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NZCPR
Guest Forum
Opinion piece by Karl du Fresne
7 December 2008
The
Changing of the Guard
In
the first party leaders’ debate on TV One during the
election campaign, Newstalk ZB political editor Barry Soper
tackled National leader John Key on the subject of the 1981
Springbok tour. He wanted to know what Key’s position had
been.
You
could almost hear the groans from thousands of living rooms,
including my own. The tour was 27 years ago, for heaven’s
sake; couldn’t we leave it alone? What possible relevance
could it have in 2008?
Viewers
aged under 40 would have been puzzled rather than exasperated.
After all, who cared whether a young John Key (he would have
been only 20) took part in protests against an ancient rugby
tour?
I
still think Soper’s question was silly, but in one sense it
pinpointed a factor in the elections that seems largely to
have escaped comment.
The
1981 Springbok tour was the high-water mark of the protest
era. For those who opposed the tour, it was as much the
defining event of their generation as Gallipoli and the Great
Depression had been for their parents and grandparents. If you
wanted to be cruel, you could say that for many of the
protesters it was the only time in their life that they did
something exciting and vaguely dangerous.
But
more than that, 1981 was the ultimate expression of much that
the rebellious, university-educated, baby-boomer generation
stood for. It was a significant factor in the momentous
political changing of the guard that occurred three years
later. With the defeat of Robert Muldoon in 1984, the
baby-boomer liberals moved from the streets, where they had so
recently been bloodied by police batons, into the halls of
power.
Soper,
like me, is a member of that baby-boomer protest generation. I
wouldn’t have a clue what his position was on the tour, and
in any case it’s not relevant. But clearly the tour still
resonated with him as a sort of political litmus test.
Moreover,
he obviously didn’t think he was alone in wanting to know
what Key’s attitude had been, and he may well have been
right. To the thousands of liberal baby-boomers who still
thrill to the memory of marching through the streets chanting
“amandla awethu” (“power to the people”), what Key
thought about rugby and apartheid may well have been a matter
of some significance.
Key’s
answer to Soper’s question – that he couldn’t really
recall what he thought about the tour, because he was
preoccupied pursuing the young woman who is now his wife –
would have brought cries of disbelief and denunciation from
veterans of the protest movement. How could anyone presuming
to run for the highest office in the land not have had a firm
view about the 1981 tour? And even worse, how could Key have
considered it so unimportant that he couldn’t even remember
what his view was? In the theology of the earnest,
middle-class liberals who led the opposition to apartheid,
this was tantamount to heresy.
But
the brutal truth is that Key represents a generation for whom
the tour didn’t matter, and matters even less in 2008. Now
he’s prime minister, and the post-war liberals who have
called many of the shots politically for the past 24 years are
going to have to get used to it.
The
left-leaning baby-boomers who helped keep Labour in power for
nine years, and who watched with mounting despair in their
artfully restored inner-suburban villas as the results came in
on election night, are having to come to terms with the
unpleasant fact that “their” people – of whom Helen
Clark is the embodiment – are no longer in control. The
baton has been passed to a new generation with quite different
values and attitudes.
In
that respect, Soper’s question identified a symbolic turning
point, even if that wasn’t its purpose. The baby-boomers
have had their shot at power and now it’s someone else’s
turn.
I’m
not a political scientist and I don’t “do” demographics,
but the population statistics must surely show that the
balance of electoral power has shifted, as it had to do, from
my generation to generations X and Y – those born from the
mid-60s on.
Admittedly
these terms need to be treated with caution. “Baby-boomer”
is the sociological term of convenience for people of my
generation but in many ways it is unsatisfactory. I prefer to
call it the sixties generation, which is a broader and looser
description yet in many ways more accurate. My reasoning is
that the 1960s – the era of the protest movement and student
radicalism, hippiedom, drugs, Bob Dylan and the Beatles,
sexual liberation (the pill) and Carnaby Street fashion –
was the decade that encapsulated the profound political,
cultural and ideological shifts of the time.
Technically
the baby-boomer generation consists of those born between 1946
and 1964, but there were people born outside that era who
exemplified baby-boomer values and people born within that era
who do not. I know many people now aged in their late 60s and
early 70s – too old, strictly speaking, to be baby-boomers
– whose political views were shaped not in the dreary,
prosperous and conformist 1950s but in the turbulent and
exhilarating 1960s.
David
Lange, for example, was born in 1942 but was unarguably a
baby-boomer in terms of his politics. He was an idealist and a
modern social democrat. Unlike the political leaders of the
preceding generation, such as Holyoake, Kirk and Muldoon, he
had the benefit of a free university education that was
crucial in shaping his liberal attitudes.
Key
was born in 1961, technically still well within baby-boomer
parameters, and like Lange he went to university. But his
formative experiences occurred during the 1980s, an era when
many of the 1960s-era values so cherished by the liberal
baby-boomers were being upended by Rogernomics.
That’s
another thing the discombobulated baby-boomers will have to
get used to. If it’s an article of faith among the liberal
left that the 1981 protest movement was an heroic rejection of
racism and authoritarianism, then it’s equally an article of
faith that the economic reforms that came later in the 1980s
were a betrayal of the egalitarian, social-democratic values
that defined “their” New Zealand. But to all intents and
purposes, people of Key’s generation have experienced only
the post-Rogernomics New Zealand.
To
them, the programme of deregulation, liberalisation and asset
sales that horrified the liberal left (and rescued a moribund
economy in the nick of time) would seem unremarkable. It’s
all they have known. Grim reminders of the supposed treachery
of the Douglas-Prebble-Bassett cabal – such a potent element
of liberal-left folklore – are largely lost on Generation
X-ers.
The
extent of this generational shift is illustrated by the fact
that Helen Clark in her 20s was immersed in politics (she was
active in Labour’s famous Princes St branch) and taking part
in protests against the Vietnam War while Key, at an
equivalent age, was well on his way to making his first
millions with Elders Merchant Finance. Only 11 years separate
them in age but in reality the gap is infinitely wider.
So
now the ageing liberal left faces the dismaying prospect of a
future in which “their” leaders, the spokespeople for the
sixties generation, are doomed to become yesterday’s men and
women, since it seems unlikely that the reliable but
unexciting Phil Goff (another baby-boomer) will be anything
more than an interim Labour leader, elected to tide things
over while the talented and ambitious young thrusters, such as
David Cunliffe and Darren Hughes, jockey to become the next
Clark.
All
this has caused much wringing of hands since the election, but
it’s no bad thing. The veterans of the Vietnam and apartheid
protests may have convinced themselves they have a monopoly on
idealism and political morality, but an honest stocktake of
the baby-boomer era would show that in many ways we’ve
stuffed things up spectacularly.
The
sixties generation were a cosseted lot, arguably the most
affluent and indulged generation in history. They responded to
their good fortune by rejecting the values of their parents
and rebelling against authority and conformity.
All
this was very liberating, but it came at an enormous cost. A
lot of babies were thrown out with the bathwater. My
generation may have achieved unprecedented personal freedom,
but it also created a legacy of social and family breakdown,
crime, drug abuse and unhappiness on a tragic scale. John
Key’s mob can’t do much worse.
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