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Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Karl du Fresne: A masterclass in damage control, and Labour's PR flunkies didn't have to lift a finger


It has been fascinating to observe the media’s treatment of allegations against Labour leader Chris Hipkins by his ex-wife. 

The first thing to note was the uniformity of the coverage. It was as if the political editors of the mainstream news outlets hurriedly got their heads together when the news broke yesterday and decided on a common approach.

The stories were all brief and couched in “nothing to see here, folks” language. They all made the same points: that the claims were “unsubstantiated” and that no one was accusing Hipkins of doing anything unlawful.

All the reports focused on Hipkins’ denials of his former wife’s damning claims. But crucially, not one explained what the allegations were. So the public were left in the dark.

Labour’s media team couldn’t have asked for a more obliging response. It has been a masterclass in damage control, and for all we know the Labour PR apparatchiks didn’t have to do a thing.

The stories also emphasised that the private Facebook post by Hipkins’ ex-wife, Jade Paul, had since been taken down – the clear implication being that at the very least she had had second thoughts, or that her claims were defamatory or untrue.

She has now said, however, that she stands by her post, which appears to have been triggered by a Labour Party election policy statement that she regarded as hypocritical.

“So many women are hurt by high profile men who just do what they want with no consequences,” Paul wrote in a subsequent post.

“We get told all of the time that if we speak out then our lives will be ruined, our kids will be impacted. We get labelled as ‘crazy’ or defamatory when we tell the truth.

“Today I have had enough.”

So what are Jade Paul’s claims? Essentially, that Hipkins treated her cruelly – for example, leaving her to drive herself home in a bloodied hospital gown after she miscarried because he was too busy to visit her and bring her clothes, and refusing to help after their brief marriage ended when she couldn’t afford groceries, saying their two children were her responsibility in the weeks she had them.

If true, the allegations are a damaging reflection on Hipkins’ character. In a brief statement, he rejected them “entirely” and said he didn’t intend to make any further comment. The stories also reported that Hipkins was taking legal advice (subtext: “I am the wronged party here”).

Will that be enough to settle public questions about the man who wants to be our next prime minister? I don’t think so.

The tone of the media coverage was summed up by a headline on the RNZ website: “Chris Hipkins’ ex-wife makes series of unsubstantiated claims about him”. It accompanied a relatively brief story by RNZ’s political editor Craig McCulloch.

It was a very peculiar headline in which the key word was “unsubstantiated”. It’s a word I don’t think I’ve seen before in hundreds of stories reporting accusations against politicians.

It neatly shifted the focus from the claims themselves to the fact that they were “unsubstantiated”. This could have been read as meaning they had no basis in fact (which is in itself unsubstantiated), or at the very least that they lacked credibility.

But “claims” are, by their very nature, unsubstantiated, and the media are not in the habit of inserting this loaded word in stories about allegations about politicians. Was this a case of RNZ acting on over-cautious legal advice, or did it decide the claims couldn’t possibly be truthful, that Hipkins’ reputation had been unfairly tarnished and it was the media’s duty to protect him by shutting the story down?

Here’s another thing to consider: would RNZ, and the media at large, have been so deferential if the accused politician had been, say, David Seymour? Hmm.

The claims against Hipkins presented the media with a crucial test. Public trust in journalists, as measured by opinion polls, has never been lower. That low level of trust is at least partially attributable to the public perception that journalists overwhelmingly lean left and that they give politicians of the left a free pass.

This perception was cemented during Jacinda Ardern’s prime ministership, when Beehive press conferences were an exercise in sycophancy and voices of dissent against the government were marginalised, ignored and shunned as pariahs. Bizarrely, National in opposition was subjected to harsher scrutiny – some of it merciless – than the party that was in power.

The government has since changed, and with it the tone of political reportage. Journalists and broadcasters who were obsequious toward the former government are notable for having magically rediscovered their killer instincts. Government politicians and policies are subjected to a level of aggressive scrutiny that was markedly absent during the Ardern years.

The disclosures by Hipkins’ ex-wife gave the media a chance to redeem themselves – to restore public faith in the willingness of political journalists to apply the blowtorch to the left as well as the right. And they blew it.

They could have reported the nature of the claims against Hipkins while making it clear they were unsubstantiated. That’s how the media in previous times would have dealt with the story.

There is a crucial matter of public interest here, and I don’t mean mere idle curiosity about the private lives of party leaders.

