Senior Twitter executives this week spoke at a Dunedin conference on social media and democracy to explain the platform’s approach towards freedom of expression. The high-level participation at the two-day conference by three of Twitter’s managers appears to be one of the first times that Twitter has engaged in such a public forum to explain its stance on free speech since the US Capitol was stormed on January 6. The events in Washington D.C. that day precipitated the banning of then US President Donald Trump from both Twitter and Facebook and came against a backdrop of a wider discussion on...
A new analysis of the careers that MPs held before they were elected reveals New Zealand’s 53rd Parliament represents an extremely diverse range of work and life experiences. The research, by BlacklandPR and the Democracy Project, identified over 200 different careers, and over 500 individual jobs among Parliamentarians. The five most popular careers for MPs are (in descending order) managers, analysts, teachers, lawyers, and elected representatives. Blackland PR Director Mark Blackham says the findings demonstrate a surprising depth of career diversity and work experiences. “Parliament has more lawyers and teachers than you find in ordinary life, but it also has...
Below is an Arabic summary/translation of my article ‘New Zealand’s surprising relationship with the Middle East’, originally published in English for the Democracy Project on 29 November 2020. The summary/translation was produced and kindly offered for republication here by Mohammed Dagamseh of the Embassy of the State of Kuwait, Wellington: علاقة نيوزيلاند في الشرق الأوسط بين الحاضر والمستقبل في مقال للكاتب والمحلل السياسي Geoffrey Miller منشور له في جامعة فيكتوريا في ويلينغتون في مشروع معهد الديمقراطية/ Democracy Project أشار فيه إلى العلاقات النيوزيلاندية الشرق أوسطية في الوقت الحاضر والمستقبل مركزاً فيه على العلاقات العسكرية، والتجارية، والشعبية، والدبلوماسية، والوزارية. وتساءل ميلر...
Below is an Arabic summary/translation of my article ‘Foreign policy in a pandemic – Nanaia Mahuta’s first challenges as foreign minister’, originally published in English for the Democracy Project on 3 November 2020. The summary/translation was produced and kindly offered for republication here by Mohammed Dagamseh of the Embassy of the State of Kuwait, Wellington: ردود الفعل والتحديات أمام أول وزيرة خارجية لنيوزيلاند في مقال للكاتب والمحلل السياسي Geoffrey Miller منشور له في جامعة فيكتوريا في ويلينغتون في مشروع معهد الديمقراطية/ Democracy Project يوم 3/11/2020 أشار فيه إلى بروز وجه نسوي جديد لأول مرة في منصب وزير الخارجية النيوزيلاندية حيث...
Geoffrey Miller looks at New Zealand’s growing relationship with the Middle East and North Africa – and contemplates its future Amidst New Zealand’s level 4 coronavirus lockdown in March, all but a handful of the country’s troops stationed in Iraq returned home, three months earlier than scheduled. The New Zealand personnel had been deployed to Camp Taji since 2015 to train Iraqi soldiers, as part of the Global Coalition to Defeat Daesh/ISIS. The end to the deployment was officially unrelated to Covid-19, but it was heavily overshadowed by it. Yet the overall lack of fanfare was perhaps also symbolic of...
Over the past 30 years, ministerial responsibility for New Zealand’s foreign affairs has changed hands remarkably rarely. Since 1990, just four individuals have dominated the portfolio – Don McKinnon (1990-1999), Phil Goff (1999-2005), Winston Peters (2005-8 and again from 2017 to 2020) and Murray McCully (2008-2017). Only two others have held the role, and then only very briefly – Gerry Brownlee (for five months after McCully retired in 2017) and Helen Clark herself (in 2008, after she stood down Winston Peters from the position). By contrast, over the same 30-year period, New Zealand has had no fewer than 12 different...
News is not in short supply in the Middle East, and at the weekend, Arabic-language media remained firmly focused on the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh. Nevertheless, the New Zealand election – and above all Jacinda Ardern’s personal success – still received significant attention from Arabic-language TV news channels, newspapers and particularly on social media. Echoes of March 15 mosque attacks In this respect, the election coverage was a small echo of the attention New Zealand received in the aftermath of the Christchurch mosque attacks in 2019. For a brief moment in March that year, the New Zealand...
By Geoffrey Miller New Zealand should continue to champion human rights in Belarus amidst an ongoing crackdown on protests by the country’s regime, former Prime Minister Helen Clark says. Protests in Belarus – often referred to as ‘Europe’s last dictatorship’ – erupted after the country’s disputed presidential elections on August 9 and are now entering their seventh week. The regime, headed by President Alexander Lukashenko, has responded to opposition protests with a brutal crackdown. Thousands of demonstrators have been beaten or arrested since last month’s vote. Numerous accounts of torture inside Belarusian prisons have also emerged. Helen Clark told the...
By Geoffrey Miller A former Minister of Defence says the government was too slow to involve the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) in New Zealand’s response to Covid-19. But Wayne Mapp, a National MP from 1996-2011 who served as Minister of Defence for three years during John Key’s first term as Prime Minister, told the Democracy Project podcast that a New Zealand First plan to shift the entire managed isolation and quarantine programme into military facilities would be a step too far. “I think that the government was way too slow in using the NZDF capability in Covid, and I...
By Geoffrey Miller Winston Peters has made his first comments on the ongoing crisis in Belarus, following rigged elections in the country often referred to as ‘Europe’s last dictatorship’. Belarus’s President, Alexander Lukashenko, is refusing to give up power despite days of mass protests following presidential elections that have been widely seen as fraudulent. Official election results from the August 9 vote saw Lukashenko win 80% of the vote. There have been widespread allegations of vote-rigging in the Eastern European country. The main opposition leader, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, remains in hiding in neighbouring Lithuania after fleeing the Belarusian capital Minsk in...