I was wrong when I claimed that leading politicians knew the name of the "prominent" New Zealander hiding behind name suppression. David Cunliffe did not.
The Labour leader has met the sex predator. "If I had known of the suggestion [that the man was a sex predator hiding behind name suppression], no such meeting would have taken place." I am sure that's true.
The meeting highlights two key points. First, there's no shaming without naming. The offender remains brazen and without remorse. He happily and openly met the Leader of the Opposition who had just loudly and boldly spoken out against sexual violence.
You think he would be too ashamed. But no. Name suppression thwarts justice because the offender has never had to own up. He can carry on like nothing happened. He can have a joke and a laugh with the leader of the Labour Party exactly as if he had never performed an indecent act on a woman in her own home. Oh that his victim could just share a joke, have a laugh, or meet the leader of the Labour Party.
Second, the meeting highlights the danger to which name suppression exposes women.