Every election that comes about inevitably has some hacks
saying it is “interesting”, “historic” etc, which of course they always
are. Elections always change governments
in some way, even if not the ruling party. Psephologists (an area that I am
often tempted to drop into) are keen to dissect some greater meaning from a
vast range of individual decisions made at the ballot box or to not go to the
ballot box, and political parties are even more keen to use that data to inform
their future utterings of rhetoric, promises and contortions of fact.
The 2014 New Zealand General Election is, though, a bit more
than all that. For it needs to be seen
in the context not only of 20 years of MMP politics, and an vigorous level of
campaigning by opposition parties, that saw many pundits thinking the election
would be close, either due to wishful thinking on their part, or because
governments seeking a third term usually only scrape through (see 2005, 1996,
1981).
In the height of economic recession, a majority of voters
chose to change the electoral system, thanks to sustained campaigning by a
coalition on the left, poorly focused counter-campaigning by those on the right
(remember Janet Shirtcliffe?) and the feeling by a significant number of voters
that they had had enough of radical reforms they neither understood nor felt
were helping them. Bear in mind in that
same election in 1993, National won by one seat, with 33% of the vote. First Past the Post meant that opposition
votes were split between Labour, the Alliance and NZ First.
Today, opposition votes are also split between Labour, the
Greens (which have succeeded the Alliance as the far-left faction in
Parliament) and NZ First, but National has won an election in its own right,
with the system many on the left thought would deliver them sustained so-called
“progressive” majorities of Labour supported by a leftwing partner, and perhaps
a centrist party maintaining a balance.
Not now. Despite a campaign
whereby the left DID campaign on a lot of policy, and dishing up a fair bit of
dirt, a majority of New Zealand voters weren’t swayed. National getting its best ever result since
1951 and Labour its worst since 1922 speaks volumes not of the split on the
left (which has not grown, as the Greens are sustaining fairly consistent
levels of support), but on a series of factors that should result in some introspection, particularly from the left...
1 The economy: NZ was barely scratched by the global
financial crisis, but was dented by the Christchurch earthquake which destroyed
significant capital and has altered Christchurch considerably not least due to
the failures of those responsible for its recovery. Still, the overall picture is stable, with
relatively low unemployment, steady if not spectacular economic growth and a
currency that has sustained value protecting NZers from inflation for capital
goods. Whilst most people are employed
and are able to maintain a reasonable standard of living, it is difficult for
oppositions to gain traction.
2 Kim Dot Com/Hone Harawira/Laila Harre et al: Politically, if there was one movement that
poisoned the prospects of a change of government it was this multi-headed hydra
of hypocrisy, vanity and power lust. The
fugitive billionaire hooking up with a racist anti-semitic bully, a
power-crazed communist and a series of like-minded hangers on looked, through
their own rhetoric, to be gaining some traction, but didn’t. This mob not only didn’t attract the
apathetic, but undoubtedly turned off many voters from ticking the two main
leftwing parties because it looked likely they would need HarreWira to form a
government. As it turned out, not even
the people of Hone Harawira’s home electorate were willing to countenance him
selling out to a foreign billionaire, and Laila Harre has wrecked a second
political party (herself coming a distant fourth in the seat she
contested). They were a gift to John
Key, and their demise should be a relief to those on the left, and a stain on
those who endorsed them.
3 National has become the party it is
comfortable being: While those on
the left sought to scaremonger that John Key was out to privatise the remaining
SOEs (who really cared?), and had plans for a “neo-liberal” revolution, the
truth is that National looks like it has done so for most of its history. A government that doesn’t do much change at
all. Beyond charter schools and reform
of the RMA (both of which are worthy, although timid), it is steady as she
goes. A government that is constraining
the welfare state, but retaining it. A
government that selectively engages in corporatist picking winners, a
government that spends up large on big infrastructure projects it believes in
(though fortunately even excessive road spending is much less harmful than
massive energy or manufacturing schemes under Muldoon). National is in the centre-ground, which means
that it isn’t exciting, it isn’t innovative, but it does move with the winds,
and as long as the economy keeps ticking over, and people are content with the
services the state provides, it has ltitle reason to change. In other words, a majority didn’t really
want change, National is “conservative” in that sense.
4 A majority don’t want their money
redistributed: A key part of the campaigning for both Labour and the Greens
was to go on about child poverty, and although they weren’t blatant about it, their
plans for capital gains tax and carbon taxes respectively and to help poor kids
smelt of socialism – although most Kiwis wouldn’t know to call it that. Most people work reasonably hard, earn their
money and support their own families, and support a welfare state so that
people aren’t homeless or starving. However,
while many have genuine concern about kids from poor families, they resent
being forced to pay more to bail out the parents who in their view, shouldn’t
have had kids they can’t afford or may be seen as feckless, fair or
otherwise. Such perceptions may be more
acute in electorates where working low-middle income families live side by side
those who don’t work, or who are negligent or anti-social. The blanket “give the families of poor kids
more money” doesn’t wash with those who rightfully see those who live off the
back of others with much more limited concern for their kids. In short, kiwis don’t want more welfare, the
lower vote for both Labour and the Greens reflects this.
