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Wednesday, December 24, 2025

John McLean: Axeable agencies of state


The Government and main stream media outlets have been doing their best to paint a picture of an economic upswing, just in time for Christmas. But the portrayed rosy economic future is a vision through rose tinted glasses. Inflation is at 3%, the highest it’s been since mid-2024 and unemployment, at 5.3%, is the highest since 2016.

More particularly, New Zealand’s core national debt had risen from $81 billion at the end of the third quarter of 2023 (the last quarter of the departed Labour Government’s term in office), to $170 billion at the end of Q3 2024, to $182 billion at the end of Q3 2025. The annual interest cost of NZ’s debt is about $10 billion. New Zealand’s debt will top $200 billion within the next few years (that’s $40,000 for every single man, woman and child in New Zealand). Nothing’s really changed, economically, since my Substack exactly two years ago:

Ani O'Brien: Brian Tamaki and the Sikh parade confrontation


Facts, fears, and the kimits of protest

The confrontation that occurred during a Sikh religious procession in South Auckland a few days ago has ignited condemnation and raised questions about protest, imported political conflicts, and national identity. While the incident itself was brief and not violent, it has alarmed many who do not want to see the cultural and religious disharmony that is rife overseas playing out in New Zealand. Anxiety over immigration levels and the challenges of multiculturalism have become more pronounced globally and this is creating tensions over public expressions of culture and belief.



I reacted to the news that Brian Tamaki’s group had staged the protest in horror at what I perceived to be an attack on a community peacefully going about their business. This generated a substantial response and much of it was in support of Tamaki and critical of the Sikh community.


Click to view

The strength of feeling on all sides got me thinking about how New Zealand defines extremism, protest rights, and acceptable conduct in shared public spaces. In my view, we are heading toward a flashpoint if we do not grapple with the tensions and underlying anxieties that are making it more difficult for us to live along side each other peacefully. Understanding what happened requires careful separation of established facts, community response, and claims that remain contested. I have tried my best to do this as evenhandedly as possible.

On 20th December, members of Auckland’s Sikh community held a Nagar Kirtan procession in South Auckland, marking the birth of Sikhism’s first guru. Nagar Kirtans are traditional religious parades involving prayer, music, and the public display of Sikh symbols. According to Sikh community leaders and media reporting, the procession was fully authorised by Auckland Council, Police, and traffic management authorities. A 2022 article in the Indian Weekender reported that the Auckland Sikh community was celebrating its 27th annual celebration that year. I can find no record of any other protest or interruption taking place at previous parades.

During the procession, a group calling itself True Patriots of NZ, publicly linked to Brian Tamaki and Destiny Church, positioned themselves in front of the march on Great South Road. The group displayed banners such as “This is New Zealand, not India” and wore clothing with slogans including “Kiwis First” and “Keep NZ NZ.” Members performed a haka and chanted Christian slogans.

Police intervened to keep the groups separated and escorted the Sikh procession so it could continue. No arrests were made and no physical violence was reported.

The incident prompted swift condemnation from political figures and community leaders. National MP Rima Nakhle visited Sikh gurdwaras in Manurewa and Takanini the following day, publicly thanking the Sikh community for what she described as “tremendous restraint” in the face of intimidating behaviour.

In a public statement, Nakhle emphasised that the Sikh procession had complied fully with New Zealand law and that attempts to obstruct it were unacceptable. She highlighted the Sikh community’s long-standing contributions to South Auckland and New Zealand more broadly, including extensive charitable work, Covid-era food distribution, fundraising for the Christchurch mosque attack victims, support for community patrols, and ongoing donations to health and social services. As a Christian, she said she explicitly rejected the idea that faith justified targeting a peaceful religious minority.

The NZ Central Sikh Association also issued a statement urging calm. The association stressed that the parade was lawful, they believed the obstruction by Tamaki’s group was irresponsible, and that the Sikh community remained committed to peace and restraint. Community leaders asked members not to escalate tensions online.

Civil liberties advocates also weighed in. The Free Speech Union defended the right of Tamaki’s group to protest in principle, but drew a clear distinction between protest and obstruction, arguing that deliberately interfering with a permitted religious event undermines others’ lawful rights.



Brian Tamaki has rejected characterisations of the protest as aggressive or unlawful. He maintains that his group acted peacefully and within the law, and that their actions were motivated by concerns about Khalistan symbolism present at the march.

