a prominent figure in Christian conservatism, advocating for Māori rights while opposing vaccine mandates and progressive policies.

She regularly criticised vaccine mandates as oppressive encroachments on personal freedom, resonating with her libertarian-leaning followers. Yet, her support for Vision NZ’s strict moral codes, which impose conservative values on personal behaviour, limits individual choice, creating a contradiction in her freedom rhetoric.

In 2025, her advocacy for Māori rights clashed with her silence on the coalition government’s policies undermining Māori wards in local governance, which weakened indigenous representation. This selective activism, driven by political expediency rather than a consistent commitment to cultural or personal freedoms, highlights a pragmatic approach that prioritises electoral appeal over principled consistency.



Heather du Plessis-Allan
Heather du Plessis-Allan, host of Newstalk ZB’s Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive, is a prominent centre-right voice, frequently critiquing progressive policies such as Māori language road signs and Labour’s economic management.

In a 2024 Herald column, she described the closure of Newshub as the “slow death of linear TV,” attributing it to market shifts while downplaying the role of government cuts to media funding, which clashed with her free speech advocacy.

In 2025, her criticism of Te Pāti Māori’s 21-day parliamentary ban as excessive ignored similar overreaches by the National-led coalition, such as restrictions on protest rights. This selective critique aligns closely with National’s narrative, undermining her claims of journalistic impartiality and revealing a tendency to prioritise ideological alignment over consistent scrutiny of power.


John MacDonald
John MacDonald, host of Newstalk ZB’s Canterbury Mornings, promotes right-leaning views, critiquing Labour’s regional policies while advocating for local economic growth.

In 2024, his broadcasts opposed Christchurch’s public transport subsidies, arguing they burdened taxpayers, yet he failed to address the National-led coalition’s underfunded infrastructure projects, which hindered regional development. This selective focus undermines his stance on fiscal accountability.

In 2025, his calls for community-driven solutions clashed with his support for coalition policies that centralised power by limiting local council autonomy, such as restrictions on Māori wards. This contradiction reveals a selective commitment to regional empowerment, prioritising ideological alignment with the coalition over consistent advocacy for local governance.


Jordan Williams
Jordan Williams, executive director of the New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union, is a prominent advocate for fiscal conservatism, lower taxes, and government accountability.

His 2024 campaigns targeted wasteful public spending, such as bloated bureaucracy, to promote transparency. However, his credibility was challenged by defamation lawsuits in 2015 over unproven claims against Colin Craig, revealing a reckless approach to public accusations.

In 2025, his push for austerity measures, including deep cuts to public spending, ignored their detrimental impact on essential services like healthcare and education, clashing with his rhetoric of fairness. This selective focus on fiscal discipline over social consequences exposes a hypocritical prioritisation of ideological goals over the broader implications of his advocacy.



Julian Batchelor
Julian Batchelor, an anti-co-governance activist and public speaker, campaigns vigorously against Māori co-governance arrangements, framing them as separatist in his 2023 speaking tour, which provoked protests due to its inflammatory rhetoric comparing co-governance to “apartheid.”

He regularly calls for open debate on the issue but dismissed Māori perspectives as divisive, contradicting his claims of fostering inclusive dialogue.

Batchelor’s advocacy for equality ignores the historical inequities stemming from Treaty of Waitangi breaches, such as land loss and cultural erosion. This selective stance prioritises populist appeal over reasoned engagement, sidelining the complex historical context in favour of a narrative that resonates with his audience’s frustrations.



Karl du Fresne
Karl du Fresne, a conservative columnist, is a staunch defender of free speech and traditional values, frequently criticising “woke” media and progressive policies.

His 2024 posts on The Platform condemned cancel culture as a threat to open discourse, yet he ignored right-wing efforts to suppress dissent, such as restrictions on protest rights. While railing against media bias, he selectively targets left-leaning outlets, sparing conservative platforms.

In 2025, his praise for free-market policies clashed with his silence on corporate welfare, such as subsidies for the agricultural sector, contradicting his anti-interventionist stance. This selective outrage reveals a tendency to prioritise ideological alignment over consistent critique of systemic issues.



Kate Hawkesby
Kate Hawkesby, host of Newstalk ZB’s Early Edition, promotes centre-right views, critiquing progressive social policies like gender education in schools while emphasising personal responsibility.

Her 2024 broadcasts opposed Labour’s welfare expansions, arguing they fostered dependency, yet she remained silent on the National-led coalition’s cuts to social services, which impacted vulnerable populations. This omission undermines her fairness rhetoric.

