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Senator Ted Cruz speaks during a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing in Washington, DC (Image: Daniel Heuer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Senator Ted Cruz speaks during a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing in Washington, DC (Image: Daniel Heuer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The BulletinFebruary 3, 2025

The ‘fake news’ article that risks harming New Zealand’s global reputation

Senator Ted Cruz speaks during a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing in Washington, DC (Image: Daniel Heuer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Senator Ted Cruz speaks during a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing in Washington, DC (Image: Daniel Heuer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Foreign minister Winston Peters has demanded a correction, explains Stewart Sowman-Lund for The Bulletin.

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‘Unfairly affecting New Zealand’s reputation’

New Zealand’s embassy in Washington DC has been brought in to try and stem the fallout from a “fake news” article shared online by a high profile US senator. The Herald’s Jamie Ensor reported that the article, by Israeli newspaper Haaretz, claimed that Israelis applying for a visa to enter New Zealand must declare any service in the Israeli Defence Force. It picked up traction over the weekend after Republican senator Ted Cruz, a former presidential hopeful with over six million followers on Twitter, shared the article. However, Immigration NZ said the article’s claims were incorrect and the agency was seeking “an urgent correction” to the article. “We have sought an urgent update to the article as it is unfairly affecting New Zealand’s reputation,” said the agency’s deputy chief operating officer Jeannie Melville. Immigration NZ said no new policies for Israeli or Palestinian nationals had been announced, and Israelis wishing to stay in New Zealand for less than three months don’t need a visa – just an electronic travel declaration.

‘Fake news’

In his remarks on social media, reported The Post, Cruz said it was “difficult to treat New Zealand as a normal ally within the American alliance system, when they denigrate and punish Israeli citizens for defending themselves”. It prompted responses online from three senior government ministers, including foreign minister Winston Peters who labelled the story “fake news” and demanded a correction. “Israelis do not need visitor visas to travel to New Zealand, let alone have to declare their military service,” Peters said in a tweet. Cruz’s tweet remains online at the time of publication, though the post by the news outlet has been removed from social media. Its story, however, remains visible on its own website. A follow-up report included comments from Immigration NZ.

Others to weigh in include Act leader David Seymour and defence minister Judith Collins, with the former telling Stuff it was “unfortunate that someone on the other side of the world got confused between John Minto and an actual leader”. That’s a reference to a “genocide hotline” being promoted by Minto, a pro-Palestinian advocate, that gained attention last week and was condemned by both the government and the Human Rights Commissioner.

Interference from a major superpower

Immigration NZ said the incorrect information regarding New Zealand’s position on Israeli migrants was impacting our international reputation. It has also raised concerns about the relationship between the United States and Aotearoa at a time of heightened tensions following the inauguration of president Donald Trump. During a visit to Washington DC last year, PM Christopher Luxon met with lawmakers from across the political spectrum, Ted Cruz among them. At the time, Luxon batted away questions about whether he was courting politicians that could be influential under a Trump presidency. “Senators and committees in the system are really powerful, really influential and it’s really important to have direct relationships with them,” he said at the time, the Herald’s Claire Trevett reported.

Speaking to ThreeNews, international relations expert Robert Patman expressed frustration that incorrect information was being circulated by a high profile US politician. “It’s an extraordinary incident and it constitutes quite serious interference in New Zealand’s domestic affairs,” Patman said. “It’s very disappointing that a senior Republican member of the senate… has actually made such insubstantial claims.”

Trade war sparked after Trump tariffs

Local officials will be hoping to maintain a positive working relationship with the United States. Over the weekend, reported the BBC, president Donald Trump followed through on his promise to introduce new tariffs on neighbouring Mexico and Canada, along with China. The following day, reported CNN, Trump acknowledged that Americans may face some “pain” as a result of his actions, with both Canada and Mexico already moving to retaliate. Canada’s prime minister Justin Trudeau said he had been trying to speak with Trump since his inauguration but still still not made contact. “We don’t want to be here, we didn’t ask for this,” Trudeau said at a press conference. Other countries, New Zealand included, are likely to be caught up in Trump’s plans for sweeping tariffs. Finance minister Nicola Willis told Bloomberg last year that we should be exempt. “Our starting position is please don’t do that,” Willis said in December. “The job that we’ve tasked our diplomats with is to put New Zealand’s absolute best foot forward.”

