THE GREENS remain a persistent political puzzle. In spite of espousing ideas and promoting policies that would keep any other party well below the five percent MMP threshold, recent polling places the party between 12 and 14 percent. If replicated in a real election, that level of support would earn the Greens 16-18 seats, making them an indispensable player in any putative government of the Left.
Clearly, the Green brand is doing almost all of the party’s heavy political lifting. What New Zealand’s own Green Party is actually committed to achieving matters much less than what Green parties, as generally understood by the world’s voters, are assumed to be committed to achieving – the salvation of the planet.
As a starter for ten percent of the Party Vote, “saving the planet” is a very respectable objective. Young voters, in particular, raised on the dire (if unheeded) warnings of climate scientists, and the irrefutable evidence of devastating weather events linked to global warming, vote Green. After all, what sort of person votes against a liveable future?
Young voters are not, however, the Greens only source of electoral support. They can also rely upon a substantial number of older voters to tick the Greens’ box on the ballot paper. Some of these will be unreconstructed hippies, the New Zealanders who cut their political teeth on the Values Party back in the early-1970s, and who then fell into the Greens’ welcoming arms with huge relief in 1990, following six years of the apostate Labour Party’s “Rogernomics”.
No one grasped the power of the Green brand more firmly than Jim Anderton, whose uneasy coalition of free-market-unfriendly parties, the Alliance, would not have been electorally viable without the Greens’ participation, and did not long survive their departure. As a centre-left politician determined to bring Labour back to its social-democratic senses, Anderton was determined to provide the many thousands of disillusioned former-Labour-voters with a progressive alternative that was guaranteed to win seats and, thereby, to wield at least some measure of determinative power over policy.
The Alliance’s demise, in 2002, left only the Greens to supply this critical support to the Labour Party. Precisely how many Green voters were voting for the global Green movement’s core principles: Ecological Wisdom, Social Justice, Grassroots Democracy and Nonviolence; and how many were voting for the Greens to keep Labour honest; is difficult to calculate. Suffice to say, when Labour does well the Green vote tends to fall, only recovering when voter support for its progressive competitor declines.
Since breaking free of the Alliance in 1999 the Greens have never failed to crest the 5 percent MMP threshold. (Although, they have come perilously close to falling below it on a number of occasions.) A reasonable working assumption would be that; in a good election for the Greens the ratio of strategic left-wing voters to ideologically-committed Greens will be roughly 50/50; and, in a bad election, that ratio will skew sharply in favour of the true-believers.
What the Greens’ true-believers believe, however, has changed.
Like the Values Party which preceded it, the Green Party that entered Parliament in 1999, under the co-leadership of Jeanette Fitzsimons and Rod Donald, took pride in affirming its allegiance to empirical science. In conformity with the political practice of Green parties around the world, the New Zealand party drew a sharp distinction between the bought-and-paid-for “science” of the big corporations, and the findings of hero scientists who presented their findings to the world fearlessly and without regard to how many corporate toes were trampled on in the process.
This science-driven Green Party reached its apogee under Rod Donald’s successor, Russel Norman – now the Executive-Director of Greenpeace Aotearoa. Working alongside freshwater ecologist Dr Mike Joy – the very epitome of a fearless hero-scientist – Norman and the Greens waged an unrelenting war against “dirty dairying” and the pollution of New Zealand’s waterways.
The success of this environmentally-focused Green Party was reflected in the 11.06 percent share of the Party Vote it received, along with 14 parliamentary seats, in the 2011 General Election. (In the 2023 General Election the Greens received 11.60 percent of the Party Vote and 15 seats.)
More than a decade has passed since the Greens campaigned as an unequivocally environmentalist party. Along with virtually every other element of the New Zealand Left, the Greens have embraced what their conservative opponents delight in castigating as the politics of “wokeness”.
In less pejorative terms, the Greens’ re-orientation involves the forefronting of issues that, while always present in the party’s policy mix, were hitherto given less emphasis. The Greens’ straightforward recognition and celebration of te Tiriti o Waitangi, for example, is now couched in the uncompromising vocabulary of decolonisation and indigenisation. Simple support for trans-gender New Zealanders has morphed into the aggressive assertion and enforcement of radical trans-gender ideology. Any external and/or internal criticism of these developments is condemned by the party as “hate speech”. Freedom of expression is no longer an unchallengeable aspect of “grassroots democracy”, or, as the New Zealand Greens have re-named it, “appropriate decision-making”.
A sense of this change of tone in the Greens is readily apparent in the most recent Green Party policy document. Ostensibly a presentation of the party’s latest thinking on how best to reduce greenhouse emissions, He Ara Anamata, contains a great deal more than the promptings of environmental science.