The accusations against Hipkins go to the heart of his character. New Zealanders are entitled to know what sort of man is putting himself forward to lead the country.

The claims against him may be false or unfair, but in other comparable countries – Australia, Britain and the US – you can be sure they would have been all over the front page. The public would have been told what he was accused of, Hipkins would have been given ample opportunity to defend himself and in due course the court of public opinion would reach a verdict.

But no, not in New Zealand. Here the media try to extinguish the story as a non-event and expect the public to accept soothing assurances by a leading female Labour MP, Barbara Edmonds, that “marriage break ups are hard”, the implication being that Jade Paul has lashed out in anger because she’s hurting.

The tone of Edmonds’ statement struck me as patronising. It also raised an interesting question about Labour Party feminists and their solidarity, or lack of it, with a woman who claims to have been badly treated. Perhaps loyalty to the party takes priority over all other considerations.

I don’t know whether Jade Paul’s claims are true, although to me they have the ring of truth. They don’t strike me as the sort of stories someone would make up. But the bottom line is that the public are entitled to know what she has alleged, and it’s the media’s duty to tell them.

Karl du Fresne, a freelance journalist, is the former editor of The Dominion newspaper. He occasionally blogs at karldufresne.blogspot.com where this article was sourced.

27 comments:

Ken S said...

To me the real scandal is that Hipkins was in Sydney on "holiday". How many holidays do these cretins get?

Anonymous said...

I eagerly await release of the text messages. They will be unable to be ignored or spun.

Anonymous said...

Ah, just asking questions huh? People who have read the book Dirty Politics can see what you’re up to here, mate. It doesn’t matter how many paragraphs you spit. National’s flunkeys may not have any good ideas, so they resort to the classics. As you were.

Anna Mouse said...

'The disclosures by Hipkins’ ex-wife gave the media a chance to redeem themselves'.......but they chose not to, again.
This will do more damage to an already damaged profession.
Are they so self absorbed, so wrapped in their on bubble of political ideology that they have truly forgotten why they exist? If so, then this will be the reason they cease to exist!

K said...

Leaves quite a nasty trail doesn't he? Remember the 'we'll hunt you down'...

LNF said...

Headline The Post "Labour Party leader Chris Hipkins in tears yesterday denying ex-wife’s claims, including affair"

Anonymous said...

Karl, well said. No bias in the far left media, ......yeh right!! Defund.

Anonymous said...

I recently read, via Breaking Views an article that related to how the NZ public was treated via our MSM. The Author used a word (Russian) Pravda, which means truth.
In Russian there are two Media outlets (print) - Pravda & Izvestia. Both are controlled by The State and only print what the State want placed before the Russian people, A good example, of recent times has been the war in Ukraine, and what has been placed in print, for public consumption, is "how and why Russia invaded Ukraine and how the war is being won". What is missing is the catastrophic loss of life of Russian Military personnel and equipment.
Comparison, Ardern - The Public Interest Journalism Fund, a Govt "way" of buying the MSM, who would have found that what was in the 'contract' and what was required of them, was "the promotion of truth (from the podium) as espoused by Ardern et.al.
Readers, keep in mind Ardern was an avid Socialist, a trait gained & learned whilst overseas and me "thinks" was considered an excellent employment requirement by Helen Clark, for whom Ardern worked, for the 9 years of the Clark Govt, on the 9th Floor as (?) a Communications person.
As to RNZ, well they are the equivalent of the BBC (UK), ABC (Australia), CBC (Canada), CNN (America) - all of whom 'espouse the truth, from the podium', the Govt can do no wrong, with exception to CNN who "have an avid dislike" for Trump.
If you think Hipkins is a liar, then please look at who sits around him, there are many within the Labour ranks (current), that have a common problem - "forked tongues".

Anonymous said...

Good on the media for not taking the bait. Gutter politics has no place in my country. There are issues facing everyday New Zealanders, in case you didn’t notice, and the government is asleep at the wheel. National pulling all the dirty tricks it can to distract. Shame on you.

Anonymous said...

Anon 831 is misinformed if she thinks Clark was a socialist. She was a pure politician, as pure as John Key. Neither really believed in anything beyond picking which way the wind is blowing and setting course accordingly. Some commenters these days, no sense of critical thought, much less memory of even recent past. Throw the word ‘socialism’ in and you’re away, forget facts, they don’t have the ring of boogeyman magic words.

