KIA WHAKATŌMURI TE HAERE WHAKAMUA: “I walk backwards into the future with my eyes fixed on my past”. To anyone with a love of history, that whakataukī really hits the spot. It is both dangerous (as well as practically impossible) to go forward without consideration for what we leave behind. Which is not to say that watching where you’re going is a bad idea. Clearly, observation and anticipation are vital, not only when it comes to navigating the present safely, but also to keeping the future safe.
Successful political leadership embodies a keen awareness of past, present, and future, along with the wisdom to adjudicate what is owed, and should be paid, to each. Sadly, such leadership has not been much in evidence during 2024. Indeed, New Zealanders have seen just how badly things can go wrong when both respect for the past, and wise adjudication in the present, are lacking. It does not make for a safe future.
Had the National-Act-NZ First coalition government had more respect for the past, it would not now have to contend with so many besetting difficulties.
Certainly, it is difficult to comprehend how any group of politicians who hadn’t spent the 36 months between January 2020 and December 2022 living under a rock could have been so unaware of the grim fiscal legacy bequeathed to all New Zealanders by the overwhelming historical experiences of those three years – the worst years of the Covid-19 global pandemic. But, astonishingly, Christopher Luxon, Nicola Willis, and their colleagues have managed it.
Unmoved, seemingly, by the disastrous fiscal consequences of doing so when the monetary consequences of addressing the urgent needs of the pandemic were everywhere apparent, the National Party promised, and delivered, tax cuts. At the very moment when responsible economic management demanded measures to increase state revenues; measures that would not only have eased the nation’s debt burden, but also dampened demand in an economy afflicted with historically high inflation; National opted to strip the state of billions of tax dollars that might otherwise have been used to address critical social needs.
Reducing the fiscal responsibilities of the National Party’s friends and allies brought many other malign consequences. Not the least of which was the need to impose harsh, across-the-board cuts in public spending. The impact of these cuts would not be felt, or, at least, not as acutely, by National’s friends and allies, but by the friends and allies of National’s electoral opponents. That these included the poorest and most vulnerable New Zealanders did not appear to give Christopher Luxon and his colleagues pause.
A political party which respected, and allowed itself to be guided by, the past would have recalled the impact of previous rounds of drastic cost-cutting by conservative governments. It would also have been aware of the store of trouble that such historical austerity programmes had built up for future generations of political leaders.
But Christopher Luxon’s and Nicola Willis’s National Party appears not think in such terms. It seems not to recognise the overwhelming infrastructure challenges now facing New Zealand as the direct consequence of political leaders who were too afraid to impose the taxes necessary to keep a humane society functioning, and too fixated on the political needs of the present to anticipate the future disasters that such cowardice, if left unaddressed, was bound to produce.
How else to explain the Coalition Government’s fast-track legislation as anything other than the “Oh f**k!” response of Chris Bishop and Simeon Brown, the Ministers, respectively, of Infrastructure and Transport, to the discovery that their country is falling apart? (A condition, incidentally, about which ordinary Kiwis, after four decades of political indifference and neglect, were fully aware!)
Once again, National’s indefatigable “presentism” blinded it to the historical precedents for this sort of “Get-out-of-the-way!” solution to the public resistance engendered by governments attempting to do everything, everywhere, all-at-once. Is there no one left in the National Party who remembers Rob Muldoon?
Not that National stands alone in this regard. Act leader David Seymour is not the least bit afraid of austerity, indeed, he welcomes it. Slashing spending is, for Act, much more than a temporary economic necessity, it’s an ideological mission. How else is the state to be got down to the size where, in the vicious phrase of the American free-market enthusiast Grover Norquist: “we can drown it in the bathtub”?
Drowning the state is not, however, the goal of NZ First. A disciple of the nineteenth century German nationalist economist Friedrich List, the NZ First leader, Winston Peters, looks upon New Zealand’s great nation-builders, Sir Julius Vogel and, yes, Sir Robert Muldoon, as politicians to be celebrated, not shuddered-at. Peters’ deputy, Shane Jones, gleefully piles pounds of rhetorical fat on his leader’s bare theoretical bones, being only too pleased to tell Greens, environmentalists, and every other unmanly defender of Freddy the Frog to “Get out of the way!” – albeit in te reo.
