Not Ready: Todd Muller’s lack-lustre and self-contradictory performances offer conclusive proof that a political leader cannot be managed into competence. National’s new boss has Janet Wilson handling his media and Matthew Hooton writing his speeches. Both are highly professional political and public relations specialists, and Muller is lucky to have them. But, they can’t be Leader of the Opposition for him.
TODD MULLER is toast. All the signs are there. The weird
contradictions contained in his own public statements. The constant leaking of
damaging information from inside his own caucus. The obvious delight of former
colleagues as they lower their lifeboats and pull away from National’s sinking
ship. The party’s been here before. Unfortunately, it was in 2002.
Just think about Paula Bennett’s bravura exit performance.
Dancing up a storm with Tom Sainsbury – as if to say: “You always thought Tom
was exaggerating, didn’t you? Nah, the boy never even got close!” There was
something very P.J. O’Rourke about Bennett’s departure: something subversively
liberating. When right-wingers turn out to have a sense of humour strong enough
to make even hard-bitten lefties chortle, it says something very reassuring
about our common humanity. Though some of us are loathe to admit it, we are all
much more the same than we are different.
One of O’Rourke’s most memorable lines was: “First we got
all the money. Then we got all the votes. Now we’ve got all the power!”
Bennett’s celebration boogie, in anticipation of Muller’s failure to win
O’Rourke’s electoral trifecta, has about it the same bracing honesty. Speaking
of her hardcore National colleagues, she once told a startled journalist: “We
didn’t come to Wellington to fuck spiders!” And wasn’t that the truth?
Muller’s lack-lustre and self-contradictory performances
offer conclusive proof that a political leader cannot be managed into
competence. National’s new boss has Janet Wilson handling his media and Matthew
Hooton writing his speeches. Both are highly professional political and public
relations specialists, and Muller is lucky to have them. But, they can’t be
Leader of the Opposition for him.
It was exactly the same with David Cunliffe. Not even Matt
McCarten, a.k.a “Mattiavelli”, could transform the ambitious climber who
deposed David Shearer into a credible alternative prime minister. In the end,
the person has to want the job enough to do what it takes to get it. Also
needed is a clear idea of what to do with “all the power” once you’ve got it.
This is where Muller falls short. Quoting Mickey Savage is all very well, but
when a traditional Catholic talks about “applied Christianity” – what, exactly,
does he mean?
It’s something which, I suspect, Muller’s evangelical
Christian colleagues would also like to know. Their right-wing, fundamentalist
version of the Christian message would see National taking a very different
stance on a broad range of social issues from the one so clearly favoured by
Muller and his liberal allies. A couple of months back, David Cormack (another
PR maven) offered up his own take on National’s Christian conservatives:
“There is a large bloc in National of Christians with some
pretty extreme views. They’re not traditional Christian National Party folk,
but more fire and brimstone. Muller is a traditional National Party Christian,
he voted No on the abortion bill’s second and third reading, he voted No on all
three readings of the euthanasia bill. But he is considered not right wing
enough by the large Christian bloc.”
According to Cormack:
“All of the highly conservative Christian MPs want to fight
their very own culture wars here in NZ; think GOP level. Staunchly pro-Israel,
really strongly anti-abortion, anti-women and gay rights. They want to fight
the ‘Marxism’ that they believe has infested our schools, universities and even
Labour (!)”
Contrast these hardline views with the gentle conservatism
set out by Muller in his Te Puna hometown address in mid-June. Beautifully
crafted by Hooton, the speech enunciated a set of values radically at odds with
the proudly reactionary beliefs of Chris Penk and his comrades. Reading that
speech, Muller’s opponents in the National caucus must have wondered whether
their party was any longer big enough for the both of them.
On the one hand stands Muller (and Hooton) eager to keep the
two main political parties committed to delivering the same neoliberal lines
(albeit with some relatively minor differences in emphasis) that have bound the
precious “median voter” to the aspirations of the broad centre of New Zealand
politics for the best part of four decades.
On the other hand stand what might best be described as the
“Radical Conservatives”. Their principal objection to the existing neoliberal
order is its acceptance of what they see as the immoral and
socially-destructive consequences of the cultural revolution of the 1960s and
70s. With some justification, they see identity politics as intrinsically
hostile to the unequal distribution of power and wealth under patriarchal
capitalism. Take patriarchy out of the capitalist equation and, in the view of
the Radical Conservatives, it will fall.
These are not the sort of ideas to earn more than a curl of
Nikki Kaye’s upper lip. Rightly, she foresees the wholesale rejection of such
an avowedly sexist National Party by the overwhelming majority of middle-class
Pakeha women. Indeed, it was to forestall such a radical-conservative deviation
into Trumpland that the coup against Simon Bridges was mounted. That it
succeeded only because the erratic Judith Collins anticipated taking more
satisfaction from shafting Bridges and Bennett than from saving them, merely
reinforces the scale of the dysfunction currently besetting the National Party.
Such dysfunction is essentially ineradicable by anything
other than the annihilation of one of the two contending factions. This is,
after all, what happened in the Labour Party when the Rogernomes and their
careerist enablers made it more-or-less impossible for the left faction to
remain within the party without surrendering their most deeply held
convictions.
For National’s Radical Conservatives, the path to this
annihilation solution is clear: engineer a defeat on a par with the disaster of
2002. The principal victims of such a strategy would be the party’s liberal
faction. In Lenin’s famous phrase, it would lead to “fewer – but better”
National MPs. A solid foundation of radical-conservative patriarchal Christian
capitalism upon which National’s electoral recovery can be built.
