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Friday, April 24, 2026

Breaking Views Update: Week of 19.4.26







Friday April 24, 2026 

News:
Standover tactics exposed by $180m pound of flesh for a gold mine

“An iwi group’s alleged demand for $180 million in order to approve the Bendigo Santana gold mine exposes how New Zealand’s resource management system has been warped by standover tactics and backroom dealing,” says ACT Resources spokesman Simon Court.

Kā Rūnaka say extracting $180 million from Santana has not been their ‘focus’, but they haven’t directly denied the report.

Geoff Parker: Constitutional Transformation or Constitutional Drift?


The push for constitutional change through Matike Mai Aotearoa is often framed as a reasonable evolution — a move toward “partnership” grounded in the Treaty of Waitangi. Many of its advocates present it as a balanced and inclusive vision for New Zealand’s future.

But the issue is not intent. It is direction — and how key concepts are being reinterpreted to justify structural change.

Lindsay Mitchell: Luxon isn't talking to me


Speaking after his cabinet meeting yesterday, affirming his continuing leadership of the National Party, Prime Minister Chris Luxon said:

"Everyday Kiwis will not be losing sleep over political sideshows in Wellington – they’ll be thinking about their mortgage, their kids’ education and the safety and security of their community."

It suddenly hit me.

He's not talking to me.

Dr Bryce Edwards: Democracy Briefing - Why the Luxon leadership speculation will return


Christopher Luxon survived. Yesterday he walked into a National caucus meeting and called an unexpected confidence vote on his own leadership. He won it. The doubters didn’t put up. So for now, they’ve been told to shut up.

It’s the framing Luxon wants us to take away. And it’s not entirely wrong. It was a bold move. He called his detractors’ bluff, and they blinked. Stuff’s political editor Jenna Lynch put it best: “His doubters were told to put up or shut up. They didn’t put up anything. So for now they have to shut up.”

But the interesting question isn’t about Luxon surviving yesterday. It’s how long he goes before he has to do something like this again.

David Harvey: Creeping Control


How the Department of Internal Affairs Is Building a Social Media Surveillance Regime Before Parliament Has Spoken

The Bill and the Bureaucracy

A Bill is currently before Parliament. The Social Media (Age Restricted Users) Bill proposes to require providers of designated social media platforms to take all reasonable steps to prevent users under 16 from holding accounts.

The legislation has broad political support. It was introduced by National MP Catherine Wedd. National backs it. Labour will not miss an opportunity to regulate. The numbers are there. In some form it will pass.

What should concern New Zealanders is not the Bill itself — the question of whether social media is harmful to adolescents is legitimate and contested — but what is being built in its name, by whom, and on whose authority, before a single clause has become law.

On Monday 20 April 2026, the Department of Internal Affairs posted an advertisement for a Programme Implementation Director (PID) to lead the establishment of a new regulatory regime for under-16 social media restrictions. The advertisement described the programme as “high-profile” and “time-critical.”

By Wednesday 22 April, the advertisement had been withdrawn. Highly ironic for a Government agency that deals with censorship.

But not before its contents revealed, in the careful language of bureaucracy, exactly how far advanced the DIA’s preparations already are — and exactly why those preparations should alarm anyone who cares about civil liberties in New Zealand.

What the DIA Is — and Why That Matters

The Department of Internal Affairs is not a neutral administrative body. It is one of the most operationally powerful agencies in the New Zealand state. It issues passports and grants citizenship. It registers births, deaths, and marriages. It operates the RealMe digital identity verification service and administers the Digital Identity Services Trust Framework.

It enforces censorship law under the Films, Videos and Publications Classification Act 1993. It maintains internet blocklists, issues formal takedown notices to online platforms, and investigates and prosecutes individuals for objectionable content online.

