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Simon turns the page

SB: RT: Very well. On another topic, Judith Collins has a book out as well - SB: RT: I thought She Who Must Not Be Named was Jacinda Ardern. Alden Williams/Stuff SB: Her? Oh. I mean sure, worst Prime Minister in living history and all that. But no-one ever sat bolt upright in the middle of the night from a chilling nightmare in which Jacinda Ardern and her death-eater caucus cronies ritually disembowel them and dance over their entrails. RT: Yikes. And I suppose if anyone asks whether this book is really about you, you can deny it by pointing out that the Simon in the book actually does vanquish his enemies and become The Chosen One.

1976: Thatcher s charm and steel

THE PRESS 160 YEARS is a series marking the launch of The The Press will revisit stories from every year of publication. Three years before she became UK Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher​ paid a visit to New Zealand where politicians and journalists admired or feared her resolve. “The British Leader of the Opposition (Mrs Margaret Thatcher) yesterday justified the sobriquet, ‘the Iron Lady’, bestowed upon her by the Russians,” The Press reported on September 11, 1976. Stuff Margaret Thatcher at the Christchurch Town Hall in 1976 with Federation of University Women president Mrs H. M. Bonisch, left, and 80-year-old foundation member Mrs K. B. McCreanor.

Comedy legend David McPhail looks back on playing Muldoon, and why Ardern would be hard to satirise

Comedy legend David McPhail looks back on playing Muldoon, and why Ardern would be hard to satirise
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Audrey Young: Rating the maiden MPs

The Woke Supremacy | The Daily Blog

IT IS DIFFICULT to attach a name to the ideology currently guiding the actions of the New Zealand ruling-class. For the past twenty years the Left has been content to call it neoliberalism, but in the third decade of the twenty-first century that term has less and less purchase on reality. The new ideology which has emerged, let’s call it “wokeism”, is a radical fusion of neoliberalism, environmentalism and identity politics – and its powerful enough to disrupt profoundly the political, social and economic institutions of New Zealand society. That wokeism will generate massive resistance is certain. Its assault on the traditional order will leave more and more people feeling unmoored and vulnerable. Inevitably, a political movement will arise to contest the wokeists’ claims and policies. This movement will not, however, be driven by the traditional Left, it will be the creation of an angry and radically populist Right. What’s more, the transformational ambitions of wokei

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