5 A large majority are uninspired by
environmental activism: While the
Greens sold child poverty they also sold clean rivers, opposing offshore oil
exploration, wanting action on climate change and their new urbanist ideological
obsession with rail transport. Although
Labour wasn’t far behind in supporting this,
the lacklustre Green result indicates that the time for scaremongering
over the environment has passed. The
child-like messages of fear and simple solutions don’t convince, and few are convinced that the future of the
planet is in the hands of a small country in the South Pacific. The Greens did well in party vote in some
university electorates, showing that bright naïve enthusiasm for socialism
still fires up those who don’t yet have to pay for it. However, the naïve hope the Greens could one
day rival Labour has been dashed.
6 Winston Peters is more authentic than David
Cunliffe: NZ First’s rather stunning
result is a direct outcome of a Labour Party that has very much confined itself
to the jargon driven rhetoric of identity politics around leftist gender feminism
(“sorry for being a man”), unionised (mostly state sector) labour and so-called
academia, as well as Maori identity politics. Whilst this goes down well with many public
servants, the heavily unionised employment sectors, beneficiaries and those who
imbibed on identity politics at university, it doesn’t work for blue collar
workers, especially men. Whilst Winston
Peters is expert at being a chameleonic shape-shifter, he is more of a voice of
authentic expression of opposition to issues of privilege, cultural alienation
and hard work than the swarmy Harvard educated Cunliffe, and his coterie of “spent
a life in politics or unions” colleagues.
Labour looks less and less like a party that will promote the likes of
Shane Jones, Damien O’Connor, John Tamahere or Clayton Cosgrove, and more a
party of self-satisfied academics and do-gooders. So few in Labour have stories to tell of entrepreneurship
or toil as workers, and ever fewer are willing to engage in the politically
incorrect rhetoric, rather than soundbite tested pablum, that Winston happily
blurts out. Labour knows Winston wont
last forever, but it has lost support to that sort of politics for a reason,
and not a reason it is comfortable owning up to. What blue collar traditional Labour voter
could vote for a man who apologised for being a man? Or indeed one who hasn’t had the decency to
resign straight after the party’s worst defeat in over 90 years, but to quibble
like a weasel.
Beyond that, there are some footnotes worth mentioning:
- Maori are not as radical as some may fear. Maori returned to Labour and NZ First in the party vote, and rejected Internet Mana’s radical mob of Harawira and Sykes.
- ACT suffered because of fears Seymour wouldn’t win Epsom and the poison of the recent past. Yes, Jamie Whyte could have done some things differently, he wasn't without gaffs that costs it some credibility, but ACT suffered primarily because it had been gutted by the John Banks era (error) and genuine concern that party vote ACT would be wasted if the election had been close. As it turned out, that fear was unfounded, but it will be up to Seymour to prove he has rock solid support in Epsom to rebuild the party to gain the 3-4% support it ought to attract for wanting less government. The problem is if Seymour looks less like the free market thorn in the side of the government and more like the facilitator of government policy. He needs to have the courage to carve out that identity, the Nats will want him to be a good boy and not to rock the boat. However, he is there to, at least point where the boat ought to be going, not just paddling with a team that isn't his own.
- United Future is like Jim Anderton’s Progressive Coalition – a one man band literally. Peter Dunne is the overhang MP, and when he retires so will his party. It has absorbed several parties over the years and they have all eroded to nothing. The ALCP has greater support.
- There might be 5% + support for a socially conservative party in NZ, but it can’t be led by Colin Craig. He didn’t ever do himself too many favours, and faced the catch 22 ACT faced of not convincing enough potential supporters that his party could reach 5%, so it didn’t. However, he came a distant second in East Coast Bays and handed Labour it’s only significant non-Maori seat victory in Napier with Garth McVicar coming a strong third.
Will the NZ left recover from facing up to the fact that the National Party now embodies as much of what the public wants from socialism as it will support?
However, for those of us who want less government it is more a case of being grateful for it not being worse. National is steadying, not shrinking the state, unless tax cuts mean tax as a proportion of GDP drops over time. National isn't weaning people off of taxpayer funded savings and healthcare, even though the demographic time bomb will make that ever more difficult to sustain. There is a big gap to the "right" of National, I'm unsure David Seymour is able to fill that gap, quite yet. I hope I am proved wrong.
6 comments:
A thoughtful dissertation.
If NZ was still a democracy, Labour would have precisely four electorates.
