Refuting Brie Elliot: The Teaching Council, Centralisation, and a Convenient Amnesia

Brie Elliot has issued what she clearly believes is a devastating ultimatum to ACT: Vote against Amendment Paper 583, or she will “remind people every single time” ACT talks about freedom, choice, or government overreach.

It is a dramatic performance. It is also historically illiterate.

Before we get to the substance, here is the core of her claim:

  • ACT cannot oppose centralisation while voting for a Minister‑appointed Teaching Council.
  • ACT cannot claim to support “choice” while removing elected teacher representatives.
  • ACT cannot oppose bureaucracy while supporting a model where the Minister appoints all members.
  • And if ACT votes for this, she will personally attach a “receipt” to every future ACT statement on freedom.

It is a strong rhetorical flourish, but it collapses the moment you introduce history, context, or basic institutional memory.

Let’s do what Brie Elliot did not: look at the actual history of teacher regulation in New Zealand.

The Teaching Council Has Been Centralised Since 1989

Brie Elliot’s entire argument rests on the premise that teachers have historically elected their own regulators, and that Amendment Paper 583 represents a shocking new centralisation.

This is false.

Since the creation of the Teacher Registration Board in 1989, teacher regulation has been:

  • created by statute
  • governed from Wellington
  • overseen by Ministerial appointment
  • structured as a centralised professional regulator

For thirty‑five years, teacher regulation has been a Wellington‑based, Minister‑controlled system.

The only exception, the only time teachers were given elected representation, was under the Ardern–Hipkins government, when Labour restructured the Teaching Council and introduced elected positions.

This was not the historical norm. It was a late, ideological experiment.

To pretend that Amendment Paper 583 is some unprecedented assault on teacher democracy is simply untrue. It is a return to the long‑standing model that existed for decades.

Brie Elliot’s argument depends on pretending the last five years are the whole of history.

The Teaching Council Under Labour Was Not “Democratic” — It Was Ideological

Let’s be honest about why Labour introduced elected positions.

It was not because Labour suddenly discovered a passion for democratic accountability in professional bodies. If that were true, they would have democratised:

  • the Medical Council
  • the Nursing Council
  • the Law Society
  • the Social Workers Registration Board
  • the Psychologists Board
  • the Midwifery Council

They did not.

They democratised one regulator: the Teaching Council.

Why? Because the Teaching Council had become a vehicle for ideological enforcement — DEI frameworks, “Unteach Racism,” Treaty‑based pedagogy, and the entire suite of Critical Education Studies dogma.

Elected positions ensured that the Council would be captured by the same activist class that dominates teacher training programmes and union leadership.

This was not democracy. It was ideological entrenchment.

Amendment Paper 583 does not “remove teacher voice.” It removes a mechanism that guaranteed activist capture.

Ministerial Appointment Is the Norm Across Every Other Profession

Brie Elliot frames Ministerial appointment as authoritarian centralisation.

Again, this is false.

In New Zealand, Ministerial appointment is the standard model for professional regulation:

  • Doctors
  • Nurses
  • Pharmacists
  • Engineers
  • Architects
  • Lawyers
  • Psychologists
  • Dentists
  • Midwives
  • Social workers

All are governed by Minister‑appointed councils.

Why? Because professional regulation is a public safety function, not a union function.

Teachers are not a special priesthood exempt from the norms that govern every other regulated profession.

If Ministerial appointment is “authoritarian,” then every professional regulator in New Zealand is authoritarian — a claim Brie Elliot does not make, because it would be absurd.

The Teaching Council Has Been a Disaster — and Teachers Know It

If Brie Elliot wants to talk about accountability, let’s talk about the Teaching Council’s record:

  • bloated bureaucracy
  • ideological training modules
  • politicised “professional standards”
  • expensive fees
  • poor service delivery
  • slow processing times
  • a reputation for hostility toward dissenting teachers

Teachers have been complaining about the Council for years. Many want it abolished entirely.

The idea that the Council is a shining beacon of teacher democracy is laughable. It is a bureaucracy that has failed teachers, failed parents, and failed the public.