Her advocacy for free speech, praised in NZ Herald profiles, clashed with her 2023 dismissal of Māori rights protests as disruptive, revealing a selective commitment to open debate that aligns with her ideological leanings rather than a universal defence of expression.



Kerre Woodham
Kerre Woodham, host of Newstalk ZB’s Kerre Woodham Mornings, champions centre-right values, critiquing Labour’s economic policies and cultural shifts she deems “woke.”

Her 2024 broadcasts praised the National-led coalition’s tax cuts as empowering for individuals, yet she downplayed their regressive impact on low-income New Zealanders, who faced reduced access to public services. This contradiction undermines her community-focused stance.

In 2023, her vocal free speech advocacy, noted in Newstalk ZB profiles, ignored right-wing efforts to limit protest rights, such as restrictions on Māori demonstrations. This selective application of her principles reveals a tendency to align with centre-right narratives over a consistent commitment to open discourse.



Leighton Smith
Leighton Smith, a former Newstalk ZB host and current podcaster, promotes hard-right views through his Leighton Smith Podcast, opposing progressive policies like climate action and Māori rights.

In 2024, his episodes criticised Labour’s environmental regulations as government overreach, yet he remained silent on the National-led coalition’s expansion of fossil fuel projects, which clearly shows a biased approach to his rhetoric.

His 2025 advocacy for free speech, cited on iHeartRadio, contradicted his dismissal of dissenting voices, such as environmental activists. This selective commitment to open discourse highlights a prioritisation of ideological views over genuine engagement, undermining his claims of fostering debate.



Liam Hehir
Liam Hehir, a New Zealand lawyer and conservative commentator, writes for Newsroom and The Blue Review, advocating for centre-right policies and democratic principles like voter accountability. 

He critiques progressive overreach, such as on waka-jumping laws or parliamentary privilege, but his mockery of the Greens’ stance on waka-jumping in 2018, despite his own opposition to such laws, reveals inconsistency. 

His 2022 use of offensive terms like “spastic” in tweets, which he later deleted after a backlash, clashed with his professional persona as a reasoned commentator. This contradiction suggests a selective adherence to decorum and principle, prioritising provocative rhetoric over consistent democratic advocacy.


Mike Hosking
Mike Hosking, a prominent Newstalk ZB host and columnist, champions centre-right policies, economic growth, and personal responsibility.

In 2024, Mike Hosking’s Newstalk ZB claim that Treasury’s PREFU ruled out a recession was deceptive, with economist Bryce Wilkinson exposing its flawed data. While Hosking slams economic spin, he glossed over 2025’s 5.1% unemployment spike, hyping nonexistent growth to echo National Party talking points.

His 2014 NZ Herald gripes about media bias ring hollow given his own pro-National tilt, revealing a clear bias for ideology over honest economic scrutiny.


Muriel Newman
Muriel Newman, a former ACT MP and director of the New Zealand Centre for Political Research, advocates for free-market policies and reduced Māori rights in her 2024 newsletters.

She opposes “race-based” policies, framing them as divisive, but ignores systemic inequalities, such as historical land confiscations, contradicting her fairness claims.

In 2025, her push for economic deregulation clashed with her silence on corporate monopolies, which undermine market competition, revealing a selective libertarianism. By targeting Māori protections while sparing powerful private interests, Newman’s advocacy prioritises ideological purity over a consistent critique of systemic power imbalances.


Nick Mills
Nick Mills, host of Newstalk ZB’s Wellington Mornings, promotes right-leaning views, critiquing progressive local policies like Wellington’s urban planning reforms while advocating for business-friendly governance. 

His 2024 interviews with figures like Tory Whanau opposed cycleway costs as wasteful, yet he ignored the National-led coalition’s underfunded transport projects, which hindered infrastructure development. This selective focus undermines his fiscal responsibility stance.

In 2025, his calls for local autonomy contradicted his support for coalition policies that centralised council powers, such as restrictions on Māori wards. This inconsistency reveals a selective advocacy that aligns with coalition priorities over genuine regional empowerment.



Paul Moon
Paul Moon, a history professor and contributor to The Common Room, promotes conservative views on New Zealand’s cultural and historical policies, opposing progressive initiatives like Māori language revitalisation. 

His 2023 posts on Bassett, Brash, and Hide criticised the history curriculum for its focus on Māori perspectives, yet his selective emphasis on colonial history ignores Māori dispossession, as noted in The Spinoff.