Khalistan refers to a Sikh separatist movement advocating for an independent Sikh homeland in the Punjab region of India. The movement has a complex history to say the least. In the 1980s and early 1990s, some Khalistan-aligned militant groups engaged in violence, including assassinations and bombings, and were designated terrorist organisations by the Indian government. These historical facts appear to form the basis of Tamaki’s argument that Khalistan is not merely a benign political cause, but a movement with a documented terrorist lineage.

There is documented Sikh separatist activism in parts of the diaspora, particularly in countries with large Sikh populations such as Canada, the United Kingdom, the United States and, to a much smaller extent, New Zealand. This support is typically expressed through political rallies, flag displays, symbolic referenda, lobbying, and online advocacy. These activities are generally non-violent and are treated under Western law as protected political expression, even when they are controversial or diplomatically sensitive. It is also important to note that Sikh communities are far from unified on Khalistan with many Sikhs opposing separatism outright, others favour greater rights within India rather than independence, and some actively resent Khalistan activism because it attracts suspicion and imports foreign political conflicts into their daily lives.

In countries like New Zealand there is no public evidence that Sikh separatist activism has translated into organised violence or terrorist activity. The tension, therefore, lies less in an immediate security threat than in how democracies balance freedom of expression, religious and cultural practice, and public unease when overseas political conflicts are expressed in shared civic spaces.

From Tamaki’s perspective, the public display of Khalistan-associated flags or symbols represents an imported political conflict being played out on New Zealand streets. He argues that New Zealand authorities and politicians are inconsistent in how they respond to such symbolism, and that similar behaviour by Christian or nationalist groups would attract far harsher scrutiny. His protest is framed as a warning about double standards, national sovereignty, and what he sees as political unwillingness to confront foreign-linked extremism.

Tamaki also situates the protest within a broader “Kiwis First” worldview, arguing that New Zealanders are increasingly discouraged from asserting national identity while being expected to accommodate overseas political causes. In engaging with online criticism about the incident, he has strongly defended his personal record of decades-long community and charitable work, including social rehabilitation programmes and food distribution, and rejects claims that his actions were motivated by racial or religious hostility.

He directly replied to my tweet defending the actions of the protestors:


Click to view

However, at the same time, several key distinctions matter.

While India designates multiple Khalistan-linked groups as terrorist organisations, support for Khalistan as a political idea is not illegal in New Zealand, nor is it automatically classified as terrorism. Under New Zealand law, terrorism requires either formal designation or credible evidence of violence, terror financing, or active plotting.

In diaspora communities, Khalistan symbolism is often used as a form of political expression rather than advocacy for violence. Crucially, in this case, no evidence was presented by Tamaki, police, or reported by mainstream media that showed the Sikh parade involved members of designated terrorist organisations or any advocacy of violence. This does not mean that concerns about extremism should be dismissed out of hand. It does mean that allegations of “terrorists” carry a high evidentiary threshold, one that is not met in relation to the South Auckland procession.

Some supporters of Tamaki have pointed to footage and photos of Sikh participants carrying what appear to be swords or knives as evidence that the procession was inherently threatening. In Sikhism, however, the ceremonial carrying of a kirpan, a small sword or dagger, is a longstanding religious practice and one of the five articles of faith observed by initiated Sikhs. The kirpan is a symbolic reminder of the duty to stand against injustice and protect the vulnerable, not a weapon carried for the purpose of violence. In New Zealand, the carrying of kirpans for religious purposes has long been accommodated in law and practice, including in schools and public events, provided they are carried responsibly and without intent to harm. While images of blades in public spaces can understandably unsettle those unfamiliar with Sikh customs, there is no evidence that the kirpans carried during the Nagar Kirtan were used threateningly or in breach of the law, and no injuries or arrests resulted from their presence.

The clash, therefore, appears to be less about a single parade than about unresolved tensions New Zealand has yet to fully confront. It raises difficult questions about how in the current climate of global tensions, there might be fear and anxiety about overt expressions perceived to be related to overseas political issues. It exposes ongoing uncertainty over where the legitimate right to protest ends and where intimidation or obstruction begins, especially when a lawful religious event is involved. It also highlights persistently expressed concerns about whether cultural and political standards are being applied evenly across different religious communities, or whether some groups are granted greater tolerance than others. Finally, it underscores the challenge of how fears, whether well-founded or overstated, can be acknowledged and addressed in a way that reduces tension rather than deepening division in an increasingly plural and politically charged society.