Anonymous said...

I wonder if the anti-democracy Mcfaulty had a hand in this outing. Underhand tactics being a specialty of the left.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for your clarity Karl. Personally I am glad to be a substack subscriber. I have seen the screenshot of the Facebook comment by Ms Paul. Hipkins deserves to be roasted. He is not fit to be our Prime Minister.

Anonymous said...

Any source to back that one up Anon 932, or is it from the standard internet gutter?

Chuck Bird said...

Hipkins proved again he was a liar. He said he did everything he could to keep his kids out of politics. It turns out that he did an article for some woman's magazine when he married Jade Paul and mentioned his children. He has done anoher article about getting married to his wife to be and mentioned their children.

In both cases he used his children for political purposes. He wanted to come across as a good family man.

Hipkins is a proven liar. I have not heard anythinng about Jade Paul so I would give her the benifit of the doubt.

I doubt if Hipkins will sue be for calling him a liar.

Anonymous said...

Someone who used to work in media actually does know how this stuff works. They know how journalism is done. The irony in that person going on to say - in the same paragraph, mind you - that “I don’t know whether Jade Paul’s claims are true” as well as “it’s the media’s duty to tell them” is so rich that NZ could become a net metal exporter.

This is all just flailing because the current right wing government doesn’t know how to run the country and has made a complete mess of the economy. We know how Dirty Politics played out, people like Karl just think people are too stupid to remember.

Anonymous said...

Hipkins's tears yesterday was pathetic. A man accused of willful neglect of his wife and kids comes out fighting, not playing the victim. A man would be indignant if he was accused of not coming to his wife's side during the miscarriage of their child.

Anonymous said...

Any chance that the media is going to drag Hipkin's mother, Rosemary, through the wringer for all her racist control of our children's education ?

Anonymous said...

The issue I think is that what Jade Paul says about Hipkin's treatment of her doesn't line up with the Labour Party's image of 'kindness and caring' particularly towards women that they wish to portray. Therefore Hipkin's is a hypocrite . Women's vote is important to the Labour party.

Anonymous said...

Some real gutter politics in this thread. Breaking Views is better than being a gossip column.

Anonymous said...

What a load of muck-raking

Anonymous said...

A miscarriage is one of the most physically and mentally traumatic events that can occur in a woman’s life. Any real man would drop everything to be with his woman in her time of need. Other real men understand that sometimes other things need to be our back at such a tlme. It’s that simple.

Anonymous said...

To Anon 12.08. The darkest site I visit is probably BV. The comment comes from years of observing left behaviour.They display no loyalty, even to fellow travellers. Where is Jacinda now? The skid marks speak volumes.

Anonymous said...

We’ve read Dirty Politics, Karl. We know what you’re up to.

Anonymous said...

The world’s on fire and NZ isn’t alone getting smacked in the face with stray embers. I couldn’t give a damn about Chippy’s private life.

CJ said...

No crime so I'm not interested and I don't even like Chris Hipkins, I think he represents the idiocy of the former government and have no interest in protecting him. That said, many of the best leaders historically have been flawed but in the modern world they would have been torn apart for some past mistake. How many great people have not stepped up to lead because they worried their entire history would be crawled through for something to cancel them for?

Eamon Sloan said...

I hadn’t followed the Hipkins issue so much until I saw his TV appearance where he was obviously just holding things together. He was under extreme stress. My reaction to those situations is to say to myself “TV loves to make people cry”. He ought to have declined all interviews, shut the doors and said nothing.

In reading Karl’s piece here the first thing that came to mind was the quote: “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned”. More about that further on. This is election year and maybe Jade Paul will eventually be seen as the one who wrote Chris Hipkins’ political death warrant – intentionally or otherwise.

I can go along with most of Karl’s points. I understand fully the politician’s position in asking the media not to go after family members. In this case Jade Paul could be regarded as ex-family. Does that make her fair game and Chris Hipkins at the same time?

I don’t know a lot about the inner workings of Facebook. I am not a Facebook user and I have always described it as a snake pit. Jade Paul’s original post was supposedly private. If the issue was publicised by a so-called associate does that prove my snake pit point?

Hell hath no fury etc. Like many others I assumed the quote was from Shakespeare. Google Brain directs us to the original wording from a playwright named William Congreve (1697 play The Mourning Bride).

Anonymous said...

Hi Karl. Well said. That $55m is still doing its work for The Left.

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