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Benjamin Doyle and Winston Peters on a green background with text from Peters' tweet reading "we are not accusing him of anything. if the police want to investigate they can"
Benjamin Doyle, Winston Peters and a portion of Peters’ post about Doyle

OPINIONPoliticsMarch 31, 2025

Peters’ attack on Doyle is vile – and the Greens should have seen it coming

Benjamin Doyle and Winston Peters on a green background with text from Peters' tweet reading "we are not accusing him of anything. if the police want to investigate they can"
Benjamin Doyle, Winston Peters and a portion of Peters’ post about Doyle

There is no excusing the deputy prime minister’s unfounded attacks on Benjamin Doyle, but the Green Party should have done more to protect its newest MP.

This morning I listened to Sean Plunket ask the deputy prime minister Winston Peters if he believed an opposition MP was promoting paedophilia.

Such a question, in a timeline less cursed than the one we’re currently inhabiting, would be the final jab in a longform, sit-down interview on a primetime current affairs show. It would have come after months of investigations, background conversations and police involvement. There would be multiple sources, expert input and legal considerations. It would be huge and breaking news.

Instead, Plunket asked Peters point blank if he thought Green MP Benjamin Doyle was promoting paedophilia because Peters had just tweeted suggesting as much after looking at three screenshots of Instagram posts from Doyle’s private, personal account.

What have we come to?

There are two separate stories at play here. The first is the story of Peters, New Zealand First and their obsession with gender-affirming care. Peters is publicly opposed to the use of puberty blockers and has said as much on a number of occasions. He is also, in a very general sense, anti-trans, as illustrated by various NZ First policies. Benjamin Doyle is non-binary and is a vocal advocate for the availability of puberty blockers and increased access to gender-affirming healthcare.

In going after Doyle, Peters is conflating the subject and wording of some Instagram posts with his view that anyone who promotes safe access to puberty blockers has nefarious intentions. (Note: there is a conspiracy theory that trans people pose a risk to children. This false fear was most recently displayed in the storming of a drag event at Te Atatū library by Man Up and Destiny Church members.)

Stripped of context, the posts that all your favourite X lurkers are salivating over are pretty bloody boring. In one from 2020, Doyle kisses their young daughter on the mouth and says nice, parental things about her in the caption. A parent kissing their toddler on the mouth is not news, nor is it a reason to call the police. But Peters, both in speaking to Plunket and in his social media posts, is always keen to include the fact that Doyle is a supporter of safe access to puberty blockers. It appears that to Peters, such views means Doyle’s otherwise ordinary actions around their own kid are now suspect.

It is deeply concerning that the deputy prime minister is able to cast suspicions on another MP in such a serious manner without providing anything by way of evidence beyond some generic photos of the MP’s own child and the word “bussy” being used. There is also an irony in Peters – he of the “war on woke” – clutching at his pearls because an MP used a word he finds offensive. As for throwing out the idea of a police investigation… if saying “bussy” is the presence of a child is a crime then lock up RNZ and throw away the key.

What will happen now? The suggestions Peters has made and the frenzy it has kicked up (death threats sent to Doyle and online conspiracy mongering about every mundane detail in Doyle’s private Instagram posts) are arguably defamatory – they are certainly harmful to Doyle. It would not be surprising if the Greens or Doyle’s family took legal action against Peters and others for their assertions, though a surprisingly meek statement from the Greens today suggests they won’t.

Benjamin Doyle (Photo: The Green Party).

The other, much less dangerous but still relevant story at play here is Benjamin Doyle’s naivete in assuming that one’s behaviour and online presence as a regular citizen will be warmly accepted, or not even noticed, once they become an MP. And, more concerning, the Green Party’s apparent lack of process in educating or, at the very least, warning potential candidates of how their behaviour may or may not be interpreted once they are a member of parliament. When Doyle was announced as an incoming MP following the removal of Darleen Tana in October last year, I knew about their personal account and its handle (biblebeltbussy). “They’ll need to get rid of that handle,” I said at the time, and was surprised to see it still there months later.

The Greens pride themselves on presenting their whole selves and being whole people as MPs. I admire it and think as a broad approach it has worked exceptionally well for them politically. In fact, they’ve either maintained high polling or even grown in popularity following a string of internal issues the past 18 months so something must be working in the approach.

But sifting through your online footprint before becoming a member of parliament isn’t reducing yourself, it’s just common sense. In the past, it has been candidates with outdated views defending or apologising for old social media posts. But just because potential Green MPs are probably less likely to have an old racist or sexist tweet lying around doesn’t make them immune from assessing their activity and viewing it through a damage control lens.

Doyle has done nothing wrong in having a personal and private account with photos of their child on it. And the assertions made about those photos are disturbing. But a simple “hey, maybe don’t have ‘bussy’ in your publicly viewable username because people won’t get it” should’ve been floated early on from a senior Greens staffer. Sometimes protection means pointing out the horrible facts of life and politics. Instead, co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick today said those conversations were currently happening.

What Peters is doing is vile, unprovoked and dangerous to the whole rainbow community, especially to Doyle and their family. Let me make that clear. It’s a horrifying progression of dangerous ideas straight from the second most powerful person in the country and it will likely have lasting effects long after Peters is out of parliament. The airing of private social media activity in order to attack an MP also sets a dangerous precedent and suggests that anything is fair game if you can get your hands on it.

