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Karl du Fresne is a freelance journalist and columnist, and a former editor
of The Dominion.
To see his blog
click here >>>.
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
4 December 2011
Three
more years
Let’s get
the congratulations out of the way first. National’s
election triumph was as emphatic as they get, at least under
MMP. Admittedly, it’s rare for a government to be tossed out
of office after only one term: it last happened in 1975, and
the circumstances then were unusual. Norman Kirk had died in
office and the Labour Party leadership had been assumed by the
mild-mannered Bill Rowling, who was ill-prepared to deal with
the aggression and firepower of a political streetfighter
named Muldoon.
But for
National to strengthen its hold on power after one term,
especially following a year as challenging as any in memory,
was some feat. Colin James reports that it’s only the fifth
time in 75 years that a first-term government has increased
its vote. (Labour did it in 2002, but not as resoundingly.)
Perhaps
desperate to inject some drama into a dull campaign, the media
talked up Labour’s chances, arbitrarily declaring Phil Goff
the winner in two bland TV debates; but it only served to
demonstrate – again – that political journalists in
Wellington are poorly equipped to read the public mind. Even
the predicted narrowing of the gap in the last stages of the
campaign never happened.
The vital
statistics – 60 seats for National (up two) and 34 for
Labour (down nine) – tell only part of the story. Even more
striking was the fact that in Labour strongholds such as
Christchurch East, Te Atatu and New Lynn, National won the
party vote. That humiliation was compounded by Labour’s loss
of well-regarded up-and-coming MPs such as Stuart Nash and
Kelvin Davis, and by the thrashing handed out to glamour
candidate Andrew Little in the previously ultra-marginal seat
of New Plymouth, Little’s home town. The ambitious former
union boss still gets into Parliament at No 15 on the Labour
list, but his star has lost a lot of its lustre.
So, a romp
for National. But this was an election where the sub-plots
were more interesting than the main action on centre-stage.
Everyone
commented on what a great campaign the Greens ran. Certainly
they seemed to pick up a lot of former Labour supporters, and
their electoral appeal can only have broadened since the
departure of polarising figures such as Sue Bradford and
Nandor Tanczos. In fact it’s tempting to wonder whether the
Greens are trying to re-position themselves as a mainstream
party of the centre-left (watch out Labour) rather than one on
the beansprouts-and-sandals fringe. Russel Norman’s stylish
suit and tie are a clue to that; the eccentric garb of the
late Rod Donald is already a distant memory.
But just
wait: the Greens have yet to be fully tested. They have never
been exposed to Minor Party Curse, the fatal affliction that
strikes small parties once they formally become part of
coalition government arrangements. That’s when the stresses
start to tell and party discipline starts to fall apart.
As
long as a party remains outside government, as the Greens have
done, it can safely occupy the moral high ground. Its
high-minded principles are unlikely to be compromised by the
dirty reality of having to govern. But the moment a party is
drawn into a coalition, deals are done and principles get
stretched. Ambitions are unleashed and tensions arise between
idealists and pragmatists. It happened to the Alliance and it
happened to ACT – both parties, like the Greens, with a
strong ideological base. Being in government also means a
minority party is subjected to much more intense media
scrutiny. All things considered, the Greens might have a more
assured future if they remain in opposition. A memorandum of
understanding with National may be as far as they can safely
go.
Then
there’s Winston Peters, whose comeback was the big story of
the night. (Obviously, someone forgot to drive a stake through
his heart.) Peters too has an unhappy record in government.
This may explain why he declared before the election that New
Zealand First wouldn’t align with either National or Labour
– although as with all Peters’ hand-on-heart declarations,
that vow could be relied on only for as long as it was
expedient for him to stick to it. So Peters is back doing what
he does best, which is opposing.
Being
in government never suited him; the burden of office, with its
requirement to toe the line, curb his tongue, make decisions
and accept some form of collective responsibility, was far too
onerous. Heck, he was probably even expected to read briefing
papers. No, at his age (66) it’s much more fun huffing and
puffing from the cross-benches, feuding with the media,
stoking the fears and prejudices of his ageing support base
and holding court at the Green Parrot. Already there are hints
that Peters will set out to hijack the first sitting of the
new parliament, as only he can, by using it to divulge the
transcript of the secret conversation between the two Johns,
Key and Banks, at the Café Urban.
And
finally we come to ACT, a Shakespearean tragedy that has
unfolded in slow motion. Its disintegration began with the
acrimonious leadership struggle that split the party after
Richard Prebble’s departure in 2004 and now we are observing
the painful last act (pun not intended).
Where
did they go wrong? Well, it’s clear that the leadership
contest between Rodney Hide, Ken Shirley, Stephen Franks and
Muriel Newman created tensions that have never gone away.
(Deborah Coddington, who left Parliament in 2005, still
can’t comment on her old party without sounding as if
she’s settling scores.) Under Hide’s leadership, ACT’s
focus drifted away from the party’s founding principles,
thus deepening the divisions. In embracing the Sensible
Sentencing Trust’s law-and-order agenda (a worthy enough
cause, but hardly consistent with ACT’s classical
liberalism), Hide strayed perilously close to Winston Peters
territory. His foray into television on Dancing
with the Stars – a misguided attempt to court mainstream
popularity – not only devalued the ACT brand but gave the
media a fresh excuse to belittle the party by showing endless
replays of Hide dropping his dancing partner. The David
Garrett sideshow didn’t help either, and neither did
perkbuster Hide’s credibility-damaging acceptance of an
overseas holiday paid for by the taxpayer.
For
all that, Hide was a capable, committed and hard-working
politician who knew the ropes and made some significant gains
in parliament. So it seemed churlish and high-handed that when
Don Brash launched his hostile takeover bid for ACT, he made
it clear that Hide had to go. That now looks like a bad
mistake. ACT has lost one of its most effective performers and
Brash’s own political career is probably beyond
resuscitation. History will record that while his principles
were unimpeachable, his political judgment was too often
woefully astray. ACT is now represented in Parliament –
nominally, anyway – by a man with no history in the party
and no record of commitment to its philosophy. John Banks has
admirable personal qualities, but he presents the absurd image
of a man wearing an ill-fitting suit tailored for someone
else.
But
back to National. Will the Key government show more daring
in its second term than it did in the first? It has the excuse
that the global economic crisis calls for bold action, but it
could just as easily argue – and probably will – that a
period of international uncertainty is no time for making
radical changes that might create anxiety. And of course it
won’t have an eager-beaver ACT caucus prodding it to take
bolder steps to arrest our relative economic decline. So while
we can expect modest reforms in such areas as welfare, youth
wages, accident compensation, partial privatisation of state
assets and the Resource Management Act, no one’s bracing
themselves for tough action to curb the state spending binge
that began under the Helen Clark government and has continued
largely unabated under National. Stability is likely to remain
National’s soothing mantra. The horses mustn’t be
frightened.
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