Within the DIA, the unit being tasked with the social media age restriction programme is Digital Safety and Identity Investigations — the department’s self-described “front line against online harm.” This unit houses the Digital Child Exploitation Team, the Digital Violent Extremism Team, the content classification function, and the anti-spam enforcement operation. The Programme Implementation Director will sit within this branch, reporting to its General Manager.

This is not a technicality. It is a structural choice with profound implications. The agency now being handed the levers of a social media age verification regime is the same agency that decides what New Zealanders may legally view online, that operates the systems through which New Zealanders prove who they are, and that already holds the biometric data of every passport holder in the country.

The convergence of these functions in a single department — identity management, censorship enforcement, and now platform access regulation — is not the result of careful institutional design. It is the result of administrative convenience and the absence of political will to do this properly.

The Advertisement: Policy Before Law

The job description for the Programme Implementation Director (PID) makes clear that this is not exploratory or contingency work. The DIA is not preparing options for Ministers to consider once legislation passes. It is already designing the operational model, building the governance structures, defining the regulatory processes, and preparing to engage with social media companies about compliance expectations.

The role requires the PID to “lead organisation design for the Phase 1 regulator, ensuring clear accountabilities, scalability and alignment with policy intent” and to “lead the translation of legislative policy into operational settings, service models and regulatory processes.”

Early engagement with social media providers is already planned, with the PID expected to “support readiness, cooperation, and shared understanding of regulatory expectations.”

None of this is contingent on Parliamentary approval. The DIA is treating the Bill’s passage as a foregone conclusion — and acting accordingly.

There is a further irritant in the job description’s priorities. Among the listed responsibilities in a more detyailed job description which is, co-incidentally no longer available, is the requirement to ensure that

“Te Tiriti o Waitangi considerations are embedded in governance, design, engagement, and delivery of online safety interventions.”

This is, as a standalone aspiration, unobjectionable. But it sits in a document that contains not a single reference to the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, to freedom of expression under section 14, or to the requirement under section 5 that any limitation on fundamental rights be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

The preference for embedding vague Treaty considerations over statutory obligations to fundamental rights is revealing. It suggests that the DIA’s operational design is proceeding without adequate legal scrutiny of the legislation it is being asked to implement.

The Freedom of Expression Problem

The stated purpose of the Bill is narrow: to reduce harm to children from designated social media platforms.

But the mechanism required to enforce it is anything but narrow. To prevent under-16s from holding accounts, providers must verify that every account-holder is 16 or older. There is no workable age verification system that applies only to children. As Privacy Commissioner Michael Webster has stated plainly, “to ensure under-16s are not accessing social media, all users over 16 will be required to verify their age.”

This is the central paradox the Bill’s architects have not adequately addressed. A law designed to protect children’s privacy will require every adult in New Zealand to submit to identity verification simply to use the most common communication tools on the internet.

Social media is no longer a luxury or an entertainment product. It is where political debate occurs, where journalists publish, where protest is organised, where communities form and maintain themselves.

A regime that conditions entry to that space on prior identity verification does not merely inconvenience adults. It imposes a chilling effect on speech — the knowledge that participation is logged, verified, and traceable — that strikes at the foundation of free expression.

The Bill’s promoters have largely dismissed this concern, asserting the Bill does not breach the NZBORA without adequately explaining why mandatory identity verification as a condition of online speech constitutes a reasonable limitation demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

That is not an adequate answer. It is not, in fact, an answer at all. The New Zealand Council for Civil Liberties has expressed concern that the Bill infringes the Bill of Rights Act, the Privacy Act 2020, and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. These are not fringe objections. They are mainstream constitutional concerns that deserve rigorous legislative analysis, not dismissal.

The Identity Infrastructure Trap

The privacy risks of any age verification system are substantial. Webster has warned that such systems could rely on government-issued documents including passports, that age estimation technologies have high error rates, and that age inference technologies rely on data mining.

Each of these pathways creates risks of data collection, data retention, and data misuse that the Bill, as currently drafted, does not adequately address.

