Straight Shooters: Radical Conservatives like Judith Collins encourage the electorate to seek out and support those politicians who promise to strengthen the powers and purview of the State. That this will inevitably entail curbing the independence of the Judiciary; authorising the increased surveillance of citizens; and locking-up an ever-increasing number of their fellow citizens; bothers them not at all.
ACCORDING TO former Labour cabinet minister, Steve Maharey:
“Social democracy is in trouble”. Who cares? If challenged to define social
democracy, most Kiwis would shake their heads and shrug. It’s not a term that
pops up very often in New Zealand political conversations. Whether or not it’s in
trouble is unlikely to keep anyone awake at night except left-wing politicos.
On the other hand, if Mr Maharey were to say “Labour is in
trouble”, then New Zealanders would have no difficulty at all in understanding
what he was saying. With Labour riding high at 48 percent in the polls, they
might question his grasp on political reality, but at least they’d know what he
meant.
A more interesting question, especially in the context of
National’s unfolding leadership contest, might be: “Is New Zealand conservatism
in trouble?” If, for example, the National Party caucus were to make Judith
Collins Leader of the Opposition, what would stand out as the most important
item on her political agenda?
If her past record is any indication, the Law and Order
issue would be right at the top of her To-Do list. It was, after all, in
recognition of her get-tough approach to boy-racers that she was given the
political nickname “Crusher”. She has worn it with pride ever since.
The Law and Order issue works exceptionally well for
right-wing politicians because it allows them to play directly to the average
voter’s powerful emotional response to the horrors of serious criminal
offending. People see the damage inflicted on the victims and their families,
and their first response is to demand that the person, or persons, responsible
be subjected to the harshest possible punishment.
They do not want to hear the explanations put forward by
bleeding-heart liberals or left-wing academics. As far as they’re concerned the
people who kill, rape and injure innocent human-beings are evil monsters. Lock
them up and throw away the key.
End. Of. Story.
In the febrile atmosphere whipped-up by right-wing political
firebrands and media sensationalists, the demands of due-process and
constitutional legal safeguards are received with scorn. If the Police have
arrested you and brought you to trial, then you must be guilty.
Sir William Blackstone’s famous legal dictum: “It is better
that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer”, cuts little ice
with a public whose blood is up. To the mob, the idea that the Law might
occasionally allow the guilty to escape punishment is an insufferable
provocation.
All of which encourages the electorate to seek out and
support those politicians who promise to strengthen the powers and purview of
the State. That this will inevitably entail curbing the independence of the
Judiciary; authorising the increased surveillance of citizens; and locking-up
an ever-increasing number of their fellow citizens; bothers them not at all.
On the contrary, the State is perceived as their champion: a
counter-force to all those “activist judges”, annoying civil libertarians and
immoral defence lawyers who demand proof of guilt “beyond reasonable doubt”,
and who bleat on about the “rights of the accused”. What about the rights of
the victims – eh? Don’t they deserve justice!
The perverse consequence of this kind of conservatism is
that, far from preserving the traditions and institutions bequeathed to us by
past generations, it actively seeks their destruction.
In place of the liberties of the citizen: extracted at great
cost from the arbitrary power of the state, these “radical conservatives”
advance the notion that the collective welfare of the people can only be
secured by suppressing anyone who sets their individual “rights” against the
obligation of the state to execute the people’s will.
The political consequences of this decidedly troubling
variety of conservatism are observable in the so-called “illiberal democracies”
of the Russian Federation, Hungary and Poland. In these countries, elections
still take place and opposition parties continue to exist alongside a diversity
of media outlets. The crucial factor which distinguishes illiberal democracy
from the real thing, is that in illiberal democracies the definition of “the
people” is radically narrowed to exclude all those who refuse to support the
governing party.
In winning power, illiberal democrats avail themselves of
all the opportunities genuine democracy provides. Once elected, however, they
move swiftly to delegitimise and marginalise their political opponents.
For those unlucky enough to live under it, illiberal democracy tends to be a
crushing experience.
A version of 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, 23 February 2018.
OT a little, but:
ReplyDeletehttps://horizonpoll.co.nz/page/495/poll-indica?gtid=1230048856443TFL
interesting.
