The 2026 inquiry into Acting District Court Judge Ema Aitken has drawn strong public attention because it sits at the intersection of judicial conduct, political sensitivity, and institutional trust. The Judicial Conduct Panel has found that Aitken’s conduct at Auckland’s Northern Club was a serious breach of comity, but not serious enough to justify removal from the bench, a conclusion explained by Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith after the report was delivered.

The decision closes a high-profile process that began after an incident at a 2024 New Zealand First function attended by then-deputy prime minister Winston Peters. It also highlights how New Zealand’s judicial accountability system works when allegations involve conduct that may damage confidence in the courts but does not automatically meet the threshold for dismissal.
What the inquiry was about
A political and judicial flashpoint
The inquiry focused on an incident at Auckland’s Northern Club on 22 November 2024, where Judge Ema Aitken was alleged to have disrupted a New Zealand First event while Winston Peters was speaking. According to the allegations, she challenged Peters during the function, prompting complaints and an eventual judicial conduct review.
Aitken denied shouting at Peters and said she did not know he was at the event. She also disputed some of the way the incident had been characterised, though she apologised for what was described as rude behaviour. The panel was asked to examine whether her actions crossed the line from poor judgment into conduct warranting removal.
Why the case mattered
The matter became significant because judges are expected to uphold standards of restraint, impartiality, and respect for the institutions of government. When a judge is alleged to have acted in a politically charged environment, the issue goes beyond etiquette and into the territory of public confidence in the judiciary.
That is why the case attracted national attention. It was not simply about one incident at a private club, but about whether judicial conduct can be judged against the standards of comity and constitutional restraint.
How the panel works
An independent accountability process
New Zealand’s Judicial Conduct Panel system exists to assess serious allegations against judges while preserving judicial independence. The process allows an independent body to investigate the facts and advise whether conduct is serious enough to justify removal.
That structure matters because judges cannot be treated like ordinary public servants. They must be protected from political pressure, but they also must be held accountable when their behavior threatens trust in the courts.
The threshold for removal
The key issue in cases like Aitken’s is not whether the conduct was inappropriate. The real legal question is whether it was so serious that it justified removal from office. That is a very high bar, and the panel’s role is to decide whether that threshold has been crossed.
In this case, the panel concluded that the conduct fell short of that extreme standard. That distinction is crucial, because it explains why Aitken can remain in office even though the panel found her actions problematic.
The Northern Club incident
What allegedly happened
The alleged incident occurred at the Northern Club during a New Zealand First event where Winston Peters was speaking. Reports and complaints said that Aitken interrupted the event and made comments suggesting Peters was lying. The matter escalated into a formal complaint process and then into a judicial inquiry.
The political sensitivity of the scene made the situation especially delicate. A judicial officer appearing to intervene in a partisan setting raises obvious concerns about perception, even if the conduct does not amount to misconduct in the most severe legal sense.
Aitken’s account
Aitken maintained that she did not know she was at a political function and denied deliberately shouting at Peters. Her position was that the incident had been misread or overstated, and that any rude behaviour did not amount to the kind of misconduct that should end her career.
That version of events was part of what the panel had to weigh. Judicial inquiries often involve not just what happened, but how intent, context, and public perception should influence the final judgment.
Paul Goldsmith’s explanation
The official announcement
Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith announced that the panel had found Aitken’s removal was not justified. He said the panel concluded her conduct was a serious breach of comity, but not enough to meet the removal threshold. Goldsmith also said Aitken would remain an Acting District Court Judge until her warrant expires in February 2027.
That statement is important because it frames the outcome as a legal and institutional decision rather than a political one. Goldsmith’s role was to convey the result, thank those involved, and emphasize the importance of the judicial conduct process.
Why the explanation matters
Goldsmith’s explanation helps the public understand why a judge can be criticized without being removed. He stressed that judicial conduct panels are important for maintaining trust and confidence in the judiciary. That message reinforces the idea that accountability and judicial independence must coexist.
By confirming that there would be no further public comment, Goldsmith also signaled that the government considered the matter settled from its side. The formal process had run its course, and the panel’s findings now stand as the decisive outcome.
