IF, AS EVERYONE ANTICIPATES, Labour wins the election, it is important to understand that, for Jacinda Ardern, little will change. She will still be Prime Minister, with all that entails. The constant flow of information from her officials will not slow. The daily decisions of government will still have to be made. Yes, there will be a new cabinet, but the key figures in that cabinet will still be her closest allies: Grant Robertson, Chris Hipkins, Meagan Woods. For Jacinda, the next few days and weeks will not be distinguished by how much everything has changed, but by how much of it has remained the same.
Depending on how the votes fall, Labour may, or may not, have to decide what sort of relationship it wishes to establish with the Greens. If, as National is desperately hoping, the Greens are forced out of Parliament, the matter will have resolved itself. If, however, National’s soufflé rises too little, too late, and the Greens squeak back into Parliament, their relationship with Labour will be determined by whether or not the seats they hold are needed to form a working government majority.
Obviously, if Labour needs the Greens to make up the numbers of power, then Jacinda will be obliged to offer James Shaw, Marama Davidson and, perhaps, three of their parliamentary colleagues, seats at the Cabinet Table. But, if Labour has the numbers to govern alone, then they will have a choice to make: to govern with the Greens – or without them.
A not inconsiderable number of Labour MPs will argue against a voluntary coalition with the Greens. Many will be furious with them for refusing to hose down National’s Wealth Tax allegations in the final days of the campaign. They will argue (with some justification) that Shaw’s and Davidson’s refusal to simply take the Wealth Tax off the table provided Judith Collins with the only weapon capable of influencing the election’s outcome. That’s not something they’ll let Jacinda forget. Their argument will be simple and brutal: The Greens cannot be trusted – not when it counts. Let them sit on the cross-benches for three years. See if that improves their judgement.
The Prime Minister and her closest advisors are much more likely, however, to heed the advice of that hardest of hardball politicians, President Lyndon Baines Johnson, who, when his advisers pressed him to put the formidable FBI Director, J Edgar Hoover, out to pasture, memorably quipped: “It’s probably better to have him inside the tent, pissing out, than outside the tent, pissing in.”
The last thing Jacinda and Labour needs is a Green Party, positioned well to their left and feeling morally obliged to criticise every move Labour makes for the entire term. Better by far to slap them in the handcuffs of Collective Cabinet Responsibility – the doctrine which requires cabinet ministers to defend even those government policies they have argued and voted against. The Greens should therefore be very wary of smiling Labour leaders bearing gifts of ginger cake and kindness!
In the best of all possible worlds, the Greens would refuse to join any form of coalition government. In that world, the Greens would not need to be told that the only thing capitalism truly fears, or has the slightest reason to fear, is anti-capitalism.
Liberalism, even in its most radical manifestations (embodied to a decidedly unhealthy degree in the current crop of Greens) remains indissolubly wedded to the core principles of the profit-driven system. When the Green Party was first formed, more than 30 years ago, it quickly attracted a swathe of hard-core anti-capitalists (many of them, like Sue Bradford, refugees from the communist organisations driven out of Jim Anderton’s NewLabour Party). By no means all of these “eco-socialist” anti-capitalists have exited the Greens, but it is indisputable that the party has become much more capitalist-friendly since James Shaw was elected co-leader. Only stupid capitalists fear the likes of Shaw. Smart capitalists all know him to be a man they can do business with.
To avoid disappointment, and that all-too-familiar disillusionment that sets in among leftists after every Labour victory, progressive New Zealanders need to understand that “doing business” is the default setting of the system our representatives are elected to administer. Capitalist democracy has almost nothing to do with the emancipation of those on the receiving end of its economic and social injustices; it is, rather, as one of capitalism’s better analysts, Joseph Schumpeter, pointed out: all about securing “an orderly circulation of elites”.
National is demonstrating – to a hilarious degree – all the signs of an elite which has become exhausted, and needs a period out of power to reconstitute and re-energise itself. Labour, by contrast, has drawn around it an impressive cross-section of the professional and administrative strata responsible for keeping this country going.
Though few New Zealanders would express it in such a fashion: Jacinda’s and Labour’s general handling of the Covid-19 crisis proved both to be highly effective defenders of the capitalist status quo. She, and they, kept the lights on. And that, in the absence of an alternative team of lighting engineers, is pretty much the whole extent of 95 percent of New Zealanders’ expectations.