Australia’s equivalent legislation includes explicit protections: platforms are barred from requiring government-issued identity documents such as passports for age verification, and verified data must be promptly destroyed.

New Zealand’s Bill contains no equivalent safeguards. This is not an oversight. It is an open door through which the DIA’s existing identity infrastructure — RealMe, the Digital Identity Services Trust Framework, the Identity Check facial recognition service already used by more than 75,000 New Zealanders — could naturally expand into the governance of social media access.

The civil liberties organisation PILLAR has argued the Bill would do little to protect children but would instead “create serious privacy risks” and limit digital freedoms, warning that forcing citizens to share personal data for age verification could increase the risk of surveillance and data misuse. These concerns are not theoretical.

Any age verification system generates metadata at scale: records that a particular individual of a particular age sought access to a particular platform at a particular time. Even where underlying identity documents are not retained, this metadata is a surveillance resource of extraordinary scope. Verification tools that are supposed to delete data after processing have, in practice, stored that data for longer than declared, and data can be intercepted and stolen before deletion.

The DIA already holds the details and photographs of every passport holder. It already holds biometric data from the Identity Check facial recognition service.

Adding social media verification to this portfolio does not merely expand the DIA’s administrative remit. It creates a single point of failure — and a single point of potential abuse — for the digital identity of every New Zealander.

Censorship by Institutional Creep

The DIA’s censorship function is not peripheral to its operations. It is structural.

The Films, Videos and Publications Classification Act provides the legal foundation for the Digital Safety Group’s work, authorising the Department to restrict access to harmful content and prevent access to banned material.

The Department maintains internet blocklists, issues takedown notices to platforms, and investigates individuals for content-related offences. This is not passive regulation. It is active enforcement.

Placing this same agency in charge of designating which platforms are age-restricted — a power that rests with the Minister but which the DIA will operationalise — and of enforcing compliance creates an institutional pathway through which the scope of restricted content can expand over time.

Platforms designated as age-restricted become, in practical terms, platforms made difficult to access. The history of censorship regimes provides no examples of agencies that, once given authority to restrict access, consistently chose to exercise that authority narrowly. Institutional incentives run in the other direction.

The parliamentary Education and Workforce Committee acknowledged that VPNs can circumvent local restrictions — an observation that amounts to an admission that the regime will be technically ineffective against determined users. When enforcement fails against technically sophisticated users, the institutional pressure will be to expand enforcement powers, not to accept the limitation.

Under DIA administration, that pressure will fall on an agency already oriented, by its existing mandate, towards content control and platform restriction.

The Political Question Nobody Is Asking

The original location of this legislation, once the National Party decided to back it, was in the education portfolio, under Minister Erica Stanford. The inquiry by the Education and Workforce Committee, which received 430 submissions and produced two reports, reflected a harm prevention framework centred on children’s wellbeing and digital literacy. That inquiry — whatever its limitations — was at least grounded in the right institutional question: how do we protect children from online harm?

Somewhere between that inquiry and the DIA job advertisement, the framing shifted. The question is no longer how to protect children. It is how to build a regulatory enforcement regime — one that sits, not in the education sector, nor in an independent regulator, but in the same department that censors content, issues passports, builds digital identity infrastructure, and investigates citizens for what they say and share online.

That shift deserves political scrutiny it has not received. The ACT Minister previously responsible for the DIA — Brooke van Velden, who abandoned the ill-conceived Safer Online Services and Web Platforms project — is leaving politics. Her departure appears to have created a vacuum in which the DIA has been permitted to advance this programme without adequate ministerial oversight.

ACT’s stated position — that digital ID for age verification should not be a government priority, and that a careful, sophisticated response is needed — has been overtaken by events inside the department ACT is nominally responsible for.

The question of how pre-emptive platform regulation squares with ACT’s opposition to market intervention, and whether this programme represents a coalition concession by ACT, has not been answered publicly. It should be.

