The battle over the words on our passports says a lot more about New Zealand than we’d like to admit.
So, they’re flipping the words on the cover of the New Zealand passport… again. New Zealand is to return to sit above Aotearoa. Cue the headlines. Cue the outrage. Cue the proverbial dick measuring. Cue the race-baiting.
If I’m honest? I really don’t care. Not about the order of the words on the cover, anyway. Put them sideways and make them into an acrostic poem for all I care. I look at it only briefly as I endure the queues, the nudie scanners, the sniffer dogs, and the Duty Free deals. But, unfortunately, this entire kerfuffle, and the way it causes people to lose their minds on both sides of it, does matter. Because it’s not really about the words. That so many Kiwis care about it shows this is a symptom of a much bigger problem.

The passport debacle is a microcosm of the slow-burning cultural tension that has been building in New Zealand for years. It’s about the cultural revolution that accelerated in the past decade sending us hurtling into inevitable conflict over things we didn’t ever previously give a toss about.
When the word Aotearoa started appearing more prominently in public life, most Kiwis didn’t mind. In fact, a lot of us thought it was a nice touch; an acknowledgment of heritage, a nod to the history of this land. We were told it was just a gesture of inclusion. That it was about respect, dual heritage, embracing both names as part of our national identity. Most Kiwis were fine with that. Shrugged and moved on.
But somewhere along the way, inclusion morphed into dominance. What began as a well-meaning effort to honour Māori language and culture has, in the hands of our cultural elites, become a tool for ideological conformity and social stratification.
It’s not really about te reo, tikanga, or even Māori. It’s about power. The university-educated, bureaucratically-ensconced, BlueSky-scrolling class have seized on te ao Māori as a mechanism through which to assert their own moral superiority over the “low-status” masses. It’s a modern version of the noble savage trope only this time, the reverence isn’t for the culture itself, but for what revering it allows them to do.
By elevating mātauranga Māori to sacred, unchallengeable status, above science, above secularism, above democratic consensus, these cultural elites get to draw a bright line between the enlightened and the ignorant. They get to be the priest class. They can sneer at the plumber in Palmerston North who doesn’t want his kids doing karakia at school, and tell themselves they’re not just smarter, but better.
Again, this isn’t about inclusion. It’s about social subjugation masquerading as virtue. A new pecking order has been established where fluency in ideological te reo and performative wokeness opens doors in public service, academia, and media while ordinary Kiwis are gaslit for noticing their own growing discomfort. You’re not allowed to question it. You’re not allowed to ask for clarity. If you do, you’re dismissed as backward, racist, colonial; a problem to be fixed or, preferably, ignored.
It’s the soft totalitarianism of the elite: cloaked in cultural empathy, enforced by social shame, and dressed up in kupu Māori.
Today, we’re swimming in a sea of te ao Māori frameworks, mandatory karakia in secular spaces, and public servants scrambling to prove their cultural credentials rather than deliver basic services. The line between recognising Māori as tangata whenua and enforcing a cultural ideology across every aspect of national life has become increasingly blurry and people have noticed.
This is where the so-called “paranoid racists” (the slippery slope crowd) get to say: told you so.
They warned us when we said “what harm is there?” and now we are watching government departments drop New Zealand altogether. Ministries, agencies, taxpayer-funded media… all doubling down on Aotearoa as the default. The same voices that insisted, “No one is replacing the name New Zealand,” now ask, with smug derision, “What’s wrong with getting rid of it?”
We’ve moved from reassurance to gaslighting. From “don’t worry, it’s just inclusion” to “if you question it, you’re a racist.” Preferring to use the internationally recognised, official name of our country is now considered “coded white supremacy.”
And it doesn’t stop with language. New Zealanders see public health campaigns wrapped in spiritual cosmologies. They see science institutions redefining the very concept of knowledge to appease a political ideology. They see schoolchildren, most of whom aren’t Māori, and many whose families have different religious beliefs, led in karakia multiple times a day as if they’re attending a religious school, not a secular public school.
I worked in the public service for a few years and I didn’t think twice about participating in karakia, waiata, and tikanga when interacting with Māori communities and iwi. Being culturally sensitive is good manners in my view. I took advantage of the taxpayer-funded te reo lessons available to us and thoroughly enjoyed them.
Where I got frustrated was when we frequently had upwards of five meetings a day (always called hui) and in each of these meetings at least the first ten minutes (but usually longer) would be dedicated to ritualistic introductions and karakia. Most of these meetings were internal or with other public servants who we regularly interacted with. I tried once to figure out how much of my taxpayer-funded time was being dedicated to sitting through these performances. In a week I might attend around 25-30 hui (yes, that is a horrendous amount but it is how the public service operates) if we play it on the conservative side and say ten minutes of each meeting was karakia and pepeha that is 250-300 minutes each week. Four or five hours each week. Now multiple that by the 600 people who worked in the same building as me.
