Once Were Likeable Eco-Warriors: The Green Party's parliamentary line-up is now a very long way from Rod’s beaming optimism, Jeanette’s grandmotherly wisdom, Sue B’s and Keith’s commitment to social justice and peace, Sue K’s safe food, and Nandor’s illegally resinous dreadlocks. Today's Green Party is fast taking on the character of a political cult: filled with zealots determined to enforce their policies on what we should be permitted to drive; what we should be encouraged to eat and drink, what it is acceptable for us to think; and what we should be allowed to say.
THERE WAS A TIME when it was really quite hard to dislike
the Greens. Back in the days of Rod Donald and Jeanette Fitzsimons; of Nandor
Tanczos and Sue Bradford; of Sue Kedgley and, yes, even the rather dour Keith
Locke. There was also that bloke who called himself the “Musterer” (instead of
the “Whip”) whose name I have completely forgotten. [Ian Ewen-Street – thankyou
Google!] When they first made their way up the steps of Parliament, back in
1999, I called them “The Magnificent Seven” – so perfectly did they cover all
the bases of ecological politics.
If you counted yourself among the Left of New Zealand
politics, and you didn’t vote for the Greens, you needed to be able to supply
yourself with a very good reason why not. The Party made not voting for them a
lot harder by being so damn nice. They practiced politics in the way most
people agreed it should be practiced: by sticking to ideas and to the policies
those ideas gave birth to; by refusing to get down in the gutter with those
politicians who seemed to regard politics as an excuse for being personally
vicious and cruel.
On Wednesday afternoons, during the General Debate, you
waited eagerly for the Greens’ turn to speak. It always came as such a welcome
relief from the personal attacks, the snide remarks, and the puerile arguments
which their fellow MPs resorted to. Invariably, the Greens’ contribution would
be about something real and important. There was always an argument for
listeners to follow – an argument based on, and backed up by, facts. You know, evidence.
It was like the sun’s rays breaking through clouds: proof that somewhere out
there, beyond all the bullshit and braggadocio, there remained a world
of light.
It is still possible to catch an echo of the Magnificent
Seven in the 2017 intake of Green MPs. Chloe Swarbrick, in particular, would
not have been out of place in that special company. Sadly, however, Swarbrick
is the exception. For the most part, her Green party colleagues have lost that
tremendous likeability that made it so hard for the Left to vote for anyone
else.
Partly, that’s because the Left itself has changed. Always
among the Greens there was a powerful libertarian current. By and large the
Greens did not like the idea of the State, or big corporations, or the petty
tyrants who run so many small businesses, interfering in the harmless and
victimless activities of their fellow citizens.
No one appealed to the libertarian fraction of the
electorate like Nandor Tanczos. With this dreadlocks, his skateboard and his
green hemp suit, he became a poster-boy: not only for the legalise marijuana
movement, but for that fiercely contrarian bunch of New Zealanders who, without
him, has veered over the edge into anti-vax and anti-1080 fanaticism.
But, it’s not just the unfortunate way in which the vacuum
created by Tanczos’ departure from political life has been filled that’s the
worry. Libertarianism, itself, has largely disappeared from the ranks of the
twenty-first century Left. Even worse, in the ideological space formerly
occupied by libertarian leftism, New Zealand now finds its exact opposite: Left
Authoritarianism.
It does not require a very long acquaintance with the Green
variety of Left Authoritarianism to realise that, in 2019, the number of
activities defined as harmless and victimless has become vanishingly small.
To be fair, there has always been an element of
authoritarianism present in the ranks of the Greens. On a number of issues –
the Treaty of Waitangi in particular – those responsible for vetting potential
candidates have always exercised zero tolerance for anything other than the
full-recognition, tino rangatiratanga, line. Until relatively recently,
however, this “politically correct” element of the Green Party apparatus was encouraged
to keep itself out of sight. Today, however, among party activists and MPs
alike, it operates loudly and uncompromisingly in plain sight.