“For generations,” writes Green Co-leader Chloe Swarbrick in her introduction, “extractive systems have treated the natural world as a resource to exploit, without regard for its limits or the intricate relationships that sustain life.”
Similar sentiments were expressed 25 years ago. It is, however, doubtful whether Swarbrick’s subsidiary claims would have been advanced so forcefully:
“Colonisation has done the same to people and cultures. It has severed connections between tangata whenua and their whenua, prioritising profit over protection, and imposing systems that strip away self-determination and reciprocity. The impacts of this legacy persist, deepening inequalities and undermining resilience.”
Certainly, the expression of unabashed hostility towards capitalism is a more recent rhetorical trend:
“These inequalities have their deep roots in violent land and resource theft of iwi Māori. Capitalism – this current insatiable, unsustainable economic system – requires colonisation and the constant assimilation of new frontiers to exploit and extract from.”
That the above is not simply the ideology of the Greens’ firebrand leader is made clear in the body of the policy document. Te Tiriti’s role in reducing greenhouse emissions will, if the Greens have their way, involve: “An equitable transition, developed by Māori and the Crown [which] will actively prioritise te iwi Māori and the Māori economy.”
Would any other political party (apart from Te Pāti Māori) that so openly attacked capitalism, promised to advance the interests of indigenous citizens ahead of later arrivals, and announced its intention to advance the entire population, whether it likes it or not, towards “[a]n economy based on climate justice [with] policies that are underpinned by Te Tiriti, [and supported by] circular systems, renewable energies, and just transitions for workers” be given such a free pass?
Another expression which encompasses the notion of “circular systems” is “autarky”. That history records a strong association between authoritarian regimes and autarky is probably worth remembering. So, too, the enormous difference between “just transitions” arranged for workers, and the securing of economic and social justice by workers.
But that’s the great advantage of having a brand as immune to critical examination as that of the Greens. Try calling anti-capitalism, ethno-nationalism, statist imposition of societal priorities, and a barely disguised disdain for the principles of democracy, by any other name – and see if it smells as sweet.
This essay was originally posted on the Interest.co.nz website on Monday, 9 December 2024.
7 comments:
Possibly your "densist" contribution yet Chris in what 7 or 8? years of following your generally ground breaking blog ... just saying.
For mine the recent mindless Parliamentary out burst from Chloe in her final speech of 2024 shows to me the increasing negative tensions her party is currently experiencing... and seem unable to understand.
Maybe this is due to the fact that their fundamental raison d'etre is no longer a topic for serious debate. Climate change as a real thing is now old hat non contentious. With no populist Greeny bandwagon to clamber aboard ...they currently are up shite creek ... sans paddle.
Let's cut to the general objective of Greens policy. Socialism.
Whilst other socialist despots and movements used other fashionable causes, the modern progressive left use climate catastrophe as the base foundation vehicle to socialist nirvana. They will save us from the climate apocalypse and even fine tune the earth's temperature by 1.5 C (yes they are gods too) through communal living, ti tiriti and neolithic tribalism and its economy, apparently. By being good little socialists!
They ignore CO2 was 15 times higher than now during a severe ice age in the paleozoic era. But hey, who cares! We can't have enemies like ..."deniers"! We must stamp out debate because it cannot withstand debate.
Apart from the magic of ti tiriti, not the hurriedly put together document it really was to cease warring and carnage and to get in before any other European superpower had the chance to that strangely enough suited all signatories at the time, they'll also achieve paradise through a "circular economy" (catchy meaningless intellectual marketing term). Yet the one that practices this more than any other because it has to, socialist Cuba, is a miserable failure.
The Greens are savy politicians, make no mistake but that does not make them capable custodians of our government. Their vision will create the opposite of their environmental goals and even worse for their social justice causes. Many vote Green on the 30 seconds thought process per election cycle based on its name, and that by ticking that box, they virtue signal that they too care, are kind, are superior but then go about their private lives in as contradictory fashion as they possibly can, to complete the absurdity that is progressiveism.
I accept Ms Swarbrick, a stereotypical comfortable middle-class white girl, radicalised by university tutors, frozen in her 18 year old former self, really believes in this crap. And as always, she/they/them mean well. As did Pol Pot.
The Green's hypocrisy/stupidity again.
MP Benjamin Doyle calls for favourable sentencing for criminals under 25. Apparently their "undeveloped pre-frontal cortex" means they don't know what they're doing. Sixteen year olds voting, or kids even younger having their genitals mutilated, are good ideas though.
