"But The Fighter Still Remains": Bill English should be staggering across the electoral ring like a bloodied, punch-drunk boxer desperate for the salvation of the fight’s final bell. Instead he’s still up on his toes and trading punches with an opposition that seems incapable of laying a single glove on his up-tilted prime-ministerial chin.
JUST OVER NINE WEEKS to go before New Zealand votes – and
what a mess! The National-led Government is an administrative disaster in which
demonstrable incompetence strives against refined political cruelty for mastery.
At this point in the electoral cycle, Bill English should be staggering across
the ring like a bloodied, punch-drunk boxer desperate for the salvation of the
fight’s final bell. Instead he’s still up on his toes and trading punches with
an opposition that seems incapable of laying a single glove on his up-tilted
prime-ministerial chin.
Labour’s performance is especially woeful. Andrew Little and
Jacinda Ardern swing wildly and miss. That there are two other fighters in the
ring with Labour should be imbuing the whole anti-government team with
confidence. Except that, instead of taking turns to punch Bill English in the
face, the Greens and NZ First are trading blows with each other. Hardly
surprising, then, that Labour is losing focus!
This lack of focus, this weakness, lies at the heart of the
Opposition’s difficulties. Labour should now be polling in the high 30s, with
the Greens and NZ First struggling to stay above the 5 percent MMP threshold. Even
when defeated by John Key in 2008, Helen Clark and Labour still managed to
attract 34 percent of the Party Vote. The Greens were minor players, with a
modest 6.7 percent, while NZ First, with just 4.7 percent support and no
electorate seats, was driven out of Parliament altogether.
Labour’s repeated failure to produce a credible replacement
for Clark has created a political vacuum into which both the Greens and NZ
first have been only too happy to step. In doing so, however, they have
contributed to the widespread public perception that the Opposition is a house
divided, or, in the devastating visual language of the National Party’s 2014
campaign propaganda – a Ship of Fools.
The explanation for Labour’s failure is to be found in the
arrogance and lack of imagination of its caucus. Though the party membership
understood the need for a clear reaffirmation of Labour’s core principles, its
MPs remained wedded to Clark’s cautious incrementalism. Without a Don
Brash-like “defender of the faith” to re-energise Labour’s base and reassert
its claim to leadership of the Left, the party’s share of the vote fell to 27
percent in 2011 and 25 percent in 2014. Four lacklustre leaders in nine years have
not only sapped the morale of the party membership, they have also contributed
to a pronounced loss of public confidence in the political competence of the Left
as a whole.
As Labour has weakened, the Greens and NZ First have
convinced themselves that the role of second party is theirs for the taking. In
the case of NZ First, this is not an altogether fanciful ambition. Given the
right set of circumstances: a cruel and incompetent National government; a fast
declining Labour Party; an electorate looking to shake up the status quo; and
it is possible to envisage Winston Peters breaking through. That the Greens will
somehow exceed the 10-11 percent which, to date, has defined the outer limits
of their support – that is much harder to see. Nonetheless, they will try.
Labour’s failure being the precondition of their success.
So Bill English keeps dancing, jabbing and, occasionally,
connecting. Watching him confront not one, but three, opponents, the punters may
even start seeing the Prime Minister as the underdog in this fight. What should
have been an execution – an act of euthanasia even – continues to be a contest.
And, so far, National isn’t losing.
UPDATE: 8:00am, Saturday, 15 July 2017 - The latest UMR polling data (UMR is the Labour Party's pollster) has been leaked to Newshub's Paddy Gower. It shows Labour plummeting from 34 percent in May to 26 percent in July. As Labour's vote collapses, however, the poll shows support for Winston Peters and NZ First surging to 14 percent. The Greens are close behind with 13 percent. Meanwhile, National boxes on with 42 percent.
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Friday, 14 July 2017.
Labour's leaders after Clarke consisted of:
ReplyDeleteGoff - a neo-lib slave
Shearer - a pointless ring-in
Cunliffe - a hopeless situation surrounded by traitors
Little - a unionist struggling to shake off the smoko room talk mentality
What short memories. From 1996 - 1999 Helen Clark polled miserably, survived a coup and went on to win the 1999 election. 2017 Andrew Little is in a similar polling position but facing the even bigger challenge of corralling a fractious and divided left bloc. Instead of being left to get on with it and even given a helping hand he is criticised and not given any hope........just like Helen Clark was. The one thing the left knows better than anyone else is the taste of its own shoe leather.
ReplyDeleteWell we will see what happens in September.
Labour’s repeated failure to produce a credible replacement for Clark has created a political vacuum into which both the Greens and NZ first have been only too happy to step.
ReplyDelete......
For many Helen Clark has a legacy that got the ball rolling and got us to where we are today: population growth, house prices, clogged roads, political correctness (Susan Devoy), multiculturalism. If that had all been a great success Labour would be where National is. Harcourts and Bailey's are loving it. The guy at the top with the most important job is the one whose results are seen mainly in hind-sight.
Labours cozy and craven MOU with the Greens was a clear indication of political weakness plus sick political correctness from the leadership of Labour.
ReplyDeleteThe Greens are not safe.
The Greens are not safe.
Labour have no balls.
Labour brings to our Country foreign interns to recruit for their cause.
Why not Kiwi's?. Why not NZ citizens?. Are you all dumb Cxxts?.
Little and Labour have lost all signs of traction within NZ.
The left is floundering.
I blame Little and his advisors.
@ Polly
ReplyDeleteI think Labour has a foot in two boats and so their leadership can't speak with conviction. They are trying to appeal to people who see other people as competition (more of "just like us, doing just what we do, living in circumstances just like we do - "mouldy old" us) and new age people who (themselves) have hit the jackpot (into Uni and up) and live a gilded life in the public service and academia. The latter have a vision (albeit a mirage) - pays well though and lot's of doughnut dunking
By the way Chris the boxer mantle in my opinion is better suited to Winston Peters.
ReplyDeleteMy great-grandfather was a liberal politician. He died before I turned one. But one of his younger friends and admirers told me that Great-Granddad’s speech to new party workers and would-be politicians was simply that their voters must understand what one thing they stood for. Not what three things. Not what ten things. What one thing.
ReplyDeleteWhenever I read the comments on one of Chris’s posts, they simply remind me that no one – including the Labour Party – knows what one thing the Labour Party stands for. And, these days, I suspect that is also true of the Green Party.
jh, 11.47,
ReplyDeletein my view your comment hits the nail as does Chris's article.
Polly 15 July 2017 at 16:59 is correct.
ReplyDeleteThe problem is Little is surrounded by uneducated unionist half-wits that have no idea on how to win a general election.
It's run like an exclusive clique. This clique that surrounds Little's office will fail.
I remember meeting with another Labour failure, the former Gen Sec, Tim Barnett, who when I spoke to him as a current Labour party member with experience on Labour party election campaigns in Aussie & UK suggested that I could 'stuff envelopes with the other volunteers'
Labour really are the ultimate political losers.