What Should Happen Instead

None of this is an argument that social media harm to children is not real, or that no legislative response is warranted. It is an argument about institutional design, the separation of powers, and the conditions under which fundamental rights can be legitimately constrained.

If New Zealand is to implement a social media age restriction regime, it should do so by establishing an independent online safety regulator — as the parliamentary committee itself recommended — rather than assigning administration to the DIA.

It should prohibit the use of government-issued identity documents for age verification, as Australia has done.

It should require immediate destruction of all verification data after each transaction is completed.

It should subject any designated verification system to independent oversight by the Privacy Commissioner.

And it should ensure that the legislation contains robust, judicially reviewable protections for freedom of expression — not a perfunctory assertion that the Bill raises no rights concerns.

The protection of children from online harm and the protection of adult New Zealanders from an overreaching surveillance state are not competing priorities.

A properly designed regime can honour both.

What the DIA is building — before the legislation has passed, without adequate rights analysis, in a department that already combines identity management, censorship enforcement, and digital infrastructure administration — does not honour either.

Post Script

The withdrawal of the job advertisement two days after it was posted suggests that someone, somewhere, recognised the problem. That is not reassuring. It means the programme continues — only now, less visibly.

As it happens a new advertisement was posted here after this article was finished. It makes little difference to the article and its argument although some of the language is less strident.

Positive words like “will” and “can” become “could”. References to a “regulatory regime” becomes a “potential new regime”.

Importantly a detailed document relating to the expectations of the applicant in various key areas which was referenced with a link in the original advertisement is not mentioned. This document contains quite a bit of detail that is now less visible.

The words may have changed but the message and the sentiment remain the same.

David Harvey is a former District Court Judge and Mastermind champion, as well as an award winning writer who blogs at the substack site A Halflings View - Where this article was sourced

David Farrar: Which media the right don’t trust at all


The AUT Trust in Media survey had this graph [below]:

It shows many NZers who are on the right are allergic to Radio NZ, TVNZ, Stuff, The Spinoff and Three News. Those newsrooms could consider what they could do to change that.

JC: The Right Are Getting It Wrong


War always comes with a price but you have to weigh up if is it a price worth paying. Churchill thought so and so does Trump.

The right are right but are getting it wrong to prove themselves right. If you think that is a piece of gobbledygook, you are not wrong in coming to the right conclusion.

A good example is Leo McKinstry, who writes a weekly column published in the International Express, the sister paper of the UK’s Daily Express.

Simon O'Connor: Rinse and repeat


National's current woes are not unique to them as a political party, but instead indicative of cultural and structural problems within New Zealand's political landscape.

Another week, another round of speculation on the leadership of the National Party. As I write, the latest iteration has been put to bed with Christopher Luxon calling a vote on his leadership and winning.

Alwyn Poole: The World’s Most Educated Countries


Versions of below have been in media around the world in the last two weeks.

“In its 2026 assessment, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development highlighted the world’s most educated countries, pointing to strong higher education access and sustained investment in learning.

David Farrar: Tax everything


Tax Justice Aotearoa have published their wishlist for a Labour-Green-TPM Government, and it can be summed up as tax everything. They Wishlist includes:

 Thursday April 23, 2026 

                   

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Ian Bradford: The Sixty Year Climate Cycle which Strongly Suggests Climate Change is a Natural Process

Jupiter is our largest and heaviest planet. Its gravitational attraction affects all the other planets in our solar system. Since 1900 the global surface temperature of the Earth has risen by about 0.8 Deg C., and since the 1970’s by about 0.5 Deg C. According to the Anthropogenic Global Warming Theory (AGWT), humans have caused more than 90% of global warming since 1900 and virtually 100% of the global warming since 1970. The AGWT is currently advocated by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, (IPCC), which is the leading body for the assessment of climate change. Many scientists believe that further emissions of greenhouse gases could endanger humanity. 

Perspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: What took National's leadership team so long here?