That Peters has just had himself appointed Minister of Railways is no accident. It is difficult to imagine a more disreputable example of National’s reckless presentism, nor of its sublime indifference to the nation’s future, than the cancellation of the iRex Project.
That Peters and his party, in a last-ditch effort to protect New Zealand’s state-owned rail network from the truckers who would happily wave it good-bye, were willing to interpose themselves between the privatisers of National and Act is vintage NZ First. It reflects Peters’ small-c conservative conviction that those who inhabit the present are not only morally obligated to meet the needs of those who are, but also to protect the achievements of those who were. How else to deliver a world worth living in to those who will be?
But, if NZ First retains a firm grasp of the past’s importance, it is every bit as guilty as its coalition partners of failing to appreciate the scale and urgency of Climate Change. Likewise, the radical transformation of public policy that is needed to address the crisis effectively. Not to deal seriously with the ever-more-apparent consequences of global warming requires a political mindset unwaveringly resistant to looking either forward or back. A mindset which, at least historically, has been associated with political parties in thrall to ideologies, private interests, or both.
The Coalition’s failure to respond adequately to the Climate Crisis pales, however, when set alongside its treatment of tangata whenua. In no other aspect of government policy has its resistance to understanding the power and importance of the past been more evident.
As a radical, right-wing libertarian, David Seymour’s impatience with the restraints placed upon the sovereign individual by considerations of lineage and tradition is understandable – if not forgivable. But, what is NZ First’s excuse? Both Peters and Jones need no lessons in the central role of te Tiriti in shaping post-European contact New Zealand. Certainly, they would have been in no doubt as to the hurt and fury that would be sparked, not only by Seymour’s Treaty Principles Bill, but also by their own equally aggressive policy of removing all references to the principles of the Treaty from New Zealand legislation. The commitments insisted upon by the leaders of Act and NZ First, post-election, amounted to playing with fire – and they knew it.
And National? The party of Rob Muldoon, Jim Bolger, Dough Graham, John Key and Chris Finlayson. Why didn’t it just say “No.”? Was there really no one in its ranks capable of appealing over the heads of the Act and NZ First negotiators to that huge part of the New Zealand electorate that is proud of its relationship with Māori. The part that believes in the Treaty – or, at least, in the Treaty they learned about in school.
Was there truly no one with the courage and understanding to call Seymour’s and Peters’ bluff? To dare them to force the country to a new election on this issue, and this issue alone? Someone who understood what the American novelist, William Faulkner, meant when he said: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past”. Someone prepared to turn his back on the nay-sayers and march towards the future facing, and drawing strength from, all those who had gone before him.
Someone resembling a prime minister.
This essay was originally posted on the Interest.co.nz website of Monday 16 December 2024.
12 comments:
Methinks this country needs someone resembling a statesman. The resemblance should have to be in acts, in determination and in political courage. For a while, the Labour-led government of Jacinda Ardern had the appearance of just what was needed. But it turned out to be mostly mirage - the Wizard of NZ: a 'virtual image' only .
I don't see anyone in this country's bleak and desiccated political landscape with the intelligence and energy to cope with its ... challenges. Cometh the hour, cometh ... no one.
Cheers,
Ion A. Dowman
Apparently there were 'too many government servants.' I've never been able to get anyone to tell me how they know there were too many government servants, how big the surplus was, or how many they considered too many. It's just an article of faith. And now all those businesses in Wellington whose owners voted for this present government are finding out what the Americanism FAFO means.
The way I see it the tax adjustments were part of a plan to offset the imminent austerity National new had to come. Yes the money in the kitty was gone, interest rates were high because the reserve bank needed to squeeze money supply. Some were going to lose their jobs but many might lose their homes or businesses and the damage from that would hurt productivity even more. Not putting their own money back into working kiwi's pockets would have put more pressure on what was turning into a dire situation. Our shrinking GDP would take another hit if anymore productive NZrs than necessary went bust. Yes the $ 3 billion a year for the next 5 years is a lot of money going towards tax relief, but three billion is 0.71% of GDP of $420 billion so lets not get carried away with how much less infrastructure we are going to be able to build. You are inline with labours thinking Chris. The only way for the government to get more is to tax more. Never think to give any incentive to work harder and produce more, or tax relief when needed. You can argue that the country couldn't afford to do it, or argue they couldn't afford not to do it depending on your belief. I was amused when our unbiased media was interviewing people who would happily give up their tax cut to fund a hospital. A question being asked that has an answer very much depending on who you ask, and was it a fair representation of our working community.