I get the feeling that the difference between the current Greens and those original greens, the likes of Rod Donald and Russel Norman and Jeanette Fitzsimons is authenticity. Those originals lived for the environmental cause and we could see that in the way they lived their lives. It's hard to imagine Chloe or Marama, putting their careers on the line for any particular environmental issue. Today's lot still push for change environmentally, but as Chris points out they've been distracted with all this other stuff. Gender, Treaty and human rights. I used the word distracted to describe their deviation from mainly environmental issues, but it's likely a deliberate move to broaden their vote base. Part of the reason might be the majority of public opinion see's the environment first and everything else second as a, : nice to have but is it practical and how much is it going to cost us.: situation. As Chris points out it is very difficult to make meaningful change when world economics are structured as they are and most people just keep on doing what they are doing so they can survive and live as well as their own situation will allow. Some who vote green may genuinely believe in these ideals but would they be prepared to make the huge sacrifices necessary if the Greens ever had the power of government and seriously implemented their own philosophies, I doubt it. Lets not use air travel, lets cut plastic out of our lives, lets only use public transport, lets not use synthetics in carpet or clothing, lets get rid of or radically downsize dairy farming and so on. If a government tried to implement that agenda it wouldn't last five minutes, but maybe the Greens don't really want to run the show because it's easier just to poke a stick at it. Chris has suggested the green label can't be criticised and those voters (whether genuine or not) along with the Maori and the oddball vote now have a guaranteed if not growing base. I don't see Labour letting too much of the Maori vote go to the Greens, Chippy's survival depends on the Maori vote, and unless I'm wrong the gender oddball vote can't be that big, surely. The Greens are doing well currently because all labour has to offer is a CGT and more economic chaos.
In this video Tamatha Paul role plays a poor victim of a (stereotyped) slum landlord. She blames capitalism. However, (as Danyl McLachlin argues in Spinoff - Jones on Property), that isn't capitalism, but rent seeking behaviour.
Tamatha Paul isn't adding anything to the discussion; she is acting like an irresponsible teen ager. This bunch of Greens are useless.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2gEa88b_A4
"anti-capitalism, ethno-nationalism, statist imposition of societal priorities, and a barely disguised disdain for the principles of democracy"
What is it, this dichotomy at the heart of the Greens: authoritarian control over the people while advocating for extreme freedom?
" Instead of something emerging from the hierarchical structuring of family, communities, and nations, the celebration of idiosyncrasy and difference itself is a consequence of radically dichotomised identity, both embodied and conceptualised by a self-identified, omniscient, omnipresent, and omnipotent inner experience, which is then represented as oppressed by external forces of control. This is the ultimate and self-devouring endpoint of liberal individualism. Such an endpoint is inevitably, even though somewhat surprisingly, allied with the endpoint of state control, for only state-like institutions can defend all our idiosyncrasies from each other. In the final analysis, of course, the state-imposed defence of all our idiosyncrasies and exceptions is impossible, no matter how comprehensive the state becomes, particularly as those identities multiply indefinitely, and the existence of one contradicts the flourishing of another. We can see this multiplication in the infinite regress of the alphabet identity, as LG transforms first into LGB, and then adds T, and then explodes into the 2SLGBTQQIA+ absurdity that is currently insisted upon—a development precisely paralleled by the ever-expanding colours and sections of the Pride Flag. As we demand state recognition for this ever-expanding panoply of hypothetical identities, we fail to notice that we are simultaneously granting the exclusive right of the state to do so, cementing in place the totalising power of the most distant and abstracted possible social order. The strange and otherwise incomprehensible alliance between the diversity, inclusivity, and equity enterprise and the so-called environmental movement can be best understood in this manner. At first glance, the consumerist hedonism of Pride—its aesthetic of overflowing variety, abundance, and inclusive generosity—appears to exist in direct conflict with the sobriety and top-down centralising restraint characteristic of environmentalism, with its demands that the earth itself be protected against its inhabitants, who do nothing but damage it in their requirement for ever-increasing freedom and standard of living. How can these two ways of thinking co-exist, much less regard each other as obvious political allies? "
https://www.arc-research.org/research-papers/the-subsidiary-hierarchy
I bought Becoming Aotearoa - A New History of New Zealand. It is a whitewash. He doesn't examine the motives behind the Burke Review of Immigration , which was to create a new society where Maori culture would predominate. Any opposition comes under the rubric of "white supremacy". I was looking forward to reading a chapter (or whole book) called Progressives and Property Investors. The whole idea of "white supremacy" delegitimises the nation-state and democracy.
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