Pages

Thursday, April 23, 2026

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.

This was not ordinary political reporting. It was a deliberate effort to manufacture and amplify a leadership crisis where none needed to exist. From 16 April 2026, when Coughlan wrote “Christopher Luxon’s limited options as he stares down toughest fortnight of his leadership,” the Herald pursued a relentless narrative of weakness and inevitable downfall. On 18 April, Coughlan published an exclusive claiming an MP had tried to warn Luxon of flagging caucus support. By 17 April, the paper was already running “What happens next in Christopher Luxon leadership saga.” Even on the day of the vote, 21 April, Coughlan’s headline asked “Christopher Luxon fires his shot – can he save his leadership?”

Between mid-March and 21 April 2026, the Herald published more than a dozen prominent stories explicitly questioning Luxon’s leadership, portraying him as embattled, out of touch, and on the brink of removal. Anonymous sources, leaked discontent, and dire predictions were deployed with clinical precision. The clear intent was to erode public and caucus confidence until the pressure became unbearable.

This is not journalism. This is an attempt by an unelected media outlet to engineer the removal of a democratically elected Prime Minister. Thomas Coughlan and the New Zealand Herald took it upon themselves to act as political king-breakers, using their platform to push a narrative that Luxon was finished and that a change of leadership was both necessary and inevitable.

Luxon’s decisive victory in the confidence vote exposed the campaign for what it was: a failed media coup. The Herald’s relentless assault did not reflect the will of the people or the National caucus — it reflected the paper’s own political preferences and hostility toward the current government.

New Zealanders have every right to be alarmed. When a major newspaper sets out to undermine and topple a sitting Prime Minister through sustained negative coverage and manufactured drama, it crosses a dangerous line. Democracy is not served by unelected journalists attempting to dictate who leads the country.

The Herald and Thomas Coughlan owe the public, and the office of Prime Minister, a full accounting for this partisan overreach. Their campaign was not reporting — it was an attempt to subvert the democratic process. Luxon’s survival is a rebuke to their agenda. The question now is whether the Herald will learn from this failure, or continue its reckless campaign against elected leadership.

Rodney Hide is a former Minister and leader of the ACT Party. This article was sourced from HERE.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Journalism thrives on transparency but can also go digging in the shadows. National is in disarray and the economy is also in disarray. The Herald reports the truth. The voters need to be kept informed.

Post a Comment

Thank you for joining the discussion. Breaking Views welcomes respectful contributions that enrich the debate. Please ensure your comments are not defamatory, derogatory or disruptive. We appreciate your cooperation.