Hardly Napoleonic Andrew: Consigning David Cunliffe to the rear of the battlefield, and replacing Nanaia Mahuta with Kelvin Davis do not strike me as the decisions of a wise general. (Although they may be those of a panicky one.) While advancing his Right, a wise general would have taken care to keep his Left strong – just in case his confidence in all these newly promoted commanders proves to be misplaced.
CLEARLY I ERRED in likening Andrew Little to Napoleon
Bonaparte. Whatever else people may say of Napoleon, no one can fairly accuse
him of dissipating his forces on the field of battle.
Concentration, concentration, concentration, was Napoleon’s
mantra: what the American Civil War General, Nathan Bedford Forrest, later
summarised as “getting there firstest, with the mostest”.
Consigning David Cunliffe to the rear of the battlefield,
and replacing Nanaia Mahuta with Kelvin Davis do not strike me as the decisions
of a wise general. (Although they may be those of a panicky one.) While
advancing his Right, a wise general would have taken care to keep his Left
strong – just in case his confidence in all these newly promoted commanders
proves to be misplaced.
As a number of right-wing commentators have already pointed
out, the treatment of Cunliffe is as wasteful of the man’s talent as it is
self-indulgently vindictive. They contrast Little’s demotion of Cunliffe with
National’s treatment of Bill English. In spite of leading his party to the
worst defeat in its history, English’s colleagues did not consider it
appropriate to signal his imminent political demise. On the contrary, his
talent was retained and directed, very successfully, against the political
enemy.
But that’s Labour’s problem, isn’t it? For far too many
Labour politicians, the political enemy is seated on their own side of the
parliamentary aisle. The Government benches contain only their opponents.
It is interesting to speculate about how Cunliffe’s
supporters in the broader Labour Party will respond to Little’s brutal
treatment of him. Some will recall the statespersonship of Helen Clark, who
judiciously divided up the top jobs between her friends – and foes. The result
– a “ministry of all the talents” – proved crucial to ending the serious
factional strife that had long plagued Labour’s caucus. Others will recall with
some bitterness the assurances given to them by the Labour hierarchy at the
party’s recent conference.
The bitter divisions of the past had been healed, they said.
Caucus and party were now working together, they said.
Yeah, Right.
It is now very clear that the only “peace” secured at
Palmerston North was a Carthaginian Peace. Satisfied that their rank-and-file
opponents had no more fight left in them, Cunliffe’s enemies immediately
prevailed upon Little to order the New Lynn MP’s political demotion.
Expressed in the most brutal terms, Little’s reshuffle
pushes Grant Robertson’s people (especially Jacinda Ardern) “up”; casts
Cunliffe’s people “down”; and raises the very serious question as to whether
Little has any “people” at all.
Are we looking at a Labour Leader in command of his own
caucus, or a Labour Leader dancing to the tune of its dominant faction? A
faction characterised by petty spitefulness, and almost completely lacking in
the magnanimity so crucial to building and bringing together an effective
government.
The last time we had a puppet Leader of the Opposition was
in the years immediately prior to the 1984 general election. The difference
then, of course, was that the public never doubted that David Lange was going
defeat Sir Robert Muldoon and bring an end to nine years of divisive National
rule.
That Andrew Little is about to do the same to John Key is
not a bet that many New Zealanders would take. And this reshuffle in no way
improves the odds.
This essay was posted
on The Daily Blog and Bowalley
Road on Monday, 30 November 2015.