A Spectral Green: John Key (with apologies to Sir Arthur Conon Doyle's The Hound of the Baskervilles) has labelled the Labour-Green alternative government a "Devil Beast" of the "Far-Left". But the names our politicians attach to their opponents very seldom correspond to their actual position on the ideological spectrum.
A CHOICE BETWEEN the Centre-Right and the Far-Left. That’s
how the Prime Minister and his National Party colleagues intend to frame next
year’s General Election. It’s a shrewd strategy. Most Kiwis feel considerably
more comfortable with “centre” than they do with “far”.
Nobody wants to be far
away when they could be at the very centre
of things. And who doesn’t enjoy being the centre
of attention? Indeed, the discovery that we’re not in this happy position
leaves most of us feeling very far
from happy.
By attaching the word ‘centre’ to the word ‘right’ National
is also adding a crucial political modifier. Very few New Zealanders will own
to being unequivocally “Right” or “Left”. It smacks too much of the sort of
ideological inflexibility they associate with places where peace tends to be as
short-supplied as freedom.
“Right-wingers” and “left-wingers”, alike, are deemed to
lack the easy-going temperament and the pragmatic approach to problem-solving
that we Kiwis (and, apparently, the rest of the world) find so appealing.
‘Laconic’ has always suited us better than ‘histrionic’. If asked to choose a
path between two extremes, most of us generally head for the middle of the
road.
And then, of course, there’s History.
Invoke the Right and people immediately think of Adolf
Hitler receiving the “Sieg Heil!” salute, as rank after rank of jack-booted
Brownshirts goose-step their way towards the Holocaust under a forest of
swastika banners. Mention the Left, and the mental image is of Joe Stalin
smiling wolfishly from Lenin’s Tomb as a May Day parade of Intercontinental
Ballistic Missiles rumbles by and the Red Army Choir belts out the
“Internationale”.
But how dramatically the picture changes when “right” and
“left” are prefixed with “centre”.
Ask Kiwi baby-boomers to think of a “Centre-Right”
politician and they’ll probably recall the ridiculously pompous – but
essentially harmless – Sir Keith Holyoake. Ask a member of Generation-X, and
five’ll getcha ten they think of John Key escorting Aroha to Waitangi, or
swigging Steinlager from the bottle in the garden of Premier House.
Say “Centre Left” to the Boomers and they’ll recall David
Lange informing a startled young American at the Oxford Union that he could
“smell the uranium” on his breath. Gen-Xers will (hopefully) remember Helen
Clark refusing to join George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq.
It’s wonderful political shorthand – but is it the truth?
Apart from conjuring-up both positive and negative political images and
memories, does the Prime Minister’s use of the terms “Centre-Right” and
“Far-Left” truly correspond to the Government’s and the Opposition’s objective
location on the ideological spectrum?
The answer must be an emphatic “No!” National and Labour
both subscribe to the same basic tenets of neoliberal economic theory that have
dominated the policy-making of the OECD countries for the past thirty years.
The Greens, too, recognise the marketplace as the most effective means of
allocating scarce resources. Their “Green Capitalism” might be “cleaner”, and
turn out a more environmentally friendly range of products than the Smoke-Stack
Capitalism of the past, but the social relations underpinning that production
are just as dirty.
Mr Key lambasts the Green Party co-leader, Russel Norman’s,
enthusiasm for “Quantitative Easing” – citing it as proof of his “Far-Left”
lunacy. But this charge merely reveals the Prime Minister to be either
economically ignorant or deeply cynical.
Quantitative Easing is the official policy not of North
Korea, Cuba or Venezuela, but of the United States, the United Kingdom and
Japan. Mr Norman’s ideas about lowering the value of the currency by expanding
the money supply are proof not of his revolutionary fervour – but of his
economic orthodoxy.
Mr Key would be better advised to stick with his “Devil
Beast” description of the Opposition parties. Using the term “Far Left” to
characterise a Labour-Green coalition is intended to elicit exactly the same
emotional response as likening it to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Hound of the Baskervilles,
but comes at much greater cost to the Prime Minister’s credibility.
The truly ironic aspect of this name game is that the New
Zealand electorate is almost certainly well to the left of its political
leaders and their parties. A visiting French journalist once described New
Zealanders as “socialists without doctrines”. Talk to most Kiwis about the sort
of country they’d like to live in and you’ll find that most of us still are.
This essay was
originally published in The Waikato Times, The Taranaki Daily News, The
Timaru Herald, The Otago Daily Times and The Greymouth Star of Friday, 31 May 2013.