Reforming it is not “centralisation.” It is repair.

The Real Centralisation Happened Under Labour — and Brie Elliot Supported It

If Brie Elliot is worried about centralisation, she should look at:

  • the centralised curriculum
  • the centralised “local histories” mandate
  • the centralised Treaty‑based pedagogy requirements
  • the centralised DEI frameworks
  • the centralised “Unteach Racism” programme
  • the centralised ideological training for teachers
  • the centralised control of assessment standards
  • the centralised control of teacher training

All of this happened under Labour. All of it was enforced through the Teaching Council.

Where was Brie Elliot then?

Silent.

Because her objection is not to centralisation. It is the wrong people having centralised power.

The “Receipt” Threat Is Pure Activist Theatre

Brie Elliot promises to “remind people every single time” ACT talks about freedom.

This is not a political argument. It is a threat of perpetual activist harassment.

It is also meaningless.

ACT has been consistent for decades:

  • centralised regulators for public safety
  • decentralised service delivery
  • reduced bureaucracy
  • reduced ideological capture
  • reduced union control over public institutions

Amendment Paper 583 is entirely consistent with that philosophy.

The only inconsistency is in Brie Elliot’s narrative.

The Real Issue: Who Controls the Teaching Profession?

This is the question Brie Elliot never asks.

Should the teaching profession be controlled by:

  • elected activists aligned with the unions and the ideological wing of teacher training? or
  • a Minister accountable to Parliament and the public?

One of these is democratic. One is not.

One can be removed by voters. One cannot.

One is subject to public scrutiny. One is not.

Brie Elliot calls Ministerial appointment “centralisation.” But elected activist capture is far more centralised, because it is insulated from democratic accountability.

Conclusion: Brie Elliot’s Argument Collapses Under Its Own Weight

Her critique depends on:

  • ignoring 35 years of history
  • pretending Labour’s ideological experiment was the historical norm
  • misrepresenting how every other profession in New Zealand is regulated
  • confusing activist capture with democratic representation
  • and framing Ministerial accountability as authoritarianism

It is a passionate argument. It is also wrong.

If ACT votes for Amendment Paper 583, it is not betraying freedom. It is restoring the regulatory model that existed for decades before Labour politicised it.

And if Brie Elliot wants to attach “receipts,” she should start with her own selective memory.

Teacher Regulation in New Zealand (1989–2026)

A concise history of centralisation, politicisation, and structural change

1989 — Creation of the Teacher Registration Board (TRB)

  • Established under the Education Act 1989.
  • Fully centralised, Wellington‑based regulator.
  • Members appointed by the Minister of Education.
  • No elected teacher representatives.
  • Purpose: registration, discipline, and professional standards.

Significance: This is the foundational model — Minister‑appointed, centralised, and bureaucratic. Exactly the model Brie Elliot now pretends never existed.

1990s–2000s — TRB continues as a Minister‑appointed regulator

  • Successive governments (National and Labour) retain the same structure.
  • No move toward elected representation.
  • Teacher regulation remains a public safety function, not a union‑democratic body.

Significance: For two decades, no one, including unions, argued that teachers should elect their regulators.

2006 — TRB replaced by the New Zealand Teachers Council (NZTC)

  • Created under the Education Standards Act 2001, implemented in 2006.
  • Still Minister‑appointed.
  • Still centralised in Wellington.
  • Expanded role: professional standards, conduct, competence, and teacher education approval.

Significance: The NZTC becomes more powerful, but remains non‑elected.

2015 — NZTC replaced by the Education Council of Aotearoa New Zealand (EDUCANZ)

  • Created by the Education Amendment Act 2015 (National Government).
  • Structure: 9 members, all appointed by the Minister.
  • Explicitly removed union influence.
  • Stronger regulatory powers, including mandatory fees.

Significance: This is the most centralised version yet, and it was the law for years. Again: no elected teacher representatives.

