Winston wasted Washington moment with calcified cowardice
There was a moment to stand up. Instead, we got silence, deflection — and a missed chance the world would have noticed.

There was a moment to stand up. Instead, we got silence, deflection — and a missed chance the world would have noticed.

Winston meets Rubio. Trump threatens war crimes. And somehow, we’re supposed to call this diplomacy?

Winston Peters is heading to Washington, but Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa says he cannot afford another round of diplomatic cowardice while Gaza burns.

Seymour and Winston want New Zealanders to stay calm. Trouble is, the IEA and JP Morgan are waving around numbers that look a lot more like an energy crisis than a minor blip.

You don’t have to agree with Jonathan Ayling to see this — when the Foreign Minister talks like this, something’s gone badly wrong.

While Kiwis struggle with fuel, jobs and rising costs, NZ First has picked its fight — defining what a woman is. This is where we are now.

I’ll happily hammer Winston when he deserves it — but this time he’s done the job. Rebuilding ties with the Cook Islands is exactly what New Zealand should have been doing.

This isn’t really about Sean Plunket. It’s about regulation, relevance, and why the BSA picked the weakest possible hill to fight on.

National in the 20s. Labour ahead. TOP rising. This isn’t just a bad poll — it’s a warning the election could break wide open.

Talking tough is easy. Turning up isn’t. Especially when the invitation comes with real questions.