But the fact that the Greens held a press conference today to condemn Peters’ vile actions and instead found themselves having to explain, with much exasperation, what bussy means suggests they should have seen this coming from the likes of Peters. And they did a disservice to their newest MP by pretending otherwise.

Keep going!
Aerial view of a golf course with two large red golf clubs crossed over the image. The landscape includes green fairways, trees, and city buildings in the distance under a partly cloudy sky.
Takapuna Golf Course could be for the chop (Image: The Spinoff)

PoliticsMarch 31, 2025

Can Auckland Council finally do the impossible and get rid of one (1) golf course?

Aerial view of a golf course with two large red golf clubs crossed over the image. The landscape includes green fairways, trees, and city buildings in the distance under a partly cloudy sky.
Takapuna Golf Course could be for the chop (Image: The Spinoff)

The last time an Auckland Council body tried to get rid of a golf course, it ended in disaster. Maybe this time it’ll be different.

Auckland Council isn’t known for its ambition. Recently it turned down an 11-storey timber building next to a train station to protect the heritage value of a gravel lot and a Mobil station. It took one of its agencies to court for going rogue and trying to build houses. Then it went back to court to argue against its own climate plan because it feared being forced to build cycle lanes

Given that, it’s a surprise to see the council trying to pull off the only task harder than replacing a villa with townhouses on the local government difficulty meter. If what looks to be a majority of councillors get their way, it will halve one of its golf courses and open the land up for activities like walking, picnicking, and not being struck in the head by a shanked drive from a local retiree.

A semicircular difficulty meter for local governments with sections from green to red. Tasks listed: "saying no for three years," "sinking $1 billion into a convention centre," "taking away a carpark," "building a bike lane," "replacing a villa," "taking away a golf course.
The scientifically robust local government difficulty meter (Science: Hayden Donnell)

The case for change is robust. In the January 2023 Auckland floods, much of the area around Takapuna golf course went several metres underwater. Two people died. Homes and businesses were destroyed. Afterward, locals asked the council to make sure it doesn’t happen again. “I’ve stood up in front of hundreds of really upset, sometimes angry, flooded communities. They’re angry that we haven’t done anything already,” says North Shore councillor Richard Hills.

Council staff were tasked with figuring out a way to flood-proof the area by finding enough space to capture 550,000 litres of water during an intense weather event. Head of sustainable partnerships Tom Mansell says the only real solution they could find was to turn half of the AF Thomas Park, where the golf course is situated, into a wetland. “We had to store huge amounts of water. The only area we own of that amount of land is AF Thomas. So we had to utilise that.”

Flooded parking lot with submerged cars near a PAK'nSAVE store. The sky is overcast, and water levels are high, covering most of the vehicles, including a red car and a white van. Buildings and a wooden fence are partially visible in the background.
Flooding on Wairau Valley Rd, near Takapuna Golf Course, at Auckland Anniversary weekend in 2023 (Photo: Auckland Council)

There’s political support for the plan. Hills says local National MPs Simon Watts and Dan Bidois have voiced support, along with local boards. Mansell says the government has agreed to jointly fund the redevelopment. Mayor Wayne Brown seems to be onside, along with most councillors. 

All this is before you even mention the fact that Auckland Council currently owns 14 golf courses, most of which are almost twice as big as the Carrington redevelopment project that will soon deliver 4,000 more homes to alleviate the city’s eternal demon of a housing crisis.

If you think that sounds like this project is a shoo-in, you haven’t familiarised yourself with golfers. The council has tried something like this before. In 2017, the Albert-Eden-Puketāpapa local board proposed redeveloping half of Mt Albert’s Chamberlain Park golf course into parkland and badly needed sports facilities, while also ensuring people could access transport corridors like Carrington Rd and the northwestern cycle path without sustaining a concussion.

A group called Save Chamberlain Park took them to the High Court. It distributed flyers with crosses emblazoned on all the trees it said would have to die for the board’s plans. At a meeting I attended in 2019, I watched a prominent member of the Auckland Horticultural Society call board member Graeme Easte “Judas Easte” and board chair Peter Haynes “Lucifer Haynes”. 

Haynes was voted out at the local elections a few months later. The right-leaning Communities and Residents ticket won a board majority and put a stop to the plans to redevelop the park.

This is the first time the council has attempted something similar since, and another rearguard action is under way. Golfing groups are requesting council emails on the project under the Local Government Official Information and Meetings Act. Emails and calls are coming in daily. A spokesperson for the Takapuna golf course claims flood mitigation could be incorporated into its existing design

Hills disagrees, and soon he’ll find out whether his colleagues back him up. This week, on Thursday, April 3, the council’s transport and infrastructure committee will vote on whether to send the wetland proposal out for a detailed business case. That would give Mansell and his team the ability to move forward with the near-impossible task of actually getting rid of part of one (1) golf course.  

They’d do so with bipartisan political backing. The project would undoubtedly save local businesses millions of dollars in repairs, and households thousands in insurance premiums. If worst comes to worst, it could actually save lives. On the other hand, the next local election is in October and Hills could soon be Richard Beelzebub. I give them a 50-50 chance of success. 

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