Latest news: Thursday, 27 November

Where are the Dirty Politics stars now? – 3 News

Key: ‘Handful’ of texts with WhaleOil blogger – Stuff.co.nz

Dita de Boni: Kitteridge’s new broom not so clean – NZ Herald

Putting the spin on ‘neutrality’ – The Dominion Post

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Slater texts – Greens say John Key ‘caught red-handed’ – One News

PM’s contact with blogger questioned – Radio NZ

Rachel Smalley: Are you OK with Key and Slater’s direct line of contact? – Newstalk ZB

Editorial: Collins in the clear but lack of judgment says it all – NZ Herald

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‘Not fair on me’: PM on text messages – Radio NZ

Defiant John Key defends Cameron Slater texts: ‘I haven’t been caught out’ – One News

This time it doesn’t wash, Prime Minister – RadioLive

The PM, the spy and the whale – The Wireless

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PM blind to staff’s shabby politicking – The Nelson Mail

Another brain fade from John Key? – RadioLive

PM blames text gaffe on ‘noise’ – 3 News

How did Key mislead Parliament? – Stuff.co.nz

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Key, Slater text messages prompt call for wider probe – 3 News

John Key’s texts with Whaleoil blogger ‘hugely embarrassing’ – One News

John Key ‘genuinely couldn’t recall’ text messages – 3 News

Cameron Slater’s texts to Prime Minister John Key: Labour tried to kill me – NZ Herald
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Little on Slater’s ‘kill me’ texts: ‘We’ve all had dreams about this sort of stuff’ – One News

Slater speaks out over texts to PM – 3 News

Taxpayers to foot WhaleOil’s legal bills over ‘dirty politics’ probes – Stuff.co.nz

PM should accept it’s game over: Little – Otago Daily Times

PM reveals Slater texts – Stuff.co.nz

Bryce Edwards: The democratic deficit of Dirty Politics – NZ Herald

John Key’s ‘credibility is on the line’ for not disclosing texts with blogger – One News

Cameron Slater: ‘I never said Labour Party were trying to kill me’ – NZ Herald

Latest news: Wednesday, 26 November

John Key mislead Parliament – Stuff.co.nz

Andrew Little tells John Key to ‘cut the crap’ over Dirty Politics – One News

Apologise or resign, MPs tell Key – Stuff.co.nz

Key either lying or not in control: Edwards – 3 News

Dirty Politics saga: Andrew Little claims John Key ‘misled New Zealand’ – One News

John Key: No dirt has stuck to my office – Stuff.co.nz

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Dirty Politics: John Key ‘in denial’ over SIS report – NZ Herald

Duncan Garner: For a PM, sorry is always the hardest word – RadioLive

Phil Goff tells John Key to ‘man up’ and apologise – One News

Judith Collins cracks on with being MP – NZ Herald

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Audio: Andrew Little reacts to SIS report – RadioLive

On the uncanny resemblance between John Key and Sergeant Schultz – Brian Edwards

Collins inquiry witnesses wanted details supressed – Newstalk ZB

PM under fire over ‘grubby’ dealings – Radio NZ

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Planet Key, where reality’s contested – Stuff.co.nz

Dirty political money – why isn’t it illegal? -The Standard

Brian Rudman: Spies bigger threat than terror fighters – NZ Herald

Key: ‘My office did not collude with the SIS’ – 3 News

Investigation found gaps in data – NZ Herald

John Key defends the way he interacts with SIS – Newstalk ZB

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Dirty Politics’ ‘Chaos and Mayhem’, minus one, dine out on report – NZ Herald

Probe into Judith Collins costs $600k – Stuff.co.nz

SIS actions incompetent and unwise – The Dominion Post

Goff: SIS report leak ‘perfectly appropriate’ – 3 News

Dump of reports could hide controversial matter – Newstalk ZB

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John Armstrong: Lack of apology leaves Key defending the indefensible – NZ Herald

Gordon Campbell on the inquiry into one case of dirty politics – Scoop.co.nz

‘Smile and wave’ not good enough – Otago Daily Times

Editorial: PM and office at heart of SIS failure to stay neutral – NZ Herald

Cameron apologises to Collins – Stuff.co.nz

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Notable sections of the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security’s 25 November 2014 report – Nicky Hager

Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security Cheryl Gwyn published her investigation today into political misuse of Security Intelligence Service information. The review confirms important details of an incident that were reported in my book Dirty Politics. Prime Minister John Key claimed at the time of the incident (the 2011 election) that his staff were not involved in tipping off National Party-aligned blogger Cameron Slater about the SIS information. Key made the same claim again when my book was published. The IG found that Key’s staff had indeed been centrally involved in this abuse of government power.

The background to the issue is that, just a few months before the 2011 election, Slater requested information from the SIS about an SIS briefing given to Labour Party leader Phil Goff. This information was widely reported as proving that Goff had not told the truth about the briefing. The incident was damaging for Goff and Labour during the election. The IG’s responsibility is the intelligence agencies and so her review could only ever cover the prime minister’s office is a passing way. Nonetheless, the report contains well researched detail that backs up (and in places takes further) all the main issues in my book about the actions of the PM’s staff.

1. The main question I raised in the book was whether it was SIS staff or the PM’s office who had tipped off Cameron Slater to request the SIS information (Slater’s claim that he had spontaneously requested the information was clearly untrue). I concluded that the tip off had come from the prime minister’s office and that the “obvious guess” for who did the tipping off was the PM’s dirty tricks man Jason Ede. The IG’s report shows definitively that it was indeed Jason Ede, acting under directions from Key’s deputy chief of staff Phil de Joux. Ede has resigned since the revelations in my bookand de Joux now works for Air New Zealand.