You see now why Todd Muller is toast! Also clear, is why so
many National women are now determined to give their votes to Jacinda.
This essay was originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Thursday, 2 July 2020.
Ah, PJ O'Rourke – along with Florence King one of the few conservative humorists that actually has a sense of humour – who punches up rather than down most of the time. Wasn't it him who said something like "A libertarian is just a conservative who wants to smoke pot and get laid."? I've got most of his books somewhere.
ReplyDeleteColour me naïve though, but I didn't realise we had much of a religious right. I spend a certain amount of time online discussing the American ones with online acquaintances, and I keep downplaying ours. Am I making mistake here? Surely not that many people are going to go for their extremely illiberal ideas? Hopefully not anyway.
Chris, I see us rapidly approaching a time when both major party's & Politics in general are Toast. We didn't notice that the Elevator Lift top floor button had been pushed when we all got on for Lockdown in late February (tho it wasn't announced until 23/3. Now that we've arrived on the top floor, there's nothing here. No economy, no happy campers, no benevolent leaders working diligently toward the change they all say that we need, but fail to make any effort to start any work toward.
ReplyDeleteMr. Muller is not equipped to lead the National Party. He's a stand-in for the next great messiah coming up thru the ranks somewhere over the horizon. There is no one in the National Party with the leadership ability, and people management skills to lead a group of blood thirsty individuals anywhere but to the opposition trough where they get their free lunches on the tax payers ticket.
Hooton is an old Political Hack of the Mike Hosking and Paul Holmes Clan. Talking heads, good for stirring shit and feeding table scraps to the Attack Hounds only.
Labour is no better. They are equally clueless in navigating their way around this broken Neoliberalist System of smoke, mirrors & Algorithms.
When we all left the lift on the top floor we noticed the baron landscape, but we haven't yet figured out what to do with it. With this current Government unable to grasp a plan of attack, we're left to stand around with our thumbs up our bums until someone comes along to kick start the way forward. Who knows when thats going to happen? It's all very hapless and hopeless at the moment...
How did our Battery go so flat in such a short period of time??
Heh Chris ... clearly you've seen Labour's internal polling and you're coming across as both worried and desperate.
ReplyDeleteThe idea that there is some ‘sane’ ideological neutral ground upon which politicians ought to stand is an oversubscribed myth. All politicians, like all voters are animated by their internalised worldview. Everyone has a view of what is true, what is just, what is good and what makes for human flourishing.
ReplyDeleteI understand the Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern formerly held the position of President International Socialist Youth. This is not neutral ground. The electorate can make up its mind about her and the party she leads on that basis.
As it happens I agree with your analysis of Todd Muller. When he folded as quickly as his MAGA hat at the first sign of opposition, it told us all we needed to know. There was no recovery from that point.
I don’t know the Christian MP’s you mention other than by name, but your characterisation appears to come from a grab bag of derogatory stereotypes rather than firsthand conversations with the individuals concerned. Even so, do Labour and their Green allies avoid ‘culture war’ politics? Under their watch we have enacted some of the most liberal abortion laws in the western world, with abortion technically available up until full term. Babies who survive are not to be resuscitated but left to die unattended. Is this the unrelenting kindness we should expect from the Labour Left? Since when has defence of the unborn been an ‘Extreme’ or ‘Radical’ stance?
The assertion that these politicians are ‘anti-woman’ and ‘anti-gay’ is unsubstantiated in your article. On this basis the criticism is little more than an unbecoming smear.
I won’t be voting National at this coming election For a range of reasons. Not least their unquestioning support of a list MP who was a former CCP member and spy trainer and who admitted lying about his application for NZ residency. If it takes National another term in opposition to rethink its ideological foundations, then so be it.
What I find interesting about you Chris is halfway through each column I can tell which publication you are writing for.And if I listen you on Newshub I see another side of you.Do you tailor your comments depending on your audience and perhaps who is paying you.
ReplyDeleteJust wondering.
Burnt toast at that.....
ReplyDeleteNational do have this issue, which is why they argue they are a "broad church", and has room for people who share their liberal economic, but socially conservative agenda. The same issue exists on the left, but it has not yet strongly appeared. The left has traditionally had religious ethnic minority groups who support them, but are anti-LGBT which are part of their "broad church". This is why it is better for Labour to have the Greens push these issues, rather than be seen to be leading from the front.
ReplyDeleteTo: Simon Cohen.
ReplyDeleteYou are quite correct, Simon, I do tailor my writing to the audiences for whom it is intended. All writers - consciously or unconsciously - do the same. We are, after all, human-beings and, as such, we are extremely sensitive to the receptivity or otherwise of other human-beings and adjust our behaviour accordingly.
The people who make no attempt to pitch their arguments in ways most likely to secure for them a fair hearing have a name: we call them fanatics.
And, no, this is not about who is paying me, since those who can still afford to do this (which does not by-the-way any longer include television and radio) hired me in full knowledge of my political and economic leanings.
So, that's enough of the snide innuendo, Mr Cohen.
Passing over your post, I like Todd Muller. Cf Oz Righties. He remembers the time he grew up in.
ReplyDeleteThe stories pouring out of the US plutocratic Mordor continue to poison my generation of NZ Pakeha males who fail to remember. Our Right leaders hang on to their consciences.
Actually, I think we'd laugh at an unscrupulous sort playing Rich bullshit as a card.
But we don't know our story which leaves us open ...
The needy have to organize themselves to be relevant and it's never a good time for the Left -- two recent essays. You are always lustrous but it would need a ph.d to specifically follow your thought process.
ReplyDelete