2018–2019 — Labour replaces EDUCANZ with the Teaching Council of Aotearoa New Zealand (TCANZ)

  • Created by the Education Amendment Act 2018 (Ardern Government).
  • Introduces elected teacher representatives for the first time in NZ history.
  • Council structure: 13 members, with 7 elected by teachers.
  • Embeds Treaty‑based and DEI frameworks into professional standards.

Significance: This is the only period (2019–2026) where teachers elect representatives. It is an ideological departure from 30 years of precedent.

2020–2023 — Teaching Council becomes increasingly politicised

  • Launches Unteach Racism” and other ideological programmes.
  • Embeds Critical Education Studies into professional standards.
  • Expands bureaucracy and increases fees.
  • Widespread teacher dissatisfaction emerges.

Significance: The Council becomes a vehicle for ideological enforcement, not professional regulation.

2024–2025 — Public and teacher backlash intensifies

  • Teachers complain about:
    • high fees
    • slow processing
    • ideological training
    • bureaucratic overreach
  • Calls for reform or abolition grow louder.

Significance: The elected‑representative model is widely seen as dysfunctional.

2026 — Education and Training (System Reform) Amendment Bill

  • Amendment Paper 583 proposes:
    • 7–9 member CouncilAll members appointed by the Minister
    • At least 3 must have 5+ years’ education sector experience
  • Returns to the pre‑2019 model used for 30 years.

Significance: This is not “new centralisation.” It is a reversion to the long‑standing norm.

Summary: What the Timeline Shows

  • 1989–2019 (30 years): Teacher regulation was always Minister‑appointed and centralised.
  • 2019–2026 (7 years): Labour introduced elected positions — an ideological anomaly.
  • 2026: Amendment Paper 583 restores the historical model.

Brie Elliot’s argument only works if you erase the entire history of teacher regulation and pretend the Ardern‑Hipkins experiment was the norm.

It wasn’t.

#AWFLAffluentWhiteFemaleLeftist #Education #FarLeft #LeftistMyths #LeftistsLeftism #Teaching
Marxist Redefinitions: Racism

Continuing with the theme that “Communists share your vocabulary, but they don’t share your dictionary”, we arrive at the contested term racism. The Classical Definition Traditionally, racism has b…

No Minister

What Are Erica Stanford’s Education Reforms Really About?

And are NZ teachers correct about where the system is headed?

I’ll start with a confession: I am pleasantly surprised by Erica Stanford. Not because she is perfect, no minister is, but because she is the first Education Minister in decades willing to say the quiet part out loud:

Critical Pedagogy, the Neo‑Marxist backbone of our curriculum, has to go[i].

For years, New Zealand’s education system has been marinated in Paulo Freire, Critical Literacy, Critical Mathematics, “other ways of knowing,” and the usual post‑structuralist detritus. Teachers may not know the genealogy, but they certainly know the slogans.

And if you spend any time on social media (as I do), you’ll see a steady stream of teachers mourning the loss of their ideological comfort zone. They want a return to Critical Pedagogy — even if they have no idea where it came from.

But the real question is this:

Are their fears about Stanford’s “knowledge‑rich” reforms even remotely grounded in reality?

Let’s examine the claims.

The “Knowledge‑Rich Curriculum” Panic

A number of teachers online insist that Stanford is importing a “knowledge‑rich” curriculum from the UK and USA, based on E.D. Hirsch’s The Schools We Need. They claim:

  • it’s “rote learning”
  • it’s “Victorian”
  • it “kills critical thinking
  • England is “backing away from it”
  • it’s “American conservative ideology”

This is the usual script.

The irony? These same teachers are oblivious to the fact that Critical Pedagogy and Culturally Relevant Teaching have dominated American education for decades — right up until the Trump administration pushed back.

If Hirsch is the bogeyman, he is a very small one compared to Freire, Giroux, Ladson‑Billings, and the entire Critical Education Studies apparatus.

What Stanford Is Actually Doing

Stanford’s reforms are not mysterious. They are:

  • restoring subject knowledge
  • raising literacy and numeracy expectations
  • introducing structured teaching
  • removing ideological content
  • requiring curriculum clarity
  • tightening ERO accountability

This is not “Hirschian indoctrination.” It is basic educational competence.