2. The IG’s report provides details of de Joux and Ede’s tip off. On 25 July “Mr de Joux provided [a description of the briefing documents] to Mr Ede with the suggestion that it might prompt an OIA [Official Information Act] request for those documents. Mr Ede then provided that information to Mr Slater, discussed the terms of the OIA request with Mr Slater and provided Mr Slater with draft blog posts concerning the issue.” Note that Ede not only discussed the “terms of the OIA request” with Slater (ie. how he should word his request to be sure to get the embarrassing information about Goff) but Ede also provided Slater with “draft blog posts” about the issue. John Key’s staff member had actually scripted blog post attacks against Goff for Slater.

3. The IG’s report confirmed other information in my book about Ede’s activities. She found that Ede used “non-official” e-mail and phone to make it easier to hide his activities: “I was concerned to discover the use of personal email and telephone accounts by Mr Ede for some of his [prime minister’s office] work and indications that he did so in order to avoid any public record,” she said. When she sent Ede a “production order” requiring him to hand over these hidden records of his prime minister’s office work, “Mr Ede provided a supplementary written statement to the inquiry in which he advised that the emails had been permanently deleted prior to the commencement of the inquiry and could not be recovered.” These are unprofessional ways for prime minister’s staff to be acting. It also appears to be a breach of the Public Records Act.

4. The IG’s report also shows that the PM’s office tolerated the blurry staff roles that facilitated the use of SIS information for political purposes. Deputy chief of staff Phil de Joux was the office’s contact with the SIS, with access to SIS information, and at the same time worked with Ede in the office’s media work, where the SIS information was seen as an opportunity.

5. John Key has claimed the IG’s report found no fault with his office. This is not correct. It was not the IG’s role to comment on abuse of power by the PM’s staff, but her findings confirm the abuse of power about which I wrote. Moreover her report shows that there were efforts to stop the inquiry from investigating the Key’s staff. She wrote: “In the course of my inquiry, I considered a submission made by counsel acting for several of the current and former staff of the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) that the actions of PMO staff in relation to Mr Slater’s OIA request were beyond the jurisdiction of the inquiry, except to the extent that those actions affected or reflected the maintenance, or failure, of political neutrality on the part of the NZSIS.” This raises various questions. Was Key aware of and involved in trying to limit the inquiry (ie was it his office that tried to stop the IG investigating Jason Ede’s and Phil de Joux’s actions)? And who were the lawyers she writes about and who paid them to try to stop the IG investigating the role of Key’s staff.

6. The Goff-SIS briefing was only one of many stories in the book. The difference here is that the Inspector-General has strong investigative powers and was willing to continue her review despite resistance from the PM’s office. Other stories concerning Slater, Ede and PM’s office attack operations, and their influence on election, still await being addressed by official or parliamentary inquiries.

Latest news: Tuesday, 25 November

Direct link between PM’s office and blogger – Radio NZ

Dirty Politics: Keeping Key’s hands clean – Stuff.co.nz

Govt in ‘spin control’, as three reports drop within hours – Stuff.co.nz

Little demands Key ‘lift his Government out of the sludge’ after Dirty Politics report – One News

John Key responds to media – NZ Herald

Phil Goff says he’s vindicated after 3 years – RadioLive

John Key ignores the obvious – Stuff.co.nz

PM welcomes Inspector-General’s report – Scoop

John Armstrong: National’s response not good enough – NZ Herald

Judith Collins waits on vacancy to shimmy back into Cabinet – One News

SIS can ‘absolutely’ be trusted says director – 3 News

Goff calls on PM to apologise or resign – Radio NZ

Dirty Politics: John Key won’t apologise to Goff – NZ Herald

Judith Collins cleared of colluding with Whale Oil blogger Slater – 3 News

Two apologies, and a call for a resignation, after report on errors by SIS – Scoop

Report slams SIS over information release – Radio NZ

Dirty Politics report: Judith Collins cleared, but bloggers tried to undermine SFO boss – One News

A further thought on the Gwyn report – The Dim Post

John Key refuses to accept Slater link – Radio NZ

Key under fire as report confirms staff disclosed SIS material to blogger – One News

Government Inquiry report released – Scoop

Dirty Politics: No evidence Judith Collins acted inappropriately: report – NZ Herald

Security analyst says SIS and PMs office unprofessional – Radio NZ

Dirty Politics: Kitteridge apologises to Goff – NZ Herald

‘Dirty politics’ report directs harsh criticism of SIS – Stuff.co.nz

Incomplete, inaccurate and misleading – Public Address

SIS criticised for ‘inaccurate’ release – Radio NZ

PM welcomes Inspector-General report – Scoop

Dirty Politics: SIS ‘failed’ to maintain political neutrality – NZ Herald

SIS report confirms Dirty Politics claims: Hager – Stuff.co.nz

Dirty Politics: John Key’s office in gun over SIS – NZ Herald

IGIS report on Dirty Politics due out today – RadioLive

Political commentators on Gwyn Inquiry – Radio NZ

Report on SIS set for release – 3 News

Pictures: The ‘Dirty Politics’ file – Stuff.co.nz

SIS report likely to show Dirty Politics book right – Radio NZ

Dirty Politics saga: Spy agency set to say sorry to Phil Goff – One News

Opposition rejects ‘dirty politics’ report findings – Stuff.co.nz

Apology should come from PM: Labour – Radio NZ

Gwyn Report to confirm Dirty Politics – The Standard

Spy review to validate book: Hager – NZ City

Royal Commission needed – PM’s office in Dirty Politics – Scoop

IGIS and Collins inquiry reports released

The Inspector-General’s report into the SIS can be read here.

Below are some of the initial reactions and analyses into the report’s release.

The report into Judith Collin’s alleged undermining of former SFO boss Adam Feeley can be read here.

Below are some of the initial reactions to the report’s release.