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Karl du Fresne is a freelance journalist and columnist. A former editor
of The Dominion. To see is blog
click here >>>.
He is not, and never has been, a member of any political party.
He is the author of Free Press, Free Society
(1994) and The Right To Know: News Media Freedom in New Zealand
(2005), both published by the Newspaper Publishers' Association.
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Opinion piece by Karl du Fresne
24 August 2008
The
Tipping-out Point for Labour
National
Radio reported a few days ago that Energy Minister David
Parker was taken aback by the public backlash against the
Government’s decision to phase out incandescent light bulbs.
Associate Justice Minister Lianne Dalziel is known to be
concerned about a similar adverse reaction against her
proposal to ban liquor sales in suburban dairies. Last month,
we witnessed the unusual spectacle of city streets being
blocked by truckies protesting at an increase in road user
charges – and the even more remarkable spectacle of the
public and the media cheering them on, despite the
inconvenience caused.
In
other words, Labour seems to have reached that point in the
life of every government when just about everything it does
seems to get up people’s noses. I suspect that support for
the truckies had very little to do with support for the
truckies; it was more a symbolic uprising in response to a
whole range of cumulative, disparate irritants connected only
by the perception that a bullying, busybody government was
intruding too far into people’s lives. The fuse was already
primed – all the truckies did was supply the match.
Veteran
political commentators such as Richard Long have drawn
parallels with Labour’s attempt to ban cats from dairies in
1975 on hygiene grounds, which created such an outcry that it
entered New Zealand political folklore. No one could seriously
argue that it was the cats-in-dairies issue that tipped the
enfeebled Rowling government out of office, but it became
emblematic of the way a grumpy and irritable electorate can
react against a seemingly piffling intrusion on its rights.
And that was after just one term in office; Helen Clark’s
government has had three.
Personally,
I think the tipping point may have been reached much earlier
than any of the events related above. The first unmistakeable
sign that Labour was in serious trouble came in the middle of
last year when school principals rebelled against proposals to
ban unhealthy foods from school tuck shops. For them, it was
one imposition too many – one more onerous administrative
burden to distract them from their core job of teaching kids.
They were also sceptical about how effective it would be –
and rightly so, judging by the number of pupils now leaving
school grounds at lunchtimes to binge on fatty foods from the
nearest dairy or takeaway outlet. I remember thinking that
when even the education profession turned against a
teacher-friendly government, one whose ranks are stacked with
former teachers, the alarm bells would surely start ringing.
But perhaps the hubris of power had impaired Labour’s
hearing, because not long after that the Clark government
compounded things by buying into a very damaging fight with
the electorate over the repeal of Section 59 of the Crimes
Act. To stretch the aural metaphor, it was at about this point
that the political commentariat began trotting out the cliché
that the public had so tired of Labour’s imperious
pronouncements that it had taken the phone off the hook.
So
where does that leave us now? Let’s assume that the polls
are correct, and that Labour is going to take a bath in the
general election. And let’s assume further that it won’t
be able to cobble together enough support from the minor
parties to outnumber National (an assumption supported by some
poll results that suggest voters are deserting the smaller
parties, with the possible exception of the Maori Party).
Shouldn’t
all this give heart to those who are ideologically at odds
with Labour’s Big Government approach and redistributionist,
the-rich-are-pricks philosophy? Well, not to me, because I
have little confidence that National will be radically
different. Elections are supposed to be about choices, but I
can’t think of any general election in my voting lifetime
when the choices seemed less clearcut. The only sense in which
the choices are clearly defined is that Labour has forgotten
how to engage reverse gear while National, which has
progressively ditched many of the policies that clearly
delineated its differences with Labour, seems unable to get
out of it.
It’s
a truism that oppositions don’t win elections, governments
lose them. It has probably never been truer than now, when we
are witnessing a Labour government seemingly bent on electoral
hara-kiri by antagonising the public at every turn, and a
National opposition bound for victory largely by default and
determined to do as little as possible to upset that prospect.
The defining quality of National’s campaign, as far as it
can be determined at this point, is that it is obsessively
risk-averse – an exquisite irony when you consider that
party leader John Key originally made his reputation, and his
millions, as an audacious foreign exchange trader with
ice-cool nerve.
Pragmatically
speaking, of course, there is no earthly reason why National
should risk frightening the voters when it can coast into
office by playing safe. But politics should be about more than
pragmatism. Some people (me, for example) are still
sufficiently naïve and idealistic to look to political
leaders for vision and inspiration, for a sense of what sort
of country New Zealand could be if it were led in a bold new
direction. John Key’s National Party, unfortunately, offers
no such vision. Former leader Don Brash got close, but allowed
himself to be repackaged by his minders as a non-threatening
“mainstream” politician – and appears to have regretted
it ever since.
Of
course there’s an alternative explanation for National’s
apparent timidity. This is the “secret agenda” theory, so
eagerly promoted by Labour, which holds that the benign smile
on John Key’s face is a trap; that National has a set of
extremist tricks up its sleeve but won’t declare its hand.
Personally I don’t buy this, but if it’s true then
National deserves to be rejected for the simple reason that
politicians in a western democracy are supposed to be open and
honest about their intentions. It was precisely because the
public became cynical about undisclosed agendas – Labour’s
in the 1980s, National’s in the 1990s – that we allowed
ourselves to be suckered into the great electoral con job
known as MMP.
Here’s
the problem, then: Key seems a genuinely decent and affable
sort of bloke – but should we elect our leaders on the basis
of their apparent decency and affability? I look for something
deeper. At the very least I look for some clear indication of
what a party stands for, philosophically. I know what Labour,
the Greens and the Maori Party stand for, and even if I
don’t agree with them I can at least respect them for having
some sort of coherent ideological framework. But when I look
at National all I see is a party that seems prepared to make
whatever trade-offs and compromises are necessary to win
office. That may be realpolitik, but I don’t believe it’s
enough to inspire confidence and respect from voters.
It
strikes me as very telling that John Key’s most visceral
response to anything since he became party leader came in
March this year when ACT leader Rodney Hide proposed that Sir
Roger Douglas should sit in a National-ACT Cabinet. In a rare
flash of something approaching passion, Key made a statement
that could have been scripted by a Labour Party spin-doctor:
“I’m not going to go and run a government that slashes
benefits and privatises off all the assets that the state
continues to own; I’m not going to run a radical agenda.”
That the National leader should be so eager to distance
himself from a party that champions small government and
private enterprise – once the ideological touchstones of
National itself – was a graphic illustration of how far
National has drifted in its bid to capture the centre ground.
I
said before that the choices facing voters in this election
have never been less clearcut, but I should qualify that. The
choices may not be as clearcut as some of us might like
between Labour and National, but MMP, for all its flaws, does
give voters other options. One of the sub-plots of the
election will be whether ACT supporters throw their weight
behind National to help ensure Labour’s defeat, or stay true
to Rodney Hide’s party in the hope that a few more ACT MPs
in Parliament will put some steel into National’s spine.
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