For the Sikh community, the protest felt like an unjustified targeting of a peaceful religious celebration that has complied with every legal requirement for three decades. For Tamaki and his supporters, it felt like a necessary act of resistance against what they perceive as political complacency and unequal enforcement of standards.

Ultimately, what happened on Great South Road was not a terrorist incident, nor was it a riot. It was a lawful religious procession met by a lawful but confrontational protest, managed by police before it escalated. It seems to have been handled appropriately by authorities.

Claims that terrorists were present remain unsubstantiated. Yet the protest itself did not arise in a vacuum. It reflected genuine anxieties about extremism, national identity, and perceived double standards, even if those anxieties were expressed in a way many found inappropriate or distressing.

If New Zealand wishes to avoid similar confrontations in the future, we will need more than condemnation or defensiveness because ignoring or scorning these tensions will not make them disappear.

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.

Bob Edlin: Losing candidate has cause to rue spending $6426 on litigation rather than on her election campaign


We are wondering, here at PoO, what might have transpired in Porirua had a candidate who lost by just nine votes taken a different tack.

She should have done much better – we calculate – by spending more on campaigning and by taking advantage of Policy.nz’s efforts to broadcast policies to voters. See above to learn what it can tell us about the candidate in question, Jess Te Huia.

Matua Kahurangi: Free trade, open borders - The India deal New Zealanders never voted for


Even though I am on annual holidays, I thought it was right to write something on this topic, because in my opinion we really are losing our Kiwi way of life in some ways. If there is one thing New Zealanders should be alert to right now, it is the quiet habit of governments giving too much away in the name of “progress”, while ordinary people are left to deal with the consequences.

That is why New Zealand First is right to be deeply sceptical about the so called free trade deal with India. Not because trade is bad in principle, but because this deal looks neither free nor fair, and it once again treats immigration concessions as a bargaining chip rather than a national interest issue.

JC: Leftist Bias Is Here To Stay


The two public broadcasters in this country, Radio New Zealand and Television New Zealand, both had a chance to redeem themselves recently and, unsurprisingly, neither of them took it. These two organisations, that we the taxpayers have the privilege of funding are forced to fund, appear reluctant to change their ways: they are hotbeds for left-wing journalist activism and seem happy to keep it that way.

Tuesday December 23, 2025 

                    

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Breaking Views Update: Week of 21.12.25







Tuesday December 23, 2025 

News:
Hipkins targets clean sweep of Māori seats, says Government driving a wedge with Māori

Upon reflecting on 2025, Labour leader Chris Hipkins says he is concerned about how the Government has operated over the past year, warning it is driving a wedge between Māori and non-Māori as the election draws closer.

David Farrar: NZ and India agree an FTA


I was sceptical when Christopher Luxon said prior to the election that he thought they could do a free trade agreement with India within three years. India has been a notoriously challenging country to do FTAs with, and the relationship between governments was quite poor under Labour. The thought of a comprehensive FTA so quickly was somewhere between ambitious and unlikely.

But Todd McClay, and no doubt many MFAT staff, have delivered and an agreement has been reached – in just two years. I have little doubt that the PM’s personal commitment to the FTA, alongside his trips to India, made a critical difference also.

Key aspects are:

Ramesh Thakur: Appeasement 0, Jew Hatred 15


As, slowly and painfully, we come to terms with what happened on Bondi Beach on Sunday, I divide my reactions into four parts: one question each addressed to the Prime Minister and the virulent anti-Israeli protestors, a comment on the Prime Minister’s leadership failings, and an anticipatory reaction to charges of Islamophobia.

Dave Patterson: The Greatest Threat in Western Hemisphere? Transnational Terrorists


The single largest threat to the US in the Western Hemisphere is transnational terrorist criminal organizations, according to Secretary of State Marco Rubio. This point of view is consistent with the US National Security Strategy that places the Western Hemisphere, America’s backyard, as a priority for geostrategic emphasis. To that end, the Trump administration has adopted a robust and many-faceted set of actions to address the threat.