If NZ had a robust electoral law, Labour would have zero electorates.
the system [MMP] many on the left thought would deliver them sustained so-called “progressive” majorities
But MMP has delivered sustained progressive majorities. It's just that the major left-wing party is now National. WFF, Student loans, massive borrowing, gay marriage, settlements, maori flags, parental leave, jobs for unionists,
now even a focus on that nonexistent beatup, child poverty! and on and on - this is the most letfwing government in NZ's history.
NZ was barely scratched by the global financial crisis
Amazing what borrowing sixty billion will do, isn't it.
a power-crazed communist
last time I looked, Steven Joyce was still #3 in National.
John Key was out to privatise the remaining SOEs (who really cared?), and had plans for a “neo-liberal” revolution
If only!
National looks like it has done so for most of its history
No - for most of its history National has delivered right-wing policies. Now National is presiding over the most left-wing government in NZ"s history.
National is in the centre-ground
In opposition, Key called Labour's policies, especially WFF, communist. In government, Key's kept all those policies. Whatever they are, they aren't centrist.
A majority don’t want their money redistributed:
That's because a majority don't pay tax. A majority is clearly willing to have the 10% of Kiwis who are nett taxpayer's money redistributed like water in a rainstorm. - because that's what today's New Zealand does!
naïve hope the Greens could one day rival Labour has been dashed.
Oh really. The longterm trends are still Labour down (losing around 2% of their vote) and Greens up (gaining about 5%). Another couple of elections like this and the Greens will be bigger than Labour.
Winston Peters is more authentic than David Cunliffe
that's not hard tho' is it? The real point is that something like 65% of Kiwis voted Right of Labour --- and that percentage has kept rising for the last 20+ years. The question is: when are we going to see some real Right-wing government?
Maori are not as radical as some may fear
yeah right. Mana's left the ballot box, back to the semtex.
rebuild the party [ACT] to gain the 3-4% support
ACT's historically had 7% of the vote, 9 MPs. A sensible ACT leader (not another f**kg academic w***kr) with actual business experience - Sam Morgan, say, or even Ian McRae - could easily get up more than that.
There might be 5% + support for a socially conservative party in NZ,
There's easily 5% for a hard-core party, looking back to the older Christian Dems, more to the point, there's NZF on 10% who are certainly "socially conservative". So there were easily 15% votes cast in this election for socially conservative parties, and between 5-10% who should have voted for ACT but voted for National instead.
the National Party now embodies as much of what the public wants from socialism as it will support?
So that the end you do admit it: we have a National socialist government.
The best news of all is that it is now clear that Mainstream NZ is represented by Whaleoil. And what Whale wants is clear: and end to unions; electorate laws that would ban Labour and the Greens; and end to state schools, healthcare and above all welfare. Not just "less redistribution" but an end to it all.
So your best hope remains where it always has been: nothing will change til Cam gets sick of National, comes off the sidelines, and runs a real right-wing party to get rid of the National socialists.
This is about the best summary I've read, Liberty. I have but a couple of comments to add.
The Conservatives can't survive without Colin Craig, and (sadly) it looks like they can't experience electoral success with him. He's a good, honest man of character and integrity, and I suspect that's his biggest problem. The question - which you've so rightly identified - is, can he stomach stepping aside for a more charismatic and politically-astute Leader, while remaining perhaps as Deputy?
As to ACT, their demise started well before the failed Brash/Banks experiment. It started with the reverse take-over by the Libertarianz. Brash/Banks was a hail-Mary play at best, and they may have done just enough to breathe sufficient life into the party to allow Seymour to get elected. The key for Seymour now is to focus on Charter Schools and STFU about social policy. ACT was started as a party which was all about the size of government intrusion into the economy (~40% of GDP at last count), and Seymour needs to understand 4 simple words: it's the economy, stupid! If he carries on the proud (recent) ACT tradition of prioritising Leftertarianz issues over traditional ACT ones, he will fail. Kiwis are far less socially-liberal than the media or our political overlords would have us believe - the party vote for the watermelons being so heavily skewed in Wgtn and Akld Central, along with ACT's abysmal party vote shows that, so while Labour has some serious lessons to learn, my hope is ACT will also be reviewing where they sit.
Yes thank you for this good synopsis Scott Liberty, and now I wish to travel further.
It is clear that there will be a drop out of votes in 2017 for NZ Nat Government, as is,.
Reasons
Corporatism, as you say giving money to corporations, lets really help Peter Jackson, or some boat crew,
or some fucking new idea here with our money ; Refused
Political arrogance; which he said he does not have but does: Refused
Deflating the NZ Currency, make the people pay for our borrowing : Refused
Referenda are for idiots : Refused
Now Scott Liberty you also say that Conservative advancing can not achieve 5% votes in 2017, with Coilin Craig as leader . iI personally doubt we will be able to change leader, but I do think we can modify him.
I have three years to prove this and we can do it.
2017 Conservative 5% holds sickling NZ Nat government.
together and enforces referenda.
Get ready now,
Yes, Nice !
Yes, nice
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