Little Green Men: Coming Or Going? Green Co-Leader, Metira Turei's State of the Nation speech made it very clear that her party has grown very weary of living on Planet Impotence - and may even be contemplating a departure for Planet Key. Her plans for Treasury to audit political parties' manifestos would certainly make the Greens' stay on Planet Key more comfortable.
I’M WORRIED that the oft-repeated claim that the Greens come
from another planet, might, in fact, be true. Because only someone recently
arrived from an altogether more benign solar system could possibly argue that
the NZ Treasury casting its cold forensic eye over left-wing parties’ policies
is a good idea. The astonishing naivety of the suggestion confirms every old
socialist’s slur that when you’re dealing with the Greens, you’re dealing with
the children of a very different tribe. And, honestly, after Metira Turei’s
“State of the Nation” speech, I’m minded to amend the end of that sentence to
read: “a very different and a very stupid
tribe.”
According to Ms Turei: “New Zealanders deserve more
transparency from their politicians so that they can better engage in the
political system. That’s why the Green Party is proposing the establishment of
[a Policy Costing Unit] to provide independent costings for the policies
proposed by political parties. The PCU would be an independent unit within the
Treasury and available to all parliamentary parties. It would help cut through
the noise of political party promises and deliver New Zealanders unbiased
information.”
Unbiased information! Clearly, the inhabitants of the planet
Ms Turei has been visiting for the past 32 years are entirely ignorant of the
1984 neoliberal coup-d’état spearheaded by the leaders of the New Zealand
Treasury. How else are we to explain her child-like faith in the Treasury’s
lack of bias? Any other politically aware individual from this benighted chunk
of our planet would have not the slightest difficulty in identifying No. 1 the
Terrace, Wellington, as New Zealand’s Barad-dûr – dwelling place of the Dark
Lord and source of all the woes of Middle Earth.
Can it really be true that Ms Turei has never heard of
“Economics II”, the special Treasury division headed by the late Roger Kerr (of
Business Roundtable fame) which, working alongside Dr Bryce Wilkinson and Dr
Graham Scott of “Economics I”, was responsible for bringing together “Economic
Management” – the policy bible for what came to be known as “Rogernomics”? Does
she really not know that the current institutional “culture” of Treasury
descends directly from these implacable ideologues?
Obviously not. Otherwise she wouldn’t dream of advocating
that her party entrust its policies to Treasury’s tender mercies. Any more than
she’d happily dispatch her youngest child for a sleepover at Michael Jackson’s
Neverland!
And yet, Ms Turei was here, in New Zealand, for the entire
time Treasury’s neoliberal evangelists were transforming the country. She knows
full well that before 1984 the number of children living below the poverty line
was 15 percent, and that after 20 years of Treasury-guided economic “reforms”,
that figure had nearly doubled.
So, if eradicating child poverty is one of the Greens’ most
important “twenty-first century policies” (as she told us, on the radio, only
this week) then how is she going to feel when Treasury solemnly vouchsafes to
the electorate that the measures her party proposes are not only unlikely to
reduce child poverty but may even make it worse. And if she refuses to believe
that Treasury would stoop to such blatantly political tactics, then all I can
recommend is that she spend an hour or two with Sir Michael Cullen. As Labour’s
finance minister from 1999 until 2008, he became something of an aficionado of
Treasury’s “ideological burps”.
There is, of course, another explanation for Ms Turei’s
extraordinary suggestion. It involves the Greens not arriving from, but
departing for, another planet. Planet Key.
After all, the planet they’re currently living on – Planet
Impotence – is a very dreary place. Nothing ever happens on this dismal chunk
of rock, and what makes their lives even more frustrating is that Planet Key
looks like a place where the right sort of Green could have such a lot of fun!
It’s so bright, so blue, and everyone living there looks so happy. A material
girl soon grows tired of hanging out with the poor and needy. Surely, it must
be someone else’s turn to nursemaid the Labour Party! Especially when, every
time Labour manages to construct a spaceship capable of lifting them off Planet
Impotence, they always leave the Greens behind!
And that’s the beauty of establishing a PCU! It more-or-less
guarantees that the Green Party’s Treasury-vetted policies will be
ideologically indistinguishable from those of a National Government.
This essay was
originally published in The Waikato Times, The Taranaki Daily News, The
Timaru Herald, The Otago Daily Times, The Greymouth Star of Friday, 29 January 2016.