David Farrar: Its very clear Tamihere is the true leader of Te Pāti Māori


The Post reports:

Indeed, she says in her sworn affidavit that Tamihere had been chairing the weekly caucus meetings of MPs in Parliament since September. And it was he who sent Kapa-Kingi an ‘ultimatum’ on her overspending that sent the simmering issue into overdrive.

To have the party president chair caucus instead of the leader or a co-leader is unprecedented. Chairing caucus is a major part of the role of the leader.

Kerre Woodham: Ask not what your country can do for you


New Zealand Inc. is in trouble and it's on us —you and me— to fix it. Not politicians, not economists, not even our blessed farmers who've got us out of trouble time and time again – it is on us, New Zealand voters.

It doesn't matter whether we vote left or right, red, blue, green, yellow, or black. We all have to give our political parties the cojones they need to enact the policies that will save this country. Treasury's been warning us for years now, decades. Current government policies —whichever government has been in— are not sustainable.

Kevin: Thoughts for the Year


As it’s the end of the year I’d thought I’d do a ‘thoughts of the year’ post – a list of things and events that were important to me. So, in no particular order:

The Murder of Charlie Kirk

Here, it’s not so much his murder, which was a tragedy, but the reaction of his detractors: from outright mocking to lying and taking what he said out context. I really have no words for the staggering level of vitriol, although I’m not sure if even vitriol is the right word.

Monday December 22, 2025 

                    

Monday, December 22, 2025

Damien Grant: New Zealand deserves better than Nicola Willis’ plan


It is four sleeps to Christmas. A time of make believe where we embrace the wonder of Santa Claus to delight children and ourselves.

Make believe is a powerful element of the human condition. The willingness to embrace an illusion is a pre-requisite to enjoy a movie, magic show or a marriage.

Insights From Social Media: Dame Anne Salmond.....

Dame Anne Salmond - Leading the Charge of New Zealand Romantic Thinking - by Colinxy

The Romantic Cloak

Few figures embody the Romantic impulse in New Zealand’s intellectual life more vividly than Dame Anne Salmond. Her writings, media appearances, and social media engagements reveal a deep commitment to cultural relativism and poststructuralist thought. She venerates the theorists of fragmentation and ambiguity, and in doing so, positions herself as a defender of what is known as the “Noble Savage.” Within this framework, behaviours that might otherwise be condemned are excused if they emerge from her preferred cultural narrative, while anything associated with European ancestry is treated with suspicion—except, of course, when it comes to herself and her academic circle.

David Farrar: Quite a few green shoots!


Business NZ says:

After a prolonged period of stagnation and negative per capita growth, the New Zealand economy is now expected to expand at just under 3% per annum through to 2027.

Both official and forward-looking indicators point to a steady improvement in the economic outlook as we enter 2026. Key indicators of growth include:

Graham Adams: Maori nationalism takes a hammering in 2025


At the end of 2024, Māori nationalists were riding high in their quest to assert a special place in the nation’s laws and policy.

In November, the video of Te Pāti Māori MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clark leading a haka in Parliament and ripping up a copy of David Seymour’s Treaty Principles Bill racked up hundreds of millions of views worldwide.

James Fite: Operation Hawkeye Strike - Trump Responds to ISIS Attack in Syria


The president promised there would be retaliation.

One week ago today, two American soldiers and a civilian translator were killed in an ambush attack in Syria, presumably perpetrated by an ISIS terrorist, according to intelligence reports. President Donald Trump promised “serious retaliation.” Yesterday afternoon, we found out exactly what that meant. At 4 p.m. Eastern on Friday, December 19, US Central Command launched Operation Hawkeye Strike. A combination of fighter jets, attack helicopters, and artillery bombarded more than 70 targets at multiple locations across central Syria, targeting known ISIS infrastructure and weapon sites.

Gary Judd KC: Bondi, Tarrant, victimhood, faith, the primitive, relativism, cultural boundaries of knowledge


The attack on members of Sydney’s Jewish community by the father and son one writer has dubbed the Bondi Barbarians is a shockingly horrific event. It is emerging that the shooters were devotees of ISIS who had just returned from Mindanao, a Muslim outpost in the predominantly Catholic Philippines. It is supposed they may have gone there to be trained for the terrorist acts committed just days after their return to Sydney. Reports indicate possession of ISIS regalia and association with known ISIS members in Sydney.