And A Smile On The Face Of The Tiger: New Zealand has been fortunate in its political encounters with populism. Whether manifested in the Social Credit Political League, the Alliance, or NZ First, Kiwi populist movements have typically been pretty good-natured affairs. Bruce Beetham’s toothy grimace; Anderton’s manic giggle; Peters’ sunburst smile: all have reassured voters of their owners’ fundamentally honourable intentions.
DON BRASH has a story he likes to tell about Winston Peters.
The Leader of NZ First had just been appointed “Treasurer” and had accepted the
Reserve Bank Governor’s invitation to discuss the Exchange Rate. For years, Peters
had been thundering away about the New Zealand Dollar being overvalued. Now
that he was Treasurer, and his party was all that stood between National and
the Opposition benches, Peters was finally in a position to do something about
it. As Governor of the Reserve Bank, Brash considered it his duty to dissuade
the populist Samson from pulling down the monetary temple.
As Brash tells the story, Peters just wasn’t that interested
– dismissing the whole issue with one of his trademark grins. A few years
later, Labour’s Steve Maharey would excuse his own party’s failure to follow
through on a promise with the observation that it was just one of those things
you say in Opposition and then forget about in Government. Had the Treasurer
anticipated Maharey’s insouciance? For Winston Peters, is the journey always
more important than the destination?
Throughout his long and eventful career, this curious
disjunction between Peters’ fiery pursuit of power, and his considerably less
than incendiary application of it, has both infuriated and intrigued his
followers. It’s as though, blackballed from the exclusive club of his dreams,
Peters has vowed vengeance. Invoking the most dire punishments against
arbitrary power and privilege, he’s recruited a vast and menacing army, marched
it up to the club’s front door, and incited his followers to smash their way
in. Then, having informed his followers that “Winston will take it from here”,
Peters carefully replaces the shattered timbers, saunters into to the club bar,
flashes the horrified members his most winning smile, and orders … a whiskey.
For Peters it has always been about vindication. The
National Party refuses to acknowledge his obvious capacity for leadership? Very
well, he will prove it to them by forming a party of his own and leading it
into Parliament. The Left brands him a racist? Very well, he will take all of
Labour’s Maori seats. The advocates of the Free Market insist that “There Is No
Alternative”? Very well, he will demonstrate the electoral appeal of NZ First’s
paternalistic capitalism.
Vindication – but not revolution. That was the Alliance’s
problem. Its activist base (and on some issues even Jim Anderton himself)
wanted to roll back completely the reforms of Roger Douglas and Ruth
Richardson. It was a mistake. The MMP electoral system, which transformed both
the Alliance and NZ First into viable electoral propositions, was designed
specifically to preserve the status quo – not overturn it. The Alliance
firebrands were unwilling to live with the compromises of coalition government.
Peters and NZ First, by contrast, resigned themselves to racking-up only small
victories.
Small – but not unimportant – victories. Making visits to
the doctor free for children under six. Securing a “Gold Card” discount scheme
for citizens over sixty-five. Gifting them free off-peak public transport.
These were the sort of changes that people appreciated every time they took
advantage of them. They did not bring the new economic order crashing down, but
they did chip away at its ideological pretensions. Peters and NZ First proved
that a helping hand could be extended to one’s fellow citizens – without the
sky falling.
New Zealand has been fortunate in its political encounters
with populism. Whether manifested in the Social Credit Political League, the
Alliance, or NZ First, Kiwi populist movements have typically been pretty
good-natured affairs. Bruce Beetham’s toothy grimace; Anderton’s manic giggle;
Peters’ sunburst smile: all have reassured voters of their owners’ fundamentally
honourable intentions. Peters in particular, has always taken care to offset
his ferocious rhetorical forays into such fraught areas as Maori-Pakeha
relations and Asian immigration by offering the public his most mischievous of
conspiratorial grins. As if to say: “What did you think of that? Impressive?
Good. Just don’t take any of it too seriously!”