Winston Peters in black and white on the left, Christopher Luxon in blue on the right

The BulletinJanuary 31, 2025

Is Winston Peters already gearing up for 2026?

Winston Peters in black and white on the left, Christopher Luxon in blue on the right

The deputy PM has backed down after a three-day row with the Greens, but only after the Mexican Embassy got pulled in. Stewart Sowman-Lund explains in today’s edition of The Bulletin.

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Mexican Embassy prompts Peters back down

Winston Peters has backed down – via a spokesperson – after comments he and his deputy leader made about Green MPs were labelled “racist”. It all started in the debating chamber on Tuesday, explained RNZ’s Anneke Smith, when Peters responded to heckles by a pair of Green MPs and demanded they “show some gratitude” for being in New Zealand. The two MPs, Lawrence Xu-Nan and Francisco Hernandez, are migrants. During the same session in the House, Shane Jones was heard yelling “send the Mexicans home”, seemingly addressed at Mexican-born Green MP Ricardo Menéndez March, who called the remark “outwardly racist and xenophobic”. In the days since, both Peters and Jones have been unrepentant. Now, it’s prompted the Mexican Embassy to wade in.

The duality of Winston Peters

The Herald’s Jamie Ensor reported yesterday afternoon that the Mexican Embassy was “following up on this matter through diplomatic channels”. It prompted a diplomatic response from the deputy prime minister, who said via a spokesperson that he was aware of the concerns and would be seeing the Mexican ambassador at Waitangi next week. “In the heat of the moment in the robust environment of Parliament, sometimes some members say things when provoked that, on reflection, may have been expressed differently.” Ensor’s report was published at about 4pm, just a few hours after Peters had expressed a wholly different perspective on the matter on social media and in person to reporters. “The Green Party need to stop the pearl clutching and the faux outrage when confronted with the truth,” Peters said in a tweet yesterday morning. Speaking to reporters, he added: “If you can’t stand the heat get out of the kitchen.”

Jones, reported Stuff’s Glenn McConnell, hasn’t yet apologised. Instead, he doubled (tripled?) down, claiming a Green MP “supports terrorism” and was a “communist”.

PM can’t catch a break

The furore has been bubbling away now for three days, proving an unwelcome headache for the prime minister in a week he has already been struggling for cut through. The Herald’s Audrey Young, in her weekly subscriber newsletter (paywalled), suggested it was all part of Winston Peters’ reelection plan for 2026. “If it sounds like Peters is out of control, think again. It appears to be a deliberate strategy in a two-year election campaign,” she wrote. On ThreeNews, Jenna Lynch suggested New Zealand First was “gearing up for a full-blown culture war with the Greens” to stir up its voter base. That will also be on the environmental front, said Lynch, with Jones poised to make a mining announcement today.

Christopher Luxon was finally forced to address the comments while speaking to media yesterday, RNZ reported, pulling out the classic line that they weren’t “remarks I’d make myself”. And, in what has become rather common with the prime minister, he said he hadn’t actually seen the remarks himself. At that point, Luxon said he hadn’t spoken with either Peters or Jones and instead made general comment about rhetoric across the House. “Across the parties there’s been MPs from lots of parties making comments I think that aren’t appropriate or helpful.” This is part of a recurring track record with the PM and exposes the difficulty of leading a three-headed coalition, as Newsroom’s Laura Walters wrote last year. It’s a lot harder for the PM to wade into issues regarding New Zealand First or Act than it is to take action against something involving a National MP. The starkest exception to that is when Luxon publicly reprimanded both David Seymour and Shane Jones for “ill-considered” comments they made about the Waitangi Tribunal last April.

Luxon urged to take a stand

Opposition MPs have been calling for further action all week, and certainly won’t be satisfied with Peters getting off for issuing a statement via a spokesperson. Ricardo Menéndez March, reported RNZ’s Rayssa Almeida, said Peters’ change in tone after the Mexican Embassy got involved showed a failure by the prime minister to take a stand. Te Pāti Māori, which this week faced an accusation from Act of being “race fanatics”, has called for Peters to step down. “New Zealand relies on migrants,” said party co-leader Rawiri Waititi. “Migrant doctors, migrant nurses, many of our Pacific whānau who come over here and work on our orchards, and many of those things. We’ve got to be able to ensure that Aotearoa’s a safe place.”