New Zealand’s literacy and numeracy collapse is not a philosophical debate; it is a national emergency.

A knowledge‑rich curriculum is not ideology. It is how every high‑performing system on Earth works.

The Ofsted Panic: Fact or Fiction?

Propagandist Brie Elliot claims that ERO leadership visiting Ofsted (UK) and AERO (Australia) is a sign that NZ is importing a punitive, high‑stakes inspection regime.

Her concerns include:

  • Ofsted’s reputation for stress
  • the Ruth Perry tragedy
  • schools advertising their ratings
  • ERO shifting to clearer judgements
  • charter schools expanding
  • the Minister having conversion powers

Let’s separate fact from fear‑projection.

FACT:

Ofsted has been criticised for its single headline grade. England removed that grade in 2024.

FACT:

ERO is moving toward clearer reporting categories.

FACT:

ERO has internal morale issues.

FICTION:

NZ is importing Ofsted’s punitive culture wholesale.

FICTION:

Clearer reporting equals “weaponised reviews.”

FICTION:

This is a plot to force schools into charter conversion.

FICTION:

Knowledge‑rich curriculum = American conservative ideology.

What’s actually happening is simple: ERO is being forced to stop producing vague, euphemistic reports that hide school failure.

For 20 years, ERO reports have been so soft, so coded, and so politically sanitised that parents could not tell whether a school was failing.

Teachers liked it that way. Parents did not.

Stanford is correcting that imbalance.

Are Teachers Correct That England Is “Backing Away” From Knowledge‑Rich Reform?

No.

England removed the headline grade from Ofsted reports — not the knowledge‑rich curriculum.

In fact:

  • The UK’s Core Knowledge approach remains intact.
  • The English Baccalaureate remains intact.
  • The knowledge‑sequenced curriculum remains intact.
  • The phonics‑based literacy reforms remain intact.
  • The maths mastery reforms remain intact.

England’s reforms have improved literacy and numeracy, especially for disadvantaged students.

Teachers claiming England is “backing away” are either misinformed or wishfully thinking.

The Real Reason Teachers Are Panicking

It is not Ofsted. It is not Hirsch. It is not charter schools. It is not “rote learning.”

It is this: Critical Pedagogy is being removed from the curriculum, and many teachers don’t know how to teach without it.

For 20 years, teacher training has been dominated by:

  • inquiry learning
  • student‑led learning
  • identity‑based teaching
  • “other ways of knowing”
  • anti‑colonial framing
  • Critical Literacy
  • Freirean pedagogy

These methods are ideologically fashionable — and empirically disastrous.

Stanford is replacing ideology with structure. Teachers trained in ideology feel threatened.

So, Are Their Concerns Valid?

Valid concerns?

A few, but not the ones they think.

  • ERO needs internal reform.
  • ERO must avoid becoming punitive.
  • Charter conversion powers should be used sparingly.

Invalid concerns?

Almost everything else.

  • Knowledge‑rich curriculum is not harmful.
  • England is not abandoning it.
  • Hirsch is not the puppet‑master.
  • Critical thinking requires knowledge.
  • Structured teaching is not “Victorian.”
  • Removing Critical Pedagogy is not “American conservatism.”

The teachers’ objections are ideological, not educational.

