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Our weekly read: The other side of the story.

 

Our ‘Weekly Reads’ look at important issues in depth from some of New Zealand’s best writers. You’ll get the other side of the story from what you’ve heard to make sense of what matters.

Graham Adams The Common Room

Hipkins’ insists there’s ‘nothing to fear’ in co-governance

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

Is ‘partnership’ with iwi feared or is it just unfair?

Graham Adams The Common Room

Hipkins’ government enters election season in disarray

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

The Prime Minister is beginning to look like a lame duck.

Greg Dawes The Common Room

Rose Hipkins and the ‘refreshed’ science curriculum

Greg Dawes, Guest Writer

The PM’s mother appears to believe the teaching of science should have a political dimension.

Graham Adams The Common Room

Co-governance smoulders in election run-up

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

Polls on October 14 will be a verdict on race-based policy in New Zealand — and Australia.

Thomas Cranmer The Common Room

Enhancing democracy: The case for a second chamber in New Zealand’s Parliament

Thomas Cranmer, Contributing Writer

One notable aspect missing from our legislative framework is a second chamber in Parliament. It was once a feature of our Parliament and there may be a compelling case for its return.

Graham Adams The Common Room

Close polls puzzle pundits as election looms

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

How long can Labour continue to levitate?

Thomas Cranmer The Common Room

Second term government, third term problems

Thomas Cranmer, Contributing Writer

They say a new broom sweeps clean, and that is certainly the case with the premiership of Prime Minister Chris Hipkins. However, even he couldn’t have anticipated the rapid exodus of ministers under his premiership.

Graham Adams The Common Room

Are bilingual road signs safe or even sensible?

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

Debate has been shut down by allegations of ‘dog-whistling’.

Liam Hehir The Common Room

Is… is the media okay? Can somebody check?

Liam Hehir, Political Commentator

Media outlets that have always been widely respected, if not always loved, keep tripping over themselves. In all honesty it feels like a bit of a breakdown and it’s hard to know just what’s at the bottom of it…

Thomas Cranmer The Common Room

From comrade to Dame in a New York minute

Thomas Cranmer, Contributing Writer

One of the final acts of Jacinda Ardern’s exit from New Zealand politics was the announcement that the former Prime Minister would become Dame Jacinda Ardern. It was possibly the fastest transition from comrade to dame that anyone has ever achieved.

Janet Wilson The Common Room

A new media regulator – a safe haven or Big Brother?

Janet Wilson, Contributing Writer

Is New Zealand about to get its own Orwellian “Newspeak” moment with the release of the Safer Online Services and Media Platforms discussion document released by the Department of Internal Affair’s Content Regulatory Review?
Graham Adams The Common Room

“Co-governance for your deck!”

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

An effective campaign against the RMA reforms led by The Taxpayers’ Union and Federated Farmers will be a nightmare for Hipkins.

Janet Wilson The Common Room

Politicians and the dark art of misinformation

Janet Wilson, Contributing Writer

“No one has ever doubted that truth and politics are on rather bad terms with each other, and no one as far as I know, has ever counted truthfulness among the political virtues,” the political theorist Hannah Arendt wrote in a seminal 1967 essay in The New Yorker. “Lies have always been regarded as necessary and justifiable tools not only of the politician’s or the demagogue’s but also of the statesman’s trade.”  Why is that so?

Graham Adams The Common Room

Te Pāti Māori: Kingmaker or Labour’s albatross?

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

Chris Hipkins must be fast realising that with friends like Te Pāti Māori he really doesn’t need enemies. In fact, the strong possibility Labour will require its support to form a government is looking like a real threat to its chances of re-election in October.

Thomas Cranmer The Common Room

Are political parties too tribal?

Thomas Cranmer, Contributing Writer

Political parties play a significant role in democratic systems. They provide a means of organising political representation and facilitating the functioning of the government. However, the question arises whether political parties, with their inherent tribalism and policy conformity, are necessary for a functioning democracy.

Graham Adams The Common Room

Demonising the rich is a risky gamble

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

Chris Hipkins and David Parker have handed the Opposition a stick to beat them with until the election.

Graham Adams The Common Room

Labour’s Three Waters refresh is a tragi-comedy

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

The government’s disdain for democracy is a gift to National and Act.

Thomas Cranmer The Common Room

The National Party and Conservative Values: A Clash of Interests?

Thomas Cranmer, Contributing Writer

As the pace of social change becomes more accelerated and, in some cases, radical, a lack of engagement on these issues by the National Party risks leaving their traditional voters feeling disillusioned.

Graham Adams The Common Room

What Hipkins doesn’t want to tell us about Three Waters

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

The focus on co-governance obscures direct iwi control of water.

Thomas Cranmer The Common Room

Identity Politics and the challenge to Conservatism

Thomas Cranmer, Contributing Writer

In recent years, New Zealand has witnessed a significant rise in identity politics, which poses a considerable challenge to conservative ideology.

Thomas Cranmer The Common Room

Challenging Progressivism in New Zealand’s Culture Wars

Thomas Cranmer, Contributing Writer

The culture wars are often viewed as an exclusively American phenomenon, but the reality is that they are becoming increasingly prominent in countries around the world, including New Zealand.

Graham Adams The Common Room

How Cyclone Gabrielle mugged the Greens and Labour

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

Enthusiasm for reducing climate-change emissions has dwindled with the storms. Influential commentators on both the left and right have declared that adaptation will be the only viable political strategy this election year.

Graham Adams The Common Room

Hipkins’ stealth revolution in education

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

The PM’s tenure as Minister of Education has given NZ school students a racialised and unbalanced curriculum.

Thomas Cranmer The Common Room

Balancing free speech and protecting religious beliefs: The complexities of hate speech laws

Thomas Cranmer, Contributing Writer

The government’s most recent failed attempt to enact hate speech laws shows just how difficult it is to strike the right balance between free speech and the protection of religious beliefs.

Graham Adams The Common Room

Has government money corrupted journalism?

Graham Adams, Contributing Writer

The debate over co-governance draws attention to the role of the $55m media fund in shutting down dissenting views. Journalist Graham Adams investigates.

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