Fighting Back: What at first looked like political suicide, turned out to be a winning strategy for National's Simon Bridges. His wrecking-ball tactics seem certain to claim the Treasury Secretary, Gabriel Makhlouf, and have seriously damaged the Finance Minister, Grant Robertson, and his much vaunted "Wellbeing Budget".
SIMON BRIDGES this morning delivered the political
performance of his career. Controlling his anger (but not hiding it) he sheeted
home the blame for one of the most spectacular political omnishambles New
Zealanders have witnessed for many years. Quite rightly, he demanded the
resignation of the Treasury Secretary, Gabriel Makhlouf, and (with only
marginally less justification) that of the Finance Minister, Grant Robertson.
There had been no hack. Bridges, his colleagues, and the
National Party’s parliamentary staffers had known that from the moment they
began releasing Budget details to the news media. How had they known that?
Simple. They were the ones who had located the supposedly secret Budget
summaries by executing a simple Google search. At the media conference he
called for 8:30am this morning (30/5/19) Bridges even showed the assembled
journalists how it was done. (The person who advised making a video of the
whole process deserves a hefty bonus!)
Small wonder, then, that Bridges came out swinging against
Robertson and Treasury when they began prattling on about a “systematic and
deliberate” hack of the Treasury website and shunted the whole matter off to
the Police. He knew it was all bullshit. He knew there was no illegality in
what National’s staffers had done. And, most importantly, he knew he could
prove it – live – on television. Which he did.
All of which means that I owe Simon Bridges an apology –
which I now duly tender. He may see it as his first duty, as Leader of the
Opposition, to behave like a wrecking-ball, rather than to present himself as
New Zealand’s next Prime Minister. But, crikey! What a wrecking-ball! Bridges
has almost certainly demolished Makhlouf (whose new Irish bosses must now be
scratching their heads) and Robertson, himself, is not out of danger. As an
exercise in smashing things up, it doesn’t get much more comprehensive than
this.
It’s taught me a valuable lesson about writing political posts. Specifically, that it is always advisable to wait for the smoke to clear
before telling people what – or who – has been burnt down.
It has also reminded me of the extreme unwisdom of relying
on “official sources”. In the light of the Treasury Secretary’s allegation that
his department’s website had been hacked, it was hard to judge Bridges’ actions
as anything other than idiotic. Equally difficult was refusing to draw the
obvious conclusion that he had been set up. That this was a classic “Sonny
ambushed at the toll-booth” situation.
Well, when the smoke cleared from this ambush, Sonny was
still standing, tommy-gun in hand, and his would-be assassins were either
running for their lives or bleeding-out on the pavement.
Assumptions can be dangerous things.
I really should have known better. Treasury has been making
the wildest and most implausible claims ever since it unilaterally unleashed
the top-down neoliberal revolution we call “Rogernomics” upon an unsuspecting
New Zealand way back in 1984. I suppose, over the course of 35 years, I have come
to regard them as immensely powerful and essentially unbeatable foes who just
don’t make mistakes. Watching this story unfold has been like watching
Tolkien’s Nazgul, the fearsome Black Riders, falling off their horses and
breaking their magic swords!
There are still some niggles, though, which I would be
remiss to ignore.
First of all, this whole affair was not only never a “hack”,
but it was also never a “leak”. To call it one, as Bridges initially did,
conjured-up images of somebody arranging for a plain brown envelope, containing
a number of Budget summaries, to be left on the Leader of the Opposition’s
desk. (Or, more likely, an anonymous memory stick!) Except, of course, it was
never that. It was National who had gone looking for this information, and it
was National who, against all the odds, found it. And all by doing no more, as
Bridges later said, than what a grandchild, or grandparent, does on-line every
day.
Mr Makhlouf is, therefore, not the only person who can be
charged with misleading the public.
Moreover, I still maintain that the ethical – and
politically responsible – thing to have done was alert the Government to the
fact that its Budget information was accessible to the most basic Google search
– and then inform the news media. Bridges could even have given the Press
Gallery copies of National’s “How To Get A Sneak Preview Of The Budget” video
and watched the Government squirm with embarrassment. It’s when people start
laughing at your enemies that you know you’re on the road to victory.