Maybe, as the world descends further into epidemiological and economic panic, and the planet itself turns aggressively on its dominant species, Jacinda, Labour and the Greens will prove themselves unequal to the challenge of keeping the lights on. At that point, we will begin in earnest the search for an elite dedicated to the creation of a new kind of economic, social, political and ecological order. That’s generally the way it works: the failure of an old system calls into existence a new one.
When our very survival turns on the creation and election of anti-capitalists, then rest assured, we will find them – and vote for them. In the meantime, as the French are wont to declare: plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.
The more things change, the more they remain the same.
This essay was originally posted on The Daily Blog of Friday, 16 October 2020.
There can be no transformational government in NZ until there has been a complete change of culture in our state service. The bureaucrats mindset is to with-hold assistance from the Department or Ministry to, in theory, reduce expenditure. The truth is they are kicking problems down the road to other sectors and will spend more on appeals and with-holding assistance than will be saved.
ReplyDeleteThis is the culture that the right put in place to demonstrate that government cannot be the solution, to the extent that frustration of process becomes the norm.
In the first term, the Labour led government showed no desire to shake up and reform, instead, there was a clear pattern of Ministers captured by the Ministry.
The people of NZ have demanded the kinder, more supportive Government. That cannot be destroyed by the peoples first contact with Government agencies.
If no a one - including the Greens and and even the most extreme of Leftists - can explain or give a brief example of how we can have civilization, prosperity, decent houses, education etc. etc. without (the basic economic function of) capitalism, then should we not all focus on how to create and utilize capital(ism) in the most all-inclusively effective manner and fair manner ?
ReplyDeleteOr plainly - would any "anti-capitalist" please stand up and explain how we can live without capitalism, if we don't want to revert to cave-dwelling hunters and gatherers ?
(Which actually might be the most effective way of "greening" our Earth, provided serious overpopulation would not consume more than what Nature is capable of delivering without human effort of the capitalistic - wealth creative and maintaining - kind.)
Yanis Varoufakis on the error that democracy and capitalism go hand in hand.
ReplyDelete(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GB4s5b9NL3I
He notes how Singapore and Lee Kuan Yew show this is not so - a capitalistic success that is democracy-free.
He says rightly: If you want to reach your goals and dreams, you cannot do it without discipline
Lee Kuan Yew
by xingmowang | 19th Oct 20, 3:27pm
ReplyDeleteI am very happy about the election results - Labour being able to govern alone for 3 years or even more.
This offers a perfect opportunity to manifest the pure incapability and inability of Labour party in leading a country by fulfilling what they promised, as well as to prove irrefutably that NZ's dependence on agriculture, foreign tourists and students, immigrants with either human and financial capitals, and China regardless of political parties.
Let's wait and see in 3 years time.
I am so excited.
https://www.interest.co.nz/opinion/107594/hayden-wilson-and-linda-clark-dentons-kensington-swan-assess-what-weekends-election
I think I got kicked off that site for saying Chinese come here buy motels and drive buses, bring a wife and 4 parents and pointing out that humans judge who is us and who is them in a fraction of a second; are territorial and set a price as to what circumstance/price they are to become us.
ethno‐traditional nationalist
" a variety of nationalism which seeks to protect the traditional preponderance of ethnic majorities through slower immigration and assimilation but which does not seek to close the door entirely to migration or exclude minorities from national membership. " Eric kaufmann
Are we like some firm that is bought out by a larger one?
here is Mr Above telling us we are now reliant on their people and their money when there is no benefit to most of us.
Will Jacinda stand up for Anne-Marie Brady or the gentleman who pays the rent
https://www.afr.com/policy/foreign-affairs/nz-academic-faces-axe-over-china-research-20201016-p565oa
Capitalism and democracy are not linked.
ReplyDeleteMilton Friedman first put his half-baked economic theories into action in General Pinochet's Chile.
The second cab off the rank was the Argentine junta next door.
Nice to know the company Mr "Free To Choose" kept.
Neoliberalism is the fascists best friend.
More unintelligible racist meanderings from John Hurley.
ReplyDelete