Knowledge‑Rich Curriculum vs Critical Pedagogy

CategoryKnowledge‑Rich
CurriculumCritical Pedagogy
(Neo‑Marxist)Core PurposeBuild a shared base of factual knowledge so students can think, read, and reason effectivelyDevelop “critical consciousness” to challenge power structures and social hierarchiesView of KnowledgeObjective, cumulative, culturally transmitted; knowledge precedes skillSocially constructed, political, contested; knowledge is a tool of oppressionRole of the TeacherExpert instructor who imparts essential knowledgeActivist‑facilitator who guides students toward ideological awarenessRole of the StudentLearner acquiring foundational knowledge and skillsEmerging activist who must interrogate society through identity and oppression lensesCurriculum StructureSequenced, coherent, cumulative; builds year on yearFluid, thematic, identity‑based; content chosen for political relevanceLiteracy ApproachPhonics, explicit instruction, structured practiceWhole‑language, “authentic texts,” student‑led readingCritical ThinkingBuilt on knowledge; you cannot think critically about what you do not knowTreated as political critique; “critical thinking” = critiquing power and identityAssessment PhilosophyMastery, accuracy, demonstrated competenceDe‑emphasis on merit; focus on equity, identity, and “lived experience”View of CultureShared cultural literacy strengthens social cohesionDominant culture is oppressive; curriculum must “decolonise” knowledgeView of the IndividualCapable learner who benefits from structure and knowledgeSocially constructed subject shaped by power, identity, and oppressionClassroom DynamicsTeacher‑led, structured, predictableStudent‑led, inquiry‑based, politically framedEducational GoalLiteracy, numeracy, knowledge, competenceActivism, identity formation, ideological critiqueInternational EvidenceStrong results in UK, Singapore, Australia, and charter networksConsistently poor outcomes; linked to literacy decline and widening gapsUnderlying PhilosophyCognitive science, educational psychology, classical liberal educationMarxism → Freire → Critical Theory → identity politics

Knowledge‑Rich education is about teaching children things they need to know. Critical Pedagogy is about teaching children what they should think in terms of Marxism about society.

One builds competence. The other builds activists.

The Bottom Line

Erica Stanford’s reforms are:

  • evidence‑based
  • internationally mainstream
  • aligned with high‑performing systems
  • a necessary correction to 20 years of ideological drift

The teachers panicking on social media are not defending children. They are defending a worldview.

And for the first time in decades, that worldview is being challenged.

[i] While Critical Pedagogy was only formalised under the Ardern-Hipkins government, it has been in place informally for much longer.

#AWFLAffluentWhiteFemaleLeftist #CriticalTheory #Education #EducationCurriculum #EducationOutcomes #LeftistMyths #LeftistsLeftism #NeoMarxism
Critical Pedagogy: Paulo Freire’s Legacy and Its Global Reverberations

According to Paulo Freire and his followers, education is never neutral. It either serves to integrate individuals into the dominant system or becomes a “practice of freedom” that seeks to transfor…

No Minister

Friday’s Quick Hits

  • Updates on Iran
  • Updates on Euro-Islam (Britain and Germany)
  • Why California is Broke and Texas is not.
  • Cuba are Asshoe
  • Ireland Can’t Vote There Way Out Of This.
  • “They got the Muthafuckin’ Robot Dog in the Muthafuckin’ Hood”
  • You have 4,294,967,295 nanoseconds to comply
  • Updates on Iran

    After my two looks at US Strategy concerning Iran and China, this guy summed it up in just two sentences:

    Donald Trump is not trying to restore the status quo. He is replacing itevery day the Strait remains closed, America sells more oil and gas.

    Especially to China. As always with Rod Martin, read the whole thing, Trump’s Hormuz Trap Snaps Shut.

    Plus this new additional pressure, yet another consequence of the Iranian morons attacking their fellow Muslims (though only Sunni) in the Gulf States:

    https://twitter.com/EricLDaugh/status/2044472932106141852

    The Yanks have been wanting this sort of access for years. There’s no point in any Mullah or IRGC commander cornering business markets in Iran if they only have Iranian money to spend , and only in Iran.

    Updates on Euro-Islam (Britain and Germany)

    Still, even if the US is trying to win in Iran, throughout the rest of the West the White Left are apparently determined to kill themselves, but only after they kill their own societies, because the ultimate grace is being tolerant of the intolerant – at least as long as they’re not intolerant right-wingers, ammirite?

    https://twitter.com/realMaalouf/status/2038247207141347521

    Meantime I can’t believe that German women have gone from this in the 2010’s…

    … to this in 2026.

    https://twitter.com/JemappelleEve/status/2038120999271489873

    Fucking racists who aren’t interested in forming relationships with men from Afghanistan and the like – and don’t give me any of this “human rights” crap.