The political and electoral consequences for the Greens are
likely to mirror those which overwhelmed the Left generally in the early 1980s.
The 1981 Springbok Tour had radicalised a great many New Zealanders who, in its
aftermath, were eager to keep pushing for social change. For many Pakeha
leftists, however, the concurrent upsurge in Maori nationalism proved too
confronting. The aggressive pursuit of “Maori Sovereignty”, in particular,
drove many Pakeha out of the so-called “New Social Movements”, where the
sovereigntists were most active.
Organisations which considered themselves progressive, such
as the aid organisation Corso, may have decked themselves out in the trappings
of bi-culturalism, but only at the cost of making insincerity an unwelcome
requirement of membership. The upshot was an emptying-out of many of the
institutions of the “White Left” – a not inconsiderable number of whom took
refuge in the much friendlier ranks of the Labour Party, which, in the early
1980s, boasted a mass membership in excess of 100,000.
With the benefit of hindsight, it is clear that the Greens,
founded in 1989, attracted a large number of members for whom the precepts of
identity politics formed the core of their political ideology. The Greens’
consensus-based decision-making processes allowed these ideologues to operate
for many years within the party without the wider electorate paying them much
attention. While the Greens were led by the likes of Rod Donald and Jeanette
Fitzsimons, the influence of the “id-pols” could be managed. Following Donald’s
death and Fitzsimons’ departure, however, the Greens parliamentary line-up has
become at once less likeable and less representative than the seven-strong
caucus which marched up Parliament’s steps in 1999.
The great problem now facing the Greens is that Labour finds
itself in possession of the most likeable political face New Zealanders have
encountered for many decades. When set against “Jacinda”, the Greens’ James
Shaw comes across as a low-energy compromiser. Meanwhile, his co-leader, Marama
Davidson, strobes identity politics in a fashion calculated to make a sizeable
majority of the electorate feel decidedly queasy.
Neither Shaw, nor Davidson, is likely to hold in place many
voters not already completely sold on the Greens’ brand of identity politics.
The party is fast taking on the character of a political cult: filled with
zealots determined to enforce their policies on what we should be permitted to
drive; what we should be encouraged to eat and drink, what it is acceptable for
us to think; and what we should be allowed to say.
It’s a long way from Rod’s beaming optimism, Jeanette’s
grandmotherly wisdom, Sue B’s and Keith’s commitment to social justice and
peace, Sue K’s safe food, and Nandor’s illegally resinous dreadlocks.
I liked them.
POSTSCRIPT: This essay was written before the Greens released their attack ad criticising National's Climate Change policies - mostly by ridiculing Simon Bridges' broad Kiwi accent. That the current leadership initially okayed the release rather proves my point. That the membership loudly demanded it be taken down (which it was) proves something else. That the spirit of 99 hasn't entirely disappeared! - C.T.
This essay (minus the postscript) was originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Tuesday, 23 July 2019.
6 comments:
You will no doubt be familiar with one strand of political analysis that divides modern politics into the "control-left", the "alt-right", and the as yet undeveloped "escape-center".
Isn't it about time white people got over being scared/angry at Maori rhetoric when they put their ideas forward? Are we not better than this? Obviously not.
This sounds just like an article I read on Portland. It is almost as though it is an ecological issue but one where you eliminate opinions you don't like and the others grow teeth and snarl.
Hobsons Pledge (for example) has valid criticisms of the bicultural process. Where they have co management it is capricious.
The Australian greens gave also gone the same way into bitterness.
This is undoubtedly true.
However I don't think that Ron and Jeanette really had a grasp on what environmentalism would resonate with the average person. I remember Jeanette fixated in SUV's way back then. Even then there were signals abut poor water quality and for reasons unfathomable to me, the Greens fixated on cars and SUV's in particular rather than clean water.
Now, they are downright unpleasant.
The problem is yours GS. You are an indenditarian.
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