As the years have passed, however, New Zealand’s “Populism
With A Smile” has become increasingly difficult to sustain. In relation to the
rest of the world, the Alliance and NZ First were movements ahead of their
time. Over the past two years, however, the global populist herds have
overtaken us with a feral strength not encountered since the darkest years of
the 1930s. And, while anger has always driven populism forward, today’s
populists are super-charged with unreasoning hatred and rage.
This leaves Peters in a difficult situation. Historically,
his aggrieved followers have always allowed themselves to be halted at the
gates of power: always willing to “let Winston take it from here.” But, placing
himself at the head of a populist movement in 2017 may prove to be an
altogether riskier undertaking.
This time the people might insist on going in with him.
This essay was
originally published in The Press of
Tuesday, 27 June 2017.
´The Alliance firebrands were unwilling to live with the compromises of coalition government.´
ReplyDeleteThe social creditors perhaps made the same mistake in 1954 in forming their own party which, over the years achieved nothing. They may have been better to have continued to work through the Labour Party, making their case at conference after conference.
And, while anger has always driven populism forward, today’s populists are super-charged with unreasoning hatred and rage.
ReplyDelete.......
That isn't analysis it is slur.
Hi Chris
ReplyDelete"The MMP electoral system, which transformed both the Alliance and NZ First into viable electoral propositions, was designed specifically to preserve the status quo – not overturn it"
It struck me at the time, though the MMP system was and is an improvement on the FPP , the sentiment that got the change over the line was the public perception that Rogernomics could not have been place under MMP. That it was a foil to the kind of unbridled power that FPP afforded that administration. Not to say Muldoons' increasingly dictatorial stance didn't contribute. But once MMP was in place of corse as you say, it has just made it that much harder to reverse it.
Cheers D J S
He could lead a campaign against neoliberalism and recruit Labour and the Greens to help him - to hell with MMP.
ReplyDeleteYes, Peters, a trial, and trying, just to add to it. Anyone with an average IQ sighs and knits their brow at his name.
ReplyDeleteYou make a good point for him, some unhigh-faluting reality of politics (the high-faluting, where we of the 'Grand Tradition of the Left' live).
Hager's 'Dirty Politics' assault pushed back US style 'believe what you need rather than what is' populism.
In summary, I find Peters tiresome. I put my first response ahead of every brown immigrant's.
I was studying New Zealand politics when Winston was Minister of Maori affairs. I thought his policies were pretty good myself. But there was always that vaguely racist attitude towards Winston in the National party, encapsulated in the "Not very good under a high ball." comment I think it was Holyoake might have made. If my memory serves me correctly I was driving to the exam when I heard on the radio that Winston was out. Frantically thinking of how to revise an answer to a question about Maori affairs policy then. :)
ReplyDelete"That isn't analysis it is slur."
ReplyDeleteI think it's probably reasonable and fair comment. Donald Trump – yes. Nigel Farage – yes no matter how much he tried to hide it. Frauke Petry – yes but she disguises it by being utterly boring. Geert Wilders – yes if you actually pay attention to what he says. And of course Marine le Pen – tried to disguise it by throwing her dad out of the boat but still full of hatred and rage. They all try to put a gloss on it – except perhaps Trump who doesn't really have the brains to do it, but yeah I think so. :) The only guy I might make an exception for is Bernie Sanders, but then he's a populist of what passes for the left in the US.
GS
ReplyDeleteYour answer still begs the question: "is it hate and is it unreasoning?". You simply assert it is.
an insightful and timely appraisal of the political landscape....and thoroughly depressing
ReplyDeleteJh
ReplyDeleteAs does your statement that it it is a slur. I had sort of hoped not to have to go into long and boring examples of the various statements made by the people in question, such as Petry's idea that illegal migrants should be shot if they try crossing the border – and according to my wife, Wilders is subtly and sometimes not so subtly different when he speaks in Dutch rather than for foreign public consumption in English. And of course Le Pen has repeatedly tried to excuse the excesses of the Vichy regime. At least one of her advisers has been found guilty of inciting hatred. As far as unreasoning goes, I would suggest that probably isn't unreasoning, more cynical ploy to gain votes.