    Ironically, one of those countries attacked by Iran, the UAE, had this to say about radical Islam in the West years ago

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwzea7OpZ48

    Why California is Broke and Texas is not.

    A little bit of humour that makes the point.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JlEzL3Trrc

    And here’s a more serious reason why, as this scandal continues to unfold in California:

    https://twitter.com/christopherrufo/status/2039372032635482535

    Cuba are Asshoe

    https://twitter.com/EmmaRincon/status/2044020364611637568

    This regime cannot fall fast enough for me.

    Meanwhile NBC conducted a simpering interview with Cuban President which you can view at this link, assuming you have a vomit bag ready, but I’ve put the link in because of an alternative set of questions the prick could have been asked, of which just two:

  • Your regime announced a ‘mass pardon’ of over 2,000 prisoners — yet NOT A SINGLE political prisoner was released, despite more than 1,200 individuals still jailed for political reasons, including 11J protesters, according to Human Rights Watch, Prisoners Defenders, Justicia 11J, and Cuban Observatory for Human Rights. Why were none included, and will you publish a full list and commit to releasing EVERY political prisoner without conditions?
  • Cuba’s overseas medical missions generate billions of dollars annually while doctors report confiscated wages, seized passports, and coercion — practices widely described as forced labor and human trafficking. Will you commit to end this system, return passports, and pay doctors their FULL salaries directly — or is this simply a malign revenue stream for the regime?
  • For a completely opposite interpretation of that last point, check out old Commie, Mike Treen’s, paen to that aspect of Cuba here at The Daily Blog, Cuba has saved millions of lives across the world and we must fight for its survival as a duty to humanity.

    I was pleased to see that there were no comments on it. Hopefully that’s because such commie propaganda is so blatant from old Tankies like Treen that it was too much even for Brandbury’s commentariat.

    Ireland Can’t Vote There Way Out Of This.

    I linked linked to this earlier in the week in a comment on the Hungary Down, Ireland Up post, but it deserves its own space, simple as a warning about how easily societies like California and Ireland can slip away from being free, safe and prosperous societies via voting (16m).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cb2Oiir0i90

    “They got the Muthafuckin’ Robot Dog in the Muthafuckin’ Hood”

    And it even speaks with an Indian-English accent. This is not how I envisioned Robocop or The Terminator getting started but then SkyNet is much smarter than us. It’ll start with cuteness.

    https://twitter.com/WallStreetApes/status/2043187603122626819

    And on the note of Robocop…

    You have 4,294,967,295 nanoseconds to comply

    I have hit this problem, as have Wintel folk, and the reason is laughable: Apple MacBooks slow down after 49 days:

    You will often notice the device slows down after a few weeks while some apps no longer work as expected. Photon has now identified a bug that effectively acts like a time bomb and is likely to be responsible for some of these problems.

    This bug means that after exactly 49 days, 17 hours, 2 minutes and 47.296 seconds from the moment a Mac is switched on, network connections are no longer terminated correctly. This initially leads to an increase in CPU utilization, because after some time hundreds or even thousands of connections are managed that should actually have been terminated. As soon as the available ports, usually 16,384 in number, are used up, no more new connections can be established.

    At which point you re-boot. But why the timing of 49 days?

    MacOS uses a 32-bit counter to determine the time and duration of network connections. It can therefore store values up to 2³², which corresponds to 4,294,967,295 nanoseconds or 49 days, 17 hours, 2 minutes and 47.296 seconds. If this value is exceeded, the counter overflows and stops working. 

    As a coder I also lost track of the number of times I fucked up on counters. In one project our system crashed about twenty days after launch because we’d embedded a small counter of human-filed documents that was exceeded because the nurses were holding them longer than designed. Easy fix of course but the mystery of why they’d been held led to a whole shit-load of the dreaded Business Process Reengineering that we should have done in the first place.

    #ArtEntertainment #California #CommunismAndCommunists #Cuba #FraudAndGrifting #Ireland #LeftistMyths #LeftistsLeftism