Pages

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.

Breaking Views Update: Week of 19.4.26







Thursday April 23, 2026 

News:
Wairoa iwi seeks removal of Goldsmith as Treaty Negotiations Minister

A Hawke's Bay post-settlement iwi trust has written to the Prime Minister calling for the removal of Paul Goldsmith as the Minister of Treaty Negotiations.

Iwi trust chairperson Pieri Munro told RNZ that Goldsmith should not have oversight of negotiations affecting Wairoa iwi, after his decision to transfer six Department of Conservation reserves to a neighbouring iwi.

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.

Dave Patterson: Sudan Civil War - A Horrendous Human Crisis


While the world’s attention has been captured by the Iran conflict and the Russian-Ukrainian war, lives are being lost at a horrendous rate in Northeast Africa. The Sudan civil war is entering its fourth year with no end in sight. Sides have been established, and fighting is continuous and brutal. The losers have been hundreds of thousands of hapless Sudanese caught in the middle.

War Continues in Sudan

Kerre Woodham: What happened to common sense and looking after yourself?


They're damned if they do and damned if they don't, aren't they? Last week people were castigating MetService for overhyping the incoming storm. And I would argue it wasn't MetService who were overhyping it, it was the media making an absolute meal out of it. Today, people are calling out MetService for not getting enough warning about the life-threatening rain and winds that are slamming Wellington and the Wairarapa district as we speak.

Whatever happened to looking after yourself? Gathering the information, you need and making decisions based on that? We seem to have descended into a national state of learned helplessness.

David Farrar: Do it Goldie!

Stuff reports:

The Government is weighing changes to the Broadcasting Standards Authority, with Media and Communications Minister Paul Goldsmith signalling disestablishment is currently his preferred option.

Goldsmith says no final decision has been made, but confirmed the Government is considering whether to retain the authority, redefine its role, or scrap it entirely, NZ Herald reported. …

Wednesday April 22, 2026 

                    

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Ngāi Tahu Attempt Shakedown Of The Santana Mining Project


On The Platform, Michael Laws chats about another Ngāi Tahu grift scandal, the attempted shakedown of the Santana mining project in this short video.

Click to view

Ryan Bridge: Luxon needs more than his base to win the election


People hate the media so hating on the media is not a bad strategy.

It's worked for Winston over many decades, although the bloke only needs 10% of people to like his style, most find it a bit abrasive.

As I've said previously, Ministers are the de-facto top brass in the caucus.

Perspective with Heather du Plessis-Allan: You've got to respect Chris Luxon's courage


Well, blow me down - they had a leadership vote in caucus, called by Chris Luxon himself, and he survived.

Good on him for doing that. That is exactly what I said he had to do if he wanted to shut this stuff down for the next week and a bit that Parliament has left to sit.

Ryan Bridge: Kiwis actually love Butter Chicken, Shane


Take away migrants from our economy and the thing pretty much falls apart.

This is not Europe, where they're overrun with migrant boats and expensive hotel bills to house the passengers.

This is not the US, where illegal migrants poured across a porous border.

Mike's Minute: The issue the Govt promised to address


You’ll be aware of the Far North Council and their unelected Māori voting plan.

It is of course a scandal, but more importantly it is part of the overall de-Māorification of the economy this current Government, in one form or another, promised to address.

The fact this stuff is still going on proves they are failing.

JC: Where to From Here for National?


In 1961, Adam Wade in America and Tommy Steele in the UK both had hits with the song “The Writing on the Wall”. Sixty-five years later, those words should be ringing in Christopher Luxon’s ears but I don’t think they will. No leader likes the idea of losing the crown, particularly one with the self-belief that Luxon apparently holds. He has some similarities with disastrous UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer in terms of low poll ratings and a reluctance to do the obvious and resign as leader. We have now had too many polls saying much the same thing – showing that Luxon as leader of the party is not a winner with the public.