Politicians have come to the defence of Green Party MP Golriz Ghahraman after Act leader David Seymour called her a "menace to freedom in this country".
Seymour was speaking to MediaWorks' Magic Talk radio host Sean Plunket yesterday about the issue of freedom of speech in relation to the Christchurch Call summit.
Plunket suggested figures such as Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Ghahraman subscribed to the notion that speech could create mass murderers and therefore needed to be controlled.
Seymour then referred to "mass murderers" in history such as Mao Tse Tung, Stalin and Hitler using the suppression of free expression to gain power before saying "I just think Golriz Ghahraman is completely wrong. I don't know if she understands what she is saying but Golriz Ghahraman is a real menace to freedom in this country."
“Golriz Ghahraman is a real menace to freedom in this country.”@dbseymour spoke to @SeanPlunket about the dangers facing free speech in New Zealand and the political theatre of Jacinda Ardern’s Christchurch Call.
— ACT Party (@actparty) May 16, 2019
Check out the full audio below ⬇️https://t.co/EQ07HiH0XO
The exchange set off a firestorm on Twitter, with Seymour being branded a bully, among other things.
Ghahraman responded on Twitter, saying Seymour was dog-whistling to racists.
David Seymour is dog whistling to racists. The same racists who were just caught talking about how to kill me.
— Golriz Ghahraman (@golrizghahraman) May 16, 2019
Otherwise why not mention that the Justice Minister and PM are also leading on hate speech reform? This is dangerous and dirty. This is not NZ https://t.co/QlRHHrbSDd
National Party heavyweight Judith Collins then stepped in, calling for a "timeout".
"Please don't refer to Golriz in this way. I do not agree with almost anything she says but she is a person and it does not assist political debate to dehumanise her like that."
Time for some ‘time out’ on this. Please don’t refer to Golriz in this way. I do not agree with almost anything she says but she is a person and it does not assist political debate to dehumanise her like that. https://t.co/cqDtApA50n
— Judith Collins (@JudithCollinsMP) May 16, 2019
Among those who thanked Collins for her comments were Green MPs Chloe Swarbrick and Julie-Anne Genter, who yesterday called some motorists "fascists".
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