The fightback has started, hasn’t it?

National’s leadership team have clearly come out of yesterday’s caucus meeting with very clear instructions: get the National Party vote back off New Zealand First. And they’ve come out hard.

Rodney Hide: The Herald’s Shameful Attempt to Overthrow a Democratically Elected Prime Minister


On Tuesday 21 April 2026, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon called for a formal confidence vote in his leadership and won it decisively. The issue, he stated, was now settled. Yet in the preceding weeks, the New Zealand Herald, under the direction of its political editor Thomas Coughlan, had conducted what amounted to a sustained, calculated campaign aimed at destabilising and ultimately removing a democratically elected Prime Minister.

Karl du Fresne: Pushing the views that suit them


It’s verging on dishonesty for RNZ to describe political commentator Janet Wilson as a former National Party press secretary, as it did yesterday in an item about the reported unrest in the National caucus, as if her former status endows her opinion with special force or credibility.
For the record, Wilson described National as a “slow-slip political earthquake” and “a miasma of nothingness”. These were damning words. The unmistakeable implication was that if Wilson is dissing Christopher Luxon then the party must be in a truly dire predicament – because after all, isn’t she supposed to be on National’s side?

Gary Judd KC: Dare to be a Daniel


Dare to be a Daniel
Dare to stand alone
Dare to have a purpose firm
Dare to make it known

So runs the refrain in a nineteenth century hymn inspired by the biblical story in the Book of Daniel, of a Jewish captive in Babylon (a region compromising parts of present-day Iraq and Syria, with the city of Babylon about 85 km south of today’s Baghdad). According to the account Daniel’s rivals tricked Babylonian King Darius into signing a decree that forbade praying to anyone but King Darius. Despite knowing the penalty was death, Daniel went home and prayed three times a day with his windows open toward Jerusalem, as was his custom. He was thrown into a den of lions, but God “shut the lions’ mouths,” and he was found unharmed the next morning. Furious, Darius had the conspirators “cast … into the den of lions, them, their children, and their wives; and the lions had the mastery of them, and brake all their bones in pieces or ever they came at the bottom of the den.”

Graham Adams: Media talks up Winston Peters’ rise


The path to election glory has traps.

NZ First’s prospects at the election after a run of good polling are being talked up by increasingly enthusiastic commentators. But if a week is a long time in politics, more than six months is an eternity. And there are traps aplenty for the party to navigate before November 7.

Listening to the media, however, you might think the continuing rise of Winston Peters and NZ First is unstoppable.

Ani O'Brien: Luxon wins confidence vote, what now?


Media fails to roll the Prime Minister

Today must end it. After a weeks and months of constant cycles of breathless speculation, anonymous briefings, and increasingly hysterical headlines, Christopher Luxon walked into caucus, forced the issue, and called a vote of confidence on his own leadership. It passed.

That has to be it. Line drawn in the sand.

Guest Post: Time to change the record?

A guest post by Michael Littlewood on Kiwiblog.

Is anyone else a little tired of articles that tell us we aren’t saving enough for our retirement, or that the country can’t afford New Zealand Superannuation (NZS)? Most seem fuelled by KiwiSaver providers or financial advisers who tell us we don’t know what we are doing; also that we need the government to force us out of our apparent indifference. Or even that the financial sky is falling in, or will be.

Instead of acting as the voice for financial service providers, why don’t reporters do some research; ask some questions; demand answers?

Dr Bryce Edwards: Democracy Briefing - The Devil in the detail of NZ First's supermarket reform


Winston Peters has smartly read the room for a second time this month. Just weeks after announcing NZ First would campaign to break up the big four electricity gentailers, he has turned his sights on the supermarket duopoly: announcing that a future NZ First government would legislate to split Foodstuffs into two nationwide cooperatives based on brand: one for New World and Four Square, and another for Pak’n Save. Both, Peters says, would then compete directly with Woolworths.