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From Wellington to Washington: how Ani O'Brien's commentary tracks the global far-right culture war into Aotearoa

  From Wellington to Washington: how Ani O'Brien's commentary tracks the global far-right culture war into Aotearoa A critical analysis of media platforming, partisan proximity, and transnational disinformation networks in New Zealand's polarising public sphere. The far right ecosystem in Aotearoa Exhibit 1 In a healthy democracy, it should be possible to ask a simple question of any commentator who is regularly given column inches in mainstream outlets: who pays them, who trains them, and whose narratives do they amplify? In Aotearoa New Zealand, that question is overdue for Ani O'Brien — a commentator whose career trajectory traces a near-textbook map of the transnational right's infrastructure for waging culture war. O'Brien is described in her Newsroom author bio as "a women's rights advocate and political commentator" who "has worked previously for the Leader of the Opposition (National) and is a council member of the Free Speech ...

The Substack and the Slur: How a Manufactured Crisis Toppled a Wahine Mฤori Political Editor

  The Substack and the Slur: How a Manufactured Crisis Toppled a Wahine Mฤori Political Editor On the architecture of the Aotearoa culture-war machine, and the danger it poses to a democracy heading into 2026 There is a particular cadence to the afternoon on which the career of a senior Mฤori journalist  at TVNZ is finished. It is unhurried. It begins with a tweet — in this case, a single image of a typed statement, posted by Maiki Sherman, the now-former political editor of TVNZ, on the afternoon of Friday, 8 May 2026, announcing that she had parted ways with the broadcaster. The post was terse, dignified, and final. As RNZ later reported , Sherman wrote that the scrutiny of the previous week had placed enormous pressure on her and rendered her role "untenable." The first wahine Mฤori to lead a major broadcaster's political team was gone. The story that finished her had not, ten days earlier, existed in any newspaper, on any wire, on any website you would consider mai...

The Mandate Far-Right Politicians Do Not Hold

  The Mandate Far-Right Politicians Do Not Hold Your election to Parliament does not authorise you to govern the academy. By Mohan J. Dutta The architecture of an electoral mandate in a parliamentary democracy is narrower than its loudest advocates pretend. A vote conferred at a general election authorises the governing coalition to legislate within the constraints of the rule of law, the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, the Treaty of Waitangi, and the suite of statutes that condition Crown power. It does not confer a roving warrant to remake every institution of public life in the image of the governing party. It does not, in particular, transfer to ministers the right to dictate what scholars may research, what courses universities may teach, what speakers institutions may host, or which academic voices the Crown will tolerate in public debate. That distinction, between democratic authority and democratic overreach, sits at the centre of the present crisis. Across Aotear...

The Language of Balance: How the Far Right Hollows Out Democracy from Within

  The Language of Balance: How the Far Right Hollows Out Democracy from Within There is a particular kind of political theatre playing out across the democratic world, and it requires a careful eye to read. Watch what the far right says, and then watch what it does. The two will rarely be the same. A movement that has spent decades organising against the very idea of pluralism now speaks fluent democracy. A movement whose foot soldiers march in the streets calling for the cleansing of the nation now legislates from cabinet rooms, draped in the vocabulary of fairness, balance, and freedom. The extremism has not gone anywhere. It has merely learned the password. This is the communicative inversion at the heart of the contemporary far-right project, and it is the secret of its success. The street-level violence of the Proud Boys, the dogwhistles of Hindutva cadres, the muttered grievances of settler colonial nostalgists in Aotearoa New Zealand — these have not been disavowed by the ...

A thousand little chips — David Seymour, the board, and the slow capture of public broadcasting

  A thousand little chips — David Seymour, the board, and the slow capture of public broadcasting Mohan J. Dutta In 2023, when then-Cabinet Minister Kiri Allan raised concerns about RNZ's treatment of Mฤori staff, David Seymour reached for the language of constitutional caution. Ministers, he said, had to be "absolutely critically cautious about even the perception of interfering with media." "Nobody loses their democracy all at once," he warned. "It's always a thousand little chips." Three years later, he is the one swinging the axe. As shareholding minister for both RNZ and TVNZ, and now Deputy Prime Minister, Seymour has used an interview on The Platform — a venue that traffics in disinformation, anti-Treaty grievance, and imported far-right culture-war content — to attack RNZ's editorial decisions, denounce the appointment of John Campbell to Morning Report as something that should have been "out of the question," and signal t...