"With Labour riding high at 48 percent in the polls".
ReplyDeleteIt is not Labour riding high, it is Ardern and the halo of pixie dust that surrounds her - without that the party is just as it was before her crowning.
As with NZF, you take away the figurehead and what have you got?
Seeing 'eyebrows' collins with a gun bothers me more than when I did, in fact, nearly get shot. Seeing the natural born malice in her un kissable lips inspires in me to marry, instead, a wart hog, warts and all.
ReplyDeleteWhat, in Gods name, would inspire the common, or garden, moron to vote for it?? Imagine rolling over, replete and now keen for bacon and eggs and see that! And likely, nae certainly plus a hangover. Oh.My.God. The Spanish Inquisition overlooked that particular torture.
Do you think we could attack the woman's policies rather than her looks? As if women haven't got enough trouble at the moment, and it's not like her looks are going to hurt you in any way shape or form compared to her policies.
ReplyDeleteThe crime and punishment question has been exploited by politicians for obvious reasons; the people feel that the states primary duty is their protection specifically and law and order generally. Nobody wants crime and corruption to get out of hand or the consequent societal collapse that follows.
ReplyDeleteIt seems that the key to crime reduction is not more punishment but better apprehension rates. Here's a fascinating interview from five or six years ago. I've copied the link from just prior to the relevant part but the whole thing is very well worth watching.
https://youtu.be/OgqcrwIVgvM?t=1795
ACCORDING TO former Labour cabinet minister, Steve Maharey: “Social democracy is in trouble.
ReplyDeleteHis version
The argument Brash advances reflects the view that colonised people should be grateful for the supposedly superior way of life they were given when Governor Hobson pronounced them citizens. He finds it aggravating (it makes him "utterly sick") that a culture he can't understand should make its way into his world.
He is, as the saying goes, on the wrong side of history. But we should not dismiss him as out of date and irrelevant. That was the mistake many Americans made as they cracked jokes about Donald Trump. Brash represents a view that has an audience. That is why his Orewa speech had such an impact. We should debate with him making it clear that hearing Maori on Morning Report is the future. And there is much more to come.
https://www.pundit.co.nz/content/why-does-don-brash-think-it-is-so-important-that-we-are-one-people
The immigration policy review in 1986 was part of a much larger agenda for change in New Zealand (Bedford 1996)
The attitudes of New Zealanders in the mid-1990s towards immigration may not have reflected the positive perspective on the value of diversity in our society that is contained in the Review of Immigration Policy August 1986. But this does not mean that the globalisation of immigration to New Zealand was an “unintended consequence of policy changes in 1986”. It was a deliberate strategy, based on a premise that the “infusion of new elements to New Zealand life has been of immense value to the development of this country to date and will, as a result of this Government’s review of immigration policy, become even more important in the future” (Burke 1986:330)
Trust in journalists and politicians is at an all time low thanks a clearing out of conservatives and institutionalization of public discourse.
GS
ReplyDeleteThat horizon poll is extraordinary. No-one I know had heard of Mark Mitchell till last week! Perhaps I should get out more.
Victor, the Horizon Poll pretty much confirms my perceived landscape of the NZ psyche. There's that amazingly deep punitive streak that parallels the warm open generosity.
DeleteVictor. For some reason they send them to me. I must've signed up for something years ago and forgotten about it. Most of them I'm not particularly interested in but this 1 was quite interesting as you said. And if it's any consolation, I'd never heard of the man either. :)
ReplyDeleteDammit, I forgot to mention that Gordon Campbell had an interesting piece in our little local giveaway paper entitled "National chooses a sacrificial lamb". Interesting take.
ReplyDeleteNick J
ReplyDeleteAgree entirely about the mixed New Zealand psyche.
After 32.5 years here, I still rarely get the signs as to whether I'm talking to a benign, caring, soft-hearted humanitarian or a died-in-the-wool Hobbesian on steroids.
In a sense, that's a good thing, as it prevents me excessively tailoring my comments to prevent giving offence. Free speech benefits but it might nevertheless be a bit of a drag on social life.