On top of that, a few times a week there was a “non-compulsory” “lunch time” waiata practice in our unit. It was explicitly not mandatory, but socially suicidal to skip it. Led by the cabal of middle-class white women who were the most ferocious enforcers of all things Māori, they made sure that choosing not to attend was not worth the grief that came with it. Only racists and people not sufficiently aware of their own privileges wouldn’t attend. The half hour of singing was officially a lunch time activity so that if someone sent in an Official Information Act request they wouldn’t find that taxes were being spent paying the generous salaries of professionals to sing out-of-tune. But everyone took their full lunch break as well as attending practice.
I could write many essays on the waste and ridiculousness that goes on in the public service, but in my opinion the performative Māorification of all things bureaucratic has created a waste behemoth. It might feel good for university-educated white professionals to sing and speak in te reo, but it does nothing to ensure the provision of effective public services to Māori nor non-Māori.
This isn’t about shared heritage and a unifying shared modern culture. It’s about which heritage gets to dominate the national narrative and who gets to impose it. Aotearoa isn’t being welcomed alongside New Zealand anymore. It’s replacing it. And with it comes a wider cultural framework that many people never consented to and are being punished for resisting.
And when they do push back? When they say, “hang on a minute… didn’t we agree this was about inclusion, not replacement?” they’re dismissed. Branded as bigots. Called colonisers. Accused of being white supremacists, no matter their actual ethnicity, background, or intent.
The entire game has shifted. What started as a promise of respect has become a demand for submission.
Which brings us back to the passport. The government is now reverting the cover text to the previous layout with English first and the backlash is predictably furious. Apparently, putting the name of our country in the language spoken by 98% of the population above the version spoken conversationally by 4% is a colonial act of violence. Meanwhile, the people cheering the change back seem convinced it’s the first step toward dismantling co-governance and restoring the “real New Zealand”.
It’s a bloody passport cover! We should hate the people who have turned our chill, cohesive nation into this.
The reason this otherwise banal decision provokes such an emotional response is because people have stopped trusting the motivations behind language changes. They’re not seen as neutral. Not anymore. They’re seen as signals: political, ideological, and divisive.
And that’s the real problem. We’ve let our national identity become a culture war. Every shift in language, every karakia before a meeting, every government policy draped in te reo becomes a battlefield in a fight for control. We can’t even agree on a name for our country without turning it into a bloodletting exercise.
So no, I’m not wound up about the passport. But I am wound up that we’ve arrived at a place where people can’t distinguish between cultural recognition and cultural imposition. Where using Māori names is no longer about embracing heritage, it’s about enforcing allegiance. And where something as symbolic as a passport cover becomes just another weapon in a war of attrition over who we are as a nation.
It’s not the passport, it’s the pattern. That’s what people are reacting to and maybe, just maybe, it’s time the Government listened. So no, the passport change won’t impact anyone’s ability to travel. But for many New Zealanders, it’s yet another reminder that their own language, culture, and values are no longer welcome parts of national identity; they’re being edged out, reframed, and derided. And that growing sense of alienation? That’s where the real danger lies.
Ani O'Brien comes from a digital marketing background, she has been heavily involved in women's rights advocacy and is a founding council member of the Free Speech Union. This article was originally published on Ani's Substack Site and is published here with kind permission.
19 comments:
100% Ani. If only Luxon would read much of what is written on Breaking Views and understand thousands of those who voted for him, only did so to reverse the Māori takeover. If an anonymous poll offered to those leaving the country asked -“Has the deterioration of racial attitudes in NZ been a driver for your departure from NZ?”- I would not be surprised if 99% said yes.
Thank you for such a beautifully written piece.
This sums it up perfectly "The entire game has shifted. What started as a promise of respect has become a demand for submission.",
we have had enough!!!!!
Fantastic piece Ani, thank you.
This sums it up beautifully "The entire game has shifted. What started as a promise of respect has become a demand for submission.
We are all sick of it !!!!!!!!!!!!!
Aotearoa was once used with affection.
Aotearoa is now used as an affectation.
Aotearoa has been weaponised.
Is this a symptom of a much bigger problem?
You bet it is.
Indeed, it is everywhere. Check out this organization...
https://www.pw.co.nz/
No, it's not" just a passport cover." The issue has two main components. The first is: The democracy issue. A country name has significant value and therefore all citizens should be consulted. It means something when travelling overseas and I have found "New Zealand" to be well respected. Aotearoa is confusing and sounds like a pacific atoll.
