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What does it mean when scholars say the far right has been "mainstreamed" in policy?

  What does it mean when scholars say the far right has been "mainstreamed" in policy? From Trump's deportation orders to attacks on the Treaty in Aotearoa, exclusionary politics is no longer at the fringe — it is writing the legislation. A culture-centered guide to how it happened, and what it means. By Mohan J. Dutta 10 May 2026 When a Deputy Prime Minister tells a public broadcaster how to do its journalism, when a coalition partner runs ministerial portfolios on a platform of disestablishing the Treaty principles, when an Australian senator announces from the Senate floor that the country is being "replaced," when an Indian Home Minister describes Muslim migrants as "termites," when a US administration designates "antifa" as a terrorist movement while pardoning the Capitol rioters — we are not looking at fringe phenomena. We are looking at the architecture of contemporary government. The far right is no longer banging on the door of t...

How a Far-Right Network Took Down New Zealand's Broadcasting Watchdog

  How a Far-Right Network Took Down New Zealand's Broadcasting Watchdog The disestablishment of the Broadcasting Standards Authority is not a routine piece of regulatory tidying-up. It is the visible end-state of an organised communicative campaign that began with a single complaint, travelled through a tightly coordinated far-right media ecology, and walked into Cabinet as policy. To understand what has happened, we have to look at the infrastructure — and at the template it imitates. The complaint that lit the fuse In July 2025, a listener of The Platform — Sean Plunket's online talkback operation — heard something they considered unacceptable: comments they described as racist, made on a programme that broadcasts continuously to a national audience over the open internet. They complained to the outlet. The outlet's reply, recounted in the Broadcasting Standards Authority's correspondence , was as instructive as it was crude: "You Plonker we aren't subje...

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...