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Mike Butler
Property investor and manager, author of The First Colonist --
The life and times of Samuel Deighton 1821-1900, former contract
writer for the New World Encyclopedia, chief sub-editor of the
Hawke’s Bay Herald-Tribune (1986-1999).
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NZCPR
Guest Forum
Mike
Butler
11
December 2011
The
no-vote protest vote
Why
did the losers lose in last week’s general election? Labour
leader-in-departure Phil Goff says it was not their time, and
Shane Jones wants to know why three out of every four voters
thought Team Goff was unfit to govern. Nearly 300,000 voters
deserted Labour between 2005 and 2011 (1) voting with their
feet against the Clark-Cullen leadership and Team Goff, plus
the policies that went with them.
What
were Goff’s unpopular policies? You don’t have to look far
to see what went wrong. He promoted a capital gains tax on all
property excluding the family home, a policy that former
Labour leader David Lange warned would not only lose one
election, but would lose the next three.
Goff
promised an extra $70-$80 a week to beneficiaries by extending
Working for Families eligibility at a time when people who are
working cannot fathom why those on benefits – including sole
parents – should not be obliged to look for work. Goff’s
willingness to extend poverty and deepen the welfare trap
prompted welfare commentator Lindsay Mitchell to warn that he
should never be allowed to get anywhere near the levers of
power.
Goff’s
opposition to the partial privatisation of some government
assets could have been more successful if the rest of his
house was in order. A trawl through Labour policy reveals
further ineffective and unpopular party ideas. (2) Why was the
voter turnout so low? Just 73 per cent of enrolled voters cast
a vote in Saturday's general election compared with 79 per
cent in 2008. Around one million eligible people didn’t
vote. The view that voters stayed away because polls predicted
the National Party could govern alone overlooks a wider
reality that many feel the electoral process has nothing to do
with them. It’s the “don’t vote, governments always
win” way of thinking. There is also the view that people who
don’t vote are lodging a protest vote.
There
is much to protest about, but the most obnoxious aspect of our
political system is that the politicians act as if they know
best. MMP brought lists of MPs who owe their loyalty to the
party hierarchy rather than to an electorate. This led to MPs
feeling proud to represent the party line to the electorate, a
view expressed by dumped Labour list MP Stuart Nash, Napier,
in the Hawke’s Bay Today newspaper. Voters are not silly,
and don’t like being dictated to, and many of us believe we
live in a representative democracy, founded on the principle
of elected individuals representing the people, and not the
other way around.
There
is also the view that the successful, skilled, and motivated
individuals who make it into parliament become well-paid
muppets who exist solely to vote for policies created by the
politicians who dominate Cabinet, currently John Key, Bill
English, Gerry Brownlee, Steven Joyce, and Murray McCully.
Well-paid
means very well paid. A backbench MP earns $141,800, the
leader of the opposition and Cabinet ministers $257,800, and
the prime minister $411,500. All these people are well into
the top 10 percent. A bit hypocritical for Goff and other
Labour trolls to claim to be speaking for the poor and
downtrodden, don’t you think?
Unions
are members of the Labour Party, with significant powers and
control Labour’s list. Left-wing blogger Chris Trotter said:
“It was the block-votes of the trade union affiliates which
kept Helen Clark’s political machine ticking over so
reliably for the 15 long years it controlled the party.” (3)
Trotter
noted that since in the private sector workforce barely one
worker in 10 is unionised, “the days when unions constituted
a genuinely representative social, economic and political
force are long gone”. Union leaders are elected by a few
score of hand-picked delegates at an annual conference.
“What were formerly the powerhouses of working-class
democracy; and the generators of workers’ power; have become
self-selecting oligarchies”.
This
is how it works, according to National Party pollster David
Farrar, who wrote on Kiwiblog, on December 3, 2011, that:
“The Labour Party rules give significant power to unions
that join Labour. There are five unions that have affiliated
and they have 75,719 members between them. Their voting
strength is based on what percentage of their members voted to
affiliate. This info is not public but let us assume it is 75%
on average which gives them 55,000 notional members.
"Those
55,000 notional members are divided up amongst the 70
electorates based on the Labour Party vote (ie if an
electorate gets 2 percent of the overall Labour Party vote,
then the union voting strength in that electorate is 2 percent
of 55,000 or 1100 notional members. On average 55,000/70 is
785 members per electorate. As you can imagine, this is vastly
more than the actual number of individual members. Based on
current union numbers and assuming a 75 percent voting
strength, the average electorate committee would have unions
entitled to 14 delegates on the LEC – EPMU 6, SWFU 4, DWU 2,
RMU 1, MU 1. The maximum size of an LEC is 30 members so at an
electorate level unions can easily dominate should they wish
to.” (4)
Farrar
said that National does not allow businesses (or associations
of businesses) to join the National Party, to vote at
conferences, to help rank the party list and to vote at
candidate selections, and noted that you could “imagine the
outcry if National had a representative from Business NZ
sitting on its list ranking committee”.
Labour
West Coast electorate MP Damien O’Connor, who
controversially characterised his party as “a gaggle of gays
and unionists”, comfortably beat West Coast-Tasman MP Chris
Auchinvole, National, by 2287 votes, reversing their 2008
election result and going against the country's tide of
support for National. The voters backed his views!
With
just 48 percent of enrolled Maori voters turning out last
week, Maori Party co-leader
Tariana Turia is greatly concerned, although she should be
more concerned that her party only captured 1.4 percent of the
party vote. If you add in Hone Harawira’s Mana Party’s 1
percent, the total 2.4 percent share shows their influence far
outweighs their actual support. They owe their existence to
the anachronistic Maori seats.
If
Turia applied some accurate thought and linked voter turnout
with policies she has promoted, such as whanau ora separate
welfare, signing up to the Declaration of Indigenous
Peoples’ Rights, pushing for a treaty-based constitution,
and facilitating sweetheart deals with tribal corporations,
the message is staring at her in the face -- that her party
has failed to capture the imagination of Maori voters.
If she
would step back a bit further, she would realise that the concerns
of Maori voters are not separate and distinct. They are the
concerns of everyone – jobs, health, education – and the
government she was in coalition with has had minimal success
on all three.
Voters
have given the National Party another three years to see if
they can do any better. While its leadership contest plays
out, the Labour Party cannot claim to be an opposition. And
the message is clear for all politicians – one million
voters did not see anything worth voting for.
Sources
1.
Labour must wield knife to be in shape for voters, NZ Herald,
December 3, 2011.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/politics/news/article.cfm?c_id=280&objectid=10770511
2.
http://www.interest.co.nz/news/election-2011-policies
3.
Rebuilding Labour without the unions, Chris Trotter, December
2, 2011. http://bowalleyroad.blogspot.com/
4.
Trotter calls for an end to unions joining Labour, David
Farrar, December 3, 2011. http://www.kiwiblog.co.nz/
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