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  1. If you want an example of dirty politics you just need to think of Paula Bennett releasing info about beneficiaries who criticised her and Judith Collins getting rid of Nick Smith.

    1. Uncle Tom Cobbly That was quite sinister, because it was privileged information to which the media would not have had access had National’s minister, Bennett, not disclosed it. At a crude level, it was bullying, but it was also a misuse of political power which should have seen Paula censured, but if I recall correctly, she gloated that she would do it again. And she did.

      When Paula tried to smear Hurimoana Dennis, presumably peeved at the good work which he was doing for the homeless, unlike her, she was leaking information which he had preferred to her in good faith. Being a dirty politics sort of girl, she tried to use it against him for no good reason whatsoever, and then tried to deflect it on someone else, as they do. But her info leaking about the beneficiaries trying to better their lives looked like petty vindictiveness and punishment for using their voices, and a warning to others to zip it up.

  2. Well put Martyn.

    The Natzos were banged up to rights by Nicky’s “Dirty politics” and “The Hollow Men”. And he has cornered the spooks and NZ Defence over the years. He puts the official spies to shame really with his opaque interview techniques and information gathering that seemingly leave no trace.

    Slater–Oil and Farrar’s fans went totally berserko on “Dirty Politics” because they were sprung! Caught with their blue real estate style cheap arse pants down around their ankles. Key’s “office” releasing OIAs to Slater–Oil first–where are you now Eade Et al?

    People like Nicky Hager are in fact sincere defenders of this country’s honour and democracy. Labour’s using “Handmaids Tale” is totally appropriate. 50% of the population are women with uteruses, many of whom will not be impressed one little bit with Baldrick Luxon’s take on THEIR access to contraception.

  3. I wouldn’t worry too much about the perceptions of Tracy. Tracy does deserve an elephant stamp on the hand though, for her valiant effort to present Mark Mitchell as a wonderful humanitarian who scrambled around in the tragic devastated ruins of post-war Iraq to reunite cuddly dogs with their sad owners. And getting mighty rich. Mitchell, was he a Lusk product too ? Tracy saw Mark as being in the mold – or mould- of John Key, but whether this was meant to trigger a stampede of support for Mr Mitchell, or send everyone running as fast as poss in the opposite direction I suppose that only Tracy could say. Is Labour’s cultural appropriation really all that bad? Like stealing others’ music, or Russia’s splendid dancing Cossacks, instead of presenting facts ? Or sending dopey students down the CBD at midnight with the unrealistic hope of finding Winston Debonair Peters looking dishevelled, or asking prostitute besties to check whether Labour politicians have frequented their brothels ? That’s more pearl-clutching sort of territory.

  4. When Watkins became editor of the Sunday paper I cancelled it. Don’t need to read shit.

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