In 2024, his advocacy for academic freedom clashed with his support for restrictive education policies that limit curriculum diversity. This contradiction prioritises ideological alignment over historical nuance, undermining his claims of scholarly objectivity in addressing New Zealand’s complex past.



Peter Cresswell
Peter Cresswell, a libertarian blogger at Not PC, advocates for minimal government, individual liberty, and free markets, frequently criticising progressive policies. 

His 2014 NZ Herald critique of election media bias contrasts with his own biased framing of Labour as “socialist” in 2024 Not PC posts, revealing a double standard in his demand for objective journalism.

In 2025, his push for housing deregulation ignored environmental impacts, such as urban sprawl, clashing with his earlier acknowledgment of sustainable urban planning needs. This selective focus highlights a tendency to prioritise libertarian ideals over the broader consequences of his policy prescriptions.



Rhys Williams
Rhys Williams, a New Plymouth businessman and NZ First supporter, is linked to inflammatory posts targeting politicians with derogatory language, including crude insults like calling female MPs “Cunts!”

While ostensibly backing NZ First’s populist, nationalist agenda, his lack of a clear public platform undermines any claim to reasoned political support.

His personal attacks, such as those against Benjamin Doyle, contradict NZ First’s policy-focused rhetoric, revealing a hypocritical descent into vitriol. This behaviour prioritises provocative posturing over substantive engagement, aligning with populist tactics rather than principled advocacy.



Robert MacCulloch
Robert MacCulloch, a Victoria University economist, champions evidence-based policy and critiques government mismanagement, particularly Labour’s economic strategies.

In 2024, he challenged Stuff’s fact-checking of a leaders’ debate, arguing it wrongly dismissed Christopher Luxon’s GST claim, emphasising rigorous data. Yet, his speculative comments on demand elasticity without supporting evidence undermined his own standards.

In 2025, his praise for market solutions contrasted with his silence on corporate monopolies, which distort competition, inconsistent with his anti-interventionist stance. This selective focus reveals a tendency to prioritise ideological alignment over the consistent application of empirical rigour.



Ryan Bridge
Ryan Bridge, a broadcaster and former host of The AM Show, promotes centre-right views through his 2024 role on Newstalk ZB’s Early Edition, critiquing progressive policies like COVID-19 lockdowns while championing free speech.

His 2021 AM Show discussions on mystery COVID cases emphasised open debate, yet his 2024 interviews pushed National Party narratives without scrutinising their budget cuts, which strained public services.

This selective questioning clashes with his image as a tough interviewer, undermining his claims of journalistic impartiality. Bridge’s tendency to align with centre-right priorities reveals a gap between his rhetoric and consistent scrutiny of power.



Sean Plunket
Sean Plunket, a broadcaster and founder of The Platform, promotes conservative views and free speech, criticising “woke” policies in his 2024 broadcasts.

He condemns cancel culture as a threat to discourse, yet his 2025 interviews amplified unverified claims against progressive figures, fuelling pile-ons that stifled debate.

His advocacy for open dialogue clashes with his selective platforming of right-wing voices, often sidelining balanced perspectives. This hypocritical stance prioritises ideological alignment over the impartiality he claims to uphold, revealing a tendency to use free speech as a tool for advancing conservative agendas rather than fostering genuine debate.



Simon O’Connor
Simon O’Connor, a former National Party MP and conservative commentator, promotes traditional values and free-market policies through his writings and public speeches, opposing progressive reforms like abortion law changes.

His 2024 X posts criticised Labour’s social policies as “woke overreach,” yet he remained silent on the National-led coalition’s cuts to public services, which disproportionately harmed vulnerable communities.

This selective focus undermines his claims of advocating for fairness, as it prioritises ideological alignment with National over consistent critique of policy impacts. O’Connor’s approach reveals a tendency to cherry-pick issues that align with his conservative values, sidelining broader social consequences.



Trevor Loudon
Trevor Loudon, a far-right activist and author, campaigns against communism and progressive policies, alleging socialist conspiracies in global politics. 

His 2024 KeyWiki posts claimed Labour MPs are Marxist infiltrators, promoting unproven narratives. While accusing others of ideological agendas, Loudon pushes his own conspiracies without evidence, contradicting his call for factual discourse.

In 2025, his warnings of “socialist” New Zealand policies lacked substantiation and ignored similar overreaches by the National-led coalition, such as centralised governance reforms. This selective focus reveals a hypocritical prioritisation of ideological fearmongering over consistent scrutiny of political power.