
Huge Victory For Free Speech: Journalist Gagged For Exposing Chinese Communist Party Interference In NZ Wins Court Case
'We're thrilled that Portia Mao, represented by the Free Speech Union, has won her court case and is no longer gagged by New Zealand law after calling out the Chinese Communist Party's overreach in New Zealand. This is excellent news for all Kiwis.
'CCP stooge, Morgan Zhihong Xiao, sought interim orders under the HDCA against Portia Mao, alleging online defamation and harassment. The initial orders (granted without notice!) required Portia to remove online commentary and apologise. With the FSU's representation, Portia applied to be heard and have the orders discharged. Judge McIlraith ruled in Portia's favour.
'The Court also rightly warned against weaponising legal tools to silence criticism, especially in political debate. The HDCA, while created with good intentions, has been weaponised now in a number of cases to silence dissent.
'Portia's victory is a huge step in pushing back on this flawed law. It was also essential for ensuring criticising foreign powers remains a legal right in New Zealand. If governments, foreign or not, can twist our own law to stop us from exposing them, then we are not free.
'The Free Speech Union is embarking on extensive work to thoroughly review the HDCA, analysing all decisions ever made under it, and will present this to the Minister of Justice later in the year. We cannot stand by while individuals like Portia are unjustly silenced.
'When a brave journalist is gagged for putting their neck on the line in our country, alarm bells should ring. Portia's victory was made possible by the thousands of Kiwis who support our work, and this result is the best outcome to protect all Kiwis' rights to seek, receive, and impart information.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
2 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
Opportunities Party goes public in search for new leader
Photo: Screenshot The Opportunities Party is looking for a new leader, and has taken to Seek to find them. TOP has been leader-less since 2023, and has taken the unusual approach of an open-call job ad to recruit the person it hopes will lead them to success in 2026. The job ad was uploaded on Seek on Thursday evening. The ad said the party was "not fussy" about a candidate's CV. "PhD in economics? Tremendous. Self-employed builder? Fantastic. Nurse? Magnificent," it said. "What matters is your ability to lead us towards a better future, live our values (fearless honesty, equitable opportunity, ingenuity, and results that matter), and handle the heat without melting." Instead, TOP was looking for someone who "understands the reality" of the cost of living, had a reputation for honesty and truth, communicated effectively, and was open to different viewpoints without taking disagreement personally. "We're not looking for an ideologue. We're looking for someone unashamedly driven by practical solutions that work for everyday Kiwis. Someone who believes in solutions being based on evidence, not whether they sound "left" or "right" and calling it "good" or "bad" based on that alone" No salary was posted. The successful candidate would be required to "steer the party to electoral success" in 2026. The party was founded in 2016 by businessman Gareth Morgan, who stepped down after the 2017 election. At that election, TOP got 2.4 percent of the party vote, to date its best result, but not enough to reach the 5 percent threshold needed to get into Parliament. Since then, it has been led by Geoff Simmons, Shai Navot, and Raf Manji. In 2023, Manji, a former Christchurch City Councillor, placed second in the seat of Ilam, ahead of the then-incumbent, Labour's Sarah Pallett. National's Hamish Campbell won the seat with a 7830 vote lead over Manji. In the most recent RNZ-Reid Research poll, TOP polled at 2.2 percent.


NZ Herald
6 hours ago
- NZ Herald
The Opportunities Party advertises for new leader, eyes 2026 election
The Opportunities Party (Top) is seeking a new party leader, according to a recent public job ad. Uploaded to the job search site Seek late last night, the ad, entitled 'Political Party Leader', gives a taste of what candidates could expect from the role. 'Feeling like everyday Kiwis get


NZ Herald
14 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Plan Beef: Meet the farmers challenging food system norms
Kiwi mum in US immigration limbo: What are your rights with ICE? American immigration lawyer Minda Thorward who is representing the Kiwi being detained and is with us to discuss the case and the wider issues around US immigration.