However. If Bridges had taken the ethical and responsible
course, he would not have been handed the opportunity to let the country
witness his righteous wrath at the perfidy of Treasury and the failure of its
political master to carry out due diligence on its spurious hacking claims.
Today, Budget Day, Grant Robertson’s much ballyhooed
“Wellbeing Budget” lies in tatters on the ground. What should have been a
crowning moment for Jacinda and her closest political ally has been turned into
a tawdry damage-control exercise – at best. Realistically-speaking, no
Opposition leader can be expected to let a chance like that go by.
So, once again, Simon: “I’m sorry.”
Finally, and on a Godfatherly
note, Newshub’s Political Editor, Tova O’Brien, has reported on being handed a
copy of the entire Budget by a young Treasury staffer outside the official
“Lockup”, where journalists are kept, incommunicado, while they digest the
Budget’s contents before the Finance Minister’s set parliamentary speech at
2:00pm.
“Should I have a copy of this outside the Lockup?”, asks the
startled Tova.
“Aren’t you with Treasury?”, responds the flustered staffer.
Honestly, it’s now become impossible to work out who is
ambushing who.
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Thursday, 30 May 2019.
Nearly everyone made the same mistake. If Bridges past history was not so shit no-one would have fallen into the trap.
ReplyDeleteD J S
Chris
ReplyDeleteThat is big of you admitting mistakes before even being prompted. Very few others would admit to that. It is one of the reasons I enjoy reading your columns, even if I might not agree with the sentiments.
Chris Morris
Bridges is a political twit who will never be prime minister of NZ. Your article was wasted.
ReplyDeleteMaybe time to have a bit of a clear out in Treasury, because whatever their job actually is they don't seem to be very good at it. Particularly the prediction part.
ReplyDeleteWell said Chris
ReplyDeleteHis wife did call him "a dirty little street fighter"......Bridges will never be the Prime Minister of this country.
ReplyDeleteRule number one: never apologise to Simon Bridges. Unless he has proven conclusively that NZ National did not know about the online exploit via Treasury website practices, prior. And that it was a random series of numerous searches that “someone” in Chris Bishop’s office apparently felt the need to do.
ReplyDeleteWas Simon B doing good for the country? Was it important and did it justify suggesting that the Finance Minister should resign which would destabilise the country? Was he trying to bring National into prominence in any way he could? Was it that important that a broken convention of announcing everything on the same day by the Finance Minister was enough to upset Labour Coalition (unless he wished to leak things ahead of time)?
ReplyDeleteThere was no insider trading involved, it appeared to be just bloody-mindedness on the part of National. Is that good that an Opposition should behave like this? Has Labour ever done anything like this and it might be retaliation, and you did it too so there? Would that be good for the country? If Parties posed that question before every action, would that be good for the country? I think I have put this kerfuffle in perspective.
Chris, I wearily greet you re this clever piece of opining. Sure it was a bungle, but also needed some balance in critique. I am over political populist games played only to win over those who are too-busy, bored, and less-well read et al. When Simon Bridges dog-whistled as he sneeringly criticised the Budget "Tanks not teachers" he knew he was lying. Replacing ancient Orions and getting Naval competency up to speed is part of real Service for country. Warmongering is long proscribed in our land, and whilst his image of heaps of steel crushing and killing as they go, helps his shallow style of Opposition-leading, it is a failing in my book.
ReplyDeleteKia ora Chris
ReplyDeleteYour mistake, as you have acknowledged, was to believe the word of a senior official of the New Zealand state. No shame in that. We need to be able to take most if not all people on trust and particularly we should be able to trust those who rule over us.
But the time has come to acknowledge that we in New Zealand can no longer trust "our" state officials. From now on everything they say to us should be checked and verified before it is accepted as fact.
You were right to apologize to Simon Bridges, but not just for Simon Bridges sake. It was necessary for the sake of your own personal and journalistic integrity, which as a result of your correction and apology remains undiminished.