As for the treaty bill, I am not too concerned about worsening relations with Maori if that means we question policy that is not democratic. Seymour has put his political reputation on the line because he believes in it. Our history is not just about how badly Maori may have been treated but is inextricably linked to our colonial past which like it or not has been the catalyst to the developed nation we are today. Maori , although arguably less so, have benefited along with everyone else. The Maori I have known since school for the most part have houses cars mobile phones smart tv's and mortgages like everyone else. It's not all bad and shameful. The question shouldn't be, why does Seymour want the bill, but why the Maori elite don't want it. Labour believe they have taken the moral high ground here but is their decision the right one. I don't believe so. If it takes division and discussion to get the right answer so be it.
"But it turned out to be mostly mirage....."
Nothing to do with a once in a one hundred year global pandemic with measures taken to save lives and costly but necessary measures to save business and then an onslaught of vitriol spurred on by conspiracy theorists, anti vaxers, far right lunatics and opposition parties all gunning for Jacinda Ardern, some who threatened her family and wanted to kill, hang or dismember.......I certainly see a lot of political bad actors gaming the weak political system that preys on the most gullible of voters.....we need another Jacinda Ardern, a better political system than MMP and an educated electorate.....not another 'sorted' carpetbagger pied piper to lead the country over the next available cliff.
Yet more claims of austerity, yet no proof. We are still spending more than we earn, we still have high numbers of public servants. There has been plenty of talk about it, but nothing has been followed through with that could be called an austerity program.
2023. Tourism generated a direct contribution to GDP of $13.3 billion, or 3.7% of GDP, an increase of 30.9% ($3.1 billion)
the number of people attributed to being directly employed in tourism was 189,432 an increase of 48.0% (61,452 people)
13,300,000,000/ 189,432 = 70209.89.
In 2011 Sir Paul Callaghan warned us that more tourism made us poorer. It earned $80,000/worker while $120,000 was needed to maintain GDP/Capita. "We have a prime minister who thinks that [says that]"
And in a series of letters, economists Michael Reddell and Hautahi Kingi debate the benefits and costs to New Zealand of immigration.
Hautahi Kingi
The case against migration cannot be based on an argument against its enormously positive effect on world income and well-being, but rather a concern for potential domestic consequences.
We should certainly take these concerns seriously. For example, migrants may reduce some workers’ wages. But the effects are relatively minimal, especially compared to those faced by locals during the historical “en masse” migration that you favor.
Hautahi Kingi won the argument, as can be seen in the finale Smart Talk at the Auckland Musem
https://www.rnz.co.nz/programmes/slice-of-heaven/story/201853337/slice-of-heaven
On the 19th Dec I argued with Michael Laws about the Fast Track Bill, in relation to "growing the economy". I suggested that that is mainly property development. I said that he hadn't addressed the fact that real wages are falling in tourism and hospitality. He didn't accept that they were saying that his daughter had worked in Queenstown in hospitality and earned $28.25/hour. Unfortunately that session isn't on line.
https://youtu.be/6hreIe1YvuA
This is unconvincing as argument.
For your pleasure, you could read Lampedusa’s ‘The Leopard’. And if v fortunate, then watch the 1963 movie with Burt Lancaster ( oh, sorry, The Barron- he’s American).
You can be Tancredi, you can be Fabrizio Prince of Salina, you can be the King of the Two Sicilies in Naples. Or some poor walk on character like the body in the garden.
But you can’t be all them. Past present and future are different for each one.
Should you not be asking, how the hell did this country end up down a rabbit hole, so deep, for a virus that I am confident, was not in anyway as dire as its proponents claimed it was?
Should you not be asking how did we end up with a political party, like Labour, that was so deeply engrained with incompetence? And so dishonest with its hidden constitutional manifesto, one I suspect that was being made up by the likes of Willie Jackson and Nania Mahuta, as they went.
The bullshit communal experience of kindness and team of 5 million was as creepy and dystopian as any fiction ever written. Gaslