Be Careful What You Wish For: For the past week Progressive New Zealand has been touting a Labour-NZ First-Green coalition as unequivocally "a good thing". Consequently, there is now a real danger of a coalition of contradictions being brought into existence: a forced parliamentary alliance with the potential to be as politically unedifying as it is electorally short-lived.
IT IS POSSIBLE to want something too much. The New Zealand
progressive community’s hunger for power – so shamelessly on display since
Election Night – has led it to treat Labour, the Greens and NZ First as
unambiguously progressive entities capable of working together without fault or
friction. That they know this assumption to be false has not prevented them
from presenting a Labour-NZ First-Green Government as unequivocally “a good
thing”. Consequently, there is now a real danger of a coalition of contradictions
being brought into existence: a forced parliamentary alliance with the
potential to be as politically unedifying as it is electorally short-lived.
As by far the most progressive member of the tripartite
alliance in prospect, the Greens will be expected to make the most wrenching
compromises and concessions. They will discover very rapidly just how vast the
discrepancy is between NZ First’s and Labour’s pro-environmental rhetoric, and
any willingness on their part to join with the Greens in rolling-out the
practical policy measures necessary to give it effect.
The differences between the Greens: a party rooted in the
most sophisticated layers of metropolitan New Zealand; and NZ First: a party
drawing it most steadfast support from the country’s smallest towns and rural
servicing centres; is unlikely to be limited to the best means of tackling
climate change and cleaning up the rivers. The Greens and NZ First will find
that they are not only at odds over what constitutes practical policy, but
that, culturally, they have almost nothing in common. Metiria Turei spoke no
more than the truth when she described NZ First as a “racist” party. Quite how
the Greens will cope with the sexism and homophobia that is reportedly rife
within their newfound ally’s ranks will be agonising to observe.
The Greens’ relationship with Labour is likely to be even
more fraught. Disagreements are always sharpest between those who believed
themselves to be in accord on the issues that matter most – only to discover
that they aren’t. Jacinda’s promises about eliminating child poverty
notwithstanding, Labour is not about to abandon its policy of keeping in place
a regime of strong “incentives” to “encourage” beneficiaries to move “from
welfare to work”. There will be no bonfire of MSD sanctions under Jacinda. Nor
will there be a 20 percent increase in beneficiaries’ incomes.
The one election promise Labour will keep and, since the
Greens foolishly signed up to it as well, the promise their junior partner will
also be expected to honour, is the promise to abide by the self-imposed
restrictions of the Labour-Green “Budget Responsibility Rules”. Since these
amount to a guarantee that National’s undeclared austerity regime will remain
in force across whole swathes of the public sector, it is impossible to avoid
the conclusion that the Budget Responsibility Rules will become an
extraordinarily divisive force within any Labour-NZ First-Green coalition.
Having denied themselves the ability to raise income and
company taxes before 2020, the Labour Party has effectively turned itself into
a massive economic brake on its own, and its potential allies’, policy
expectations. Unless the Greens and NZ First can persuade the likes of Grant
Robertson and David Parker to avail themselves of hitherto out-of-bounds
financial resources, this ‘progressive austerity’ will soon turn the coalition
into a bitter collection of thwarted hopes and dreams.
Small wonder then, that, according to political journalists
Richard Harman and Jane Clifton, there is a growing faction within both the
National Caucus and the broader National Party to walk away from any deal with
NZ First. Convinced that the coming together of Labour, NZ First and the Greens
can only end in bitter disappointment and, ultimately, coalition-dissolving
division, they are arguing that it is better to allow the “three-headed
monster” to demonstrate its utter incapacity to provide “strong and stable”
government for New Zealand. “Give them enough rope,” runs this argument, “and
in three years – or less – they will have hanged themselves, and National will
be back in the saddle and ready for another very long ride.”
It would be an enormous error for New Zealand’s progressive
community to convince itself that the deep contradictions embedded in the
manifestos of Labour, NZ First and the Greens can somehow be overcome. Far
better for Labour and the Greens, the two parties who are, at least
theoretically, ideologically compatible, to spend the next three years
developing a suite of progressive policies capable of making a real difference
to the lives of the many – not the few.
Right now, with the progressive community’s desire for
political power so unreservedly on display, it should be very, very careful
what it wishes for.
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Saturday, 30 September 2017.