What comity means
A constitutional principle
The panel said Aitken’s actions were a serious breach of comity. In constitutional terms, comity refers to mutual respect and restraint between the branches of government: the executive, legislature, and judiciary. It is not merely about politeness; it is about preserving the balance that allows institutions to function properly.
When a judge appears to act in a way that undermines that balance, the concern is that public confidence could erode. A judge does not have to act unlawfully to cause damage; even a serious appearance of partisanship can be enough to raise constitutional concerns.
Why it matters in practice
A breach of comity does not automatically mean removal. That is where the legal distinction becomes important. The panel’s use of the phrase suggests that Aitken’s behavior was serious and inappropriate, but still not grave enough to prove she could no longer serve.
This helps explain the nuance of the outcome. The panel acknowledged the wrongdoing without concluding that the judiciary had been irreparably harmed by it.
Findings at a glance
| Issue | Outcome |
|---|---|
| Judge involved | Ema Aitken |
| Incident location | Auckland’s Northern Club |
| Incident date | 22 November 2024 |
| Panel finding | Serious breach of comity |
| Removal recommendation | Not justified |
| Current status | Remains Acting District Court Judge |
| Warrant expiry | February 2027 |
| Government response | Paul Goldsmith confirmed the findings and closed the matter |
Why removal was not recommended
High legal threshold
The panel’s central conclusion was that while the conduct was serious, it did not justify the extraordinary step of removal. That implies the panel believed the incident fell short of the most severe categories of judicial misconduct. In effect, it drew a line between conduct that damages reputation and conduct that ends a judicial career.
This is consistent with the way many accountability systems work. Institutions often distinguish between poor judgment, serious breach, and unfitness for office, even though the public may view all three as equally damaging.
Preservation of judicial independence
Another reason removal may not have been recommended is the need to protect judicial independence from overreaction. If every controversial or politically awkward incident led to dismissal, the judiciary could become vulnerable to pressure and public outrage rather than evidence-based assessment.
So the decision reflects a balance. The panel condemned the conduct but stopped short of taking the most severe institutional step available.
What the findings mean
For the judiciary
The outcome is likely to be seen as a test of the judicial accountability system. On one hand, the process shows that judges are not beyond scrutiny. On the other, it shows that removal is reserved for the most serious cases, not every instance of embarrassing or ill-judged conduct.
That balance is essential for public confidence. If the system is too lenient, it appears self-protective. If it is too harsh, it risks undermining independence.
For public trust
Public trust in judges depends on both integrity and restraint. This case reminds people that a judge’s conduct can be scrutinized even outside the courtroom, especially where political events are involved. It also shows that the judiciary is expected to maintain a higher standard than ordinary public debate.
The panel’s findings may reassure some observers that the system can investigate serious complaints fairly. Others may feel that the conduct should have had stronger consequences. Either way, the process has made the standards more visible.
Political and constitutional implications
Sensitivity around political figures
Because the incident involved Winston Peters and a NZ First event, the matter was always going to have political overtones. That made the inquiry more delicate than a typical workplace conduct issue. It also meant the findings could easily be interpreted through a partisan lens, even though the panel’s role was not political.
Goldsmith’s handling of the result was therefore important. His statement focused on process, principle, and institutional respect rather than party politics.
A warning for public officials
The case also sends a broader message to public officials and judges alike: private settings do not necessarily shield public behaviour from scrutiny. When a judicial officer acts in a visible, politically charged environment, that conduct can become a matter of constitutional concern.
The lesson is not that judges must avoid all public events. It is that they must be especially careful about how their words and actions might be understood when political sensitivity is in the room.
Conclusion
The 2026 Ema Aitken inquiry has ended with a carefully balanced finding: the Judicial Conduct Panel judged her conduct to be a serious breach of comity, but not serious enough to justify removal. Paul Goldsmith’s explanation made clear that the process was about preserving both judicial accountability and judicial independence.

Vineeth T.C. is a news writer and digital content contributor at PageEuropean, covering key developments across New Zealand and Australia. His work focuses on delivering clear, fact-based reporting on current affairs, public policy, business updates, and regional news that matter to readers.