Secondly: The Maori name for New Zealand was never Aotearoa. That was bequeathed by a British or European settler. You might as well refer to Italy as Pizza land. As well as that 80% or more of us don't speak Maori. We are happy with the name of our country.
An excellent commentary Ani, striking right at the heart of this country's problems. I have no worries with being called any of the pejorative terms used against those of us who not only are cultural chauvinists (and for very good reasons, seeing what we have done for New Zealand and its development) but see the past clearly. Since 1642 explorers, colonists, settlers from the highly advanced cultural centres of Europe have made New Zealand. The stone-age peoples that first settled here have, in concrete terms done little or nothing, if extirpating much of the native biota can be termed nothing. In other words, we, the Europeans, have every right to be proud of our ancestry and achievements, and our language and culture should be pre-eminent. We have not been, and will not be, the lackeys of a Neolithic culture that seeks to drag us back 10 000 years. We need to ensure constant exposure of the rubbish we are being forced to swallow and to put pressure on politicians who, unfortunately at present, seem to have all the resolve of eunuchs in a bordello.
Nice piece Ani, thank you! I do agree with Janine though that "it's not just a passport cover" but would frame it by fact that these are one of very few critical identification documents, i.e. about WHO you are. I, for example am not one from Mumbo Jumbo Land. Increasingly becoming evident to me that the absolute worst period in our so-called colonialist history (so far) is right now. The colonists have simply forgotten who they are, and where they came from while conveniently forgetting all of the sacrifices made along the way. It is their own loss of identity that has created this dangerous vacuum.
Excellent article, Ani.
You are absolutely right ! The move to apartheid in New Zealand has accelerated over the last decade to the extent that New Zimbabwe is almost here.
Political parties are a farce, a species of entertainment to beguile the population in our pretend democracy, while the real power, “City of London Corporation”, shapes our future and demands it’s extortion. Fifty years ago, the slow creep towards turning NZ into an “apartheid ethnostate” began.
An apartheid ethnostate defines its national identity and citizenship based on ethnicity, meaning it privileges one ethnic group over others, while implementing policies and practices similar to apartheid, meaning it actively discriminates against and segregates certain ethnic or racial groups, denying them equal rights and opportunities.
Apartheid is explicitly prohibited under international law as a crime against humanity, while ethnostates are not necessarily illegal, but may raise concerns about human rights and discrimination.
How comes it that when radical activists change something we’re all supposed to shut up because “progress” but when it’s changed back it’s all, “Why do you care so much? Why are you so divisive? Why you making it a big deal?”
Most people would never have waded into a culture war without being dragged in by the insanity and derangement of pseudo-Marxists.
Another great article from Ani whom, it seems, likewise resents being in the middle of a battle she didn’t want to fight.
An excellent item . Now the important - and essential - issue is to fight back. Luxon must be forced to face political survival for his lack of respect for our democracy and the numerous voters who placed their trust in him.
As dual nationals looking to go back to Australia because of precisely what Ani has laid out here we are appalled at what is going on in both Countries since Albo & Co are promoting exactly what Ardern started over here. Ani is 100% correct and Luxon is doing little to arrest the rot. The only conundrum for us, which Country is the least dangerous to our future?
Should we have a referendum on the name of our country?Maori activists would say that even asking the question is "racist".
EXACTLY, Anon !!!
We have 120 Members of Parliament, all of whom are not only expected, but required by their Oaths to have the best interests of ALL NZers in mind.
However, we have the leaders of National, Labour, Greens, TPM, all telling their MPs to fall in line and not utter a word against the apartheid they are inflicting on every NZer.
Which MP is going to break the moral, ethical silence and break ranks and speak out ?
Otherwise, more of the Third Reich intimidation techniques.
How likely is Breaking Views about to be censored ?
Indeed the country has reached that precise point. Any action which does not please radical Maori will trigger protest and even violence. Think of the Hikoi reaction to the Treaty Principles Bill.
And think what will happen if any party except the Left wins in 2026 , The radical Maori plan is now for the Left to be - and stay in power permanently .
That is why a referendum is essential - but not on the country's name. The subject is NS's status as a democracy OR ethno-state.
My first Passport was received early 1950s and clearly labelled:
"British Subject : New Zealand Citizen". I was , and am, proud of it.
Later passports have Maori words on the cover. I was less than pleased and humiliated when asked by foreigners what they meant and had to say, like most of us, I don't know. Not only myself but virtually the whole of the human race does not know yet this document is our introduction to the world. What sort of brain-dead officials made our passports yet another vehicle of racist thought?
Several comments refer to the role and duties of PM Luxon and MPs due to their oaths of office . No PM of NZ and no NZ parliament has the right to transform NZ from a democracy into an ethno-state without consulting the citizens as to their preferred status. Why is the PM avoiding his duty in this regard?
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