Just Politicians? The Green Party Caucus 2018: Jan Logie (Realo) Chloe Swarbrick (Fundi) Gareth Hughes (Fundi) James Shaw (Realo) Marama Davidson (Fundi) Julie Anne Genter (Realo) Eugenie Sage (Realo) Golriz Ghahraman (Fundi). The term fundi indicates a fundmental and uncompromising attachment to Green Party principles. Realos argue for a more realistic and instrumental approach to the questions of political power and how it should be used.
IF THE GREENS were a party like any other party, would they
have given away their “patsy questions” to National? If we were able to put
aside our admiration for the Greens’ proud record of being out “in front” of
New Zealand politics-as-usual, how would we analyse their surprising decision?
If we were willing to say: “They’re all just politicians: neither better nor
worse than their counterparts in Labour, National and NZ First.” How would we
call it?
We are tempted to answer that first question by saying: “Of
course not! No political party with three Ministers Outside Cabinet would ever
voluntarily strengthen the hand of their allies’ enemies. Not while those allies
and the government they lead remain utterly reliant on their continuing and
steadfast parliamentary support.”
It’s easy to imagine both Labour and NZ First struggling to
make any kind of sense out of the Greens’ announcement. If, as they insist, the
Greens regard their patsy questions as a waste of parliamentary time, then the
simple and most politically defensible solution would surely be – not to ask
them. Rather than rising to their feet, the Green MPs could spend the whole of
Question Time sitting on their arses – as silent and mysterious as eight little
sphinxes.
That they have chosen, instead, to give their questions to
the National Party must have all the other Members of Parliament racking their
brains for an explanation that doesn’t leave the Greens looking like a bunch of
impossibly naïve muppets.
“What’s the catch?”, would have been Simon Bridges’ most
likely response. “What do you expect from us in return?”
“Who’s the target?”, would have been the response of Jacinda
Ardern’s back-room boys: David Parker, Grant Robertson and Phil Twyford.
NZ First would merely have concluded that the entire Green
caucus had been taking Ecstasy. “I warned Jacinda,” would be Winston Peters’
world-weary response. “I told her they couldn’t be trusted.”
But, hold on a minute. Is it really impossible that the
Greens’ decision was motivated by genuine political values? Why shouldn’t their
assurances that the party’s sole intention is to make the government more
accountable be accepted? Why can’t it be a case of, as Rod Donald used to say,
the Greens not being on the Left, or the Right, but out in front?
The answer is brutally simple. If the Greens really were
determined to subject the Labour-NZ First Coalition to the scrutiny of the most
informed, articulate and progressive members of the House of Representatives,
then they would hardly have given away the chance to do exactly that to
Parliaments most ill-informed, inarticulate and reactionary elements.
Progressive Kiwis have only to ask themselves: “Who would we
rather held this Government to account: Chloe Swarbrick or Mark Mitchell?
Golriz Ghahraman or Judith Collins?” – to realise that the justification
advanced to them by Green Party co-leader, James Shaw, is pure, unadulterated,
bullshit.
The Greens as a whole are not out in front on this issue.
But the Greens realo (realist)
faction is, almost certainly, behind it.
Let us, for the sake of argument, assume that at this point
in the race for the Green Party’s female co-leadership, the fundi (fundamentalist) Marama Davidson
is out in front.
One of the more substantial planks in Marama’s election
platform has been her argument that as a Green MP without ministerial
responsibilities, she will be well-placed to raise the issues, and voice the
concerns, that are exercising the Green Party membership.
How would that be done? Well, she could ask questions of the
Labour-NZ First Coalition Government: questions relating to the CPTPP,
oil-drilling and climate-change. She could hold Jacinda and Winston (and
James?) to account on their commitment to end child poverty and homelessness.
It’s a promise with clear appeal to those members of the Green Party already
heartily suspicious of the pig they’re being asked to support – and the poke it
came in.
But, just how effective could Marama be if there were no
questions to ask?
The idea of putting a muzzle on the Greens’ fundi faction would have enormous appeal
to those realo members of the party
determined not to blow this long-awaited opportunity to demonstrate that Green
Ministers can make a real difference.
It would also be received with profound relief by the
apprehensive leaders of Labour and NZ First.
Giving away the Greens patsy questions to National has drawn
a line in the sand for the members of the Green Party’s electoral college.
“Cross that line by electing Marama,” they are being told, “and all you will be
signalling to Labour and NZ First is your fundamental untrustworthiness. Why?
Because stripped of the right to ask questions in the House, Marama will be
left with no choice but to keep her party honest by other means – and that can
only result in a destabilised government.”
By declining to cross the line which Shaw and his allies
have drawn in the sand, the representatives of the Green Party branches will be
demonstrating their commitment to effecting real change from within the system
– and inside the government.
Progressive New Zealand’s loyalty to the Labour-NZ
First-Green Government will only be enhanced by the gift of additional
questions to the National Party Opposition. In politics, as in war, it is
always preferable to have your enemies’ fire coming at you from the front, not
from behind – or even to one side.
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Tuesday, 20 March 2018.
5 comments:
The Greens have taken gutless uselessness to new depths.
If the Greens have an alternative agenda (do they?) then who will ever know from their parliamentary performance.
Let the neo-liberals run riot instead. WFI!
These actions will not increase the Green vote. Future polls should make some sense out of this hypocrisy.
After watching questions in the house last few days it would seem by the generally incredibly limp questions from National that if they have more rope they should eventually hang themselves. The front bench is weak. Bridges is no match for Ardern and every time Bridges opens his mouth Bennett, Adams and Collins join him and put their feet in it. Cunning plan by the Greens it appears.
The Greens are playing at being clever Greens.
The Green is washing to a light blue.
The Greens are doing something different! Oooh dear, cringe, fuss, fulminate, fumigate! All of you pathetic, negative, knee-jerk status quo conservatives, just run past your flickering brain ends that what we have been doing in the past is not working, is not satisfactory, and we have to pilot new ideas that will make a change for the better; actually force some new approaches.
To explain to the simple-minded, the Greens are using a well-known, everyday technique that people use for obtaining toothpaste from the tube - squeezing it. The Greens are squeezing the system of Question Time to get it to deliver something we want, and will keep on doing so to produce something useful consistently. Of course that is likely to be that National aren't capable of saying or doing anything useful for the country.
But they will be hoist on their own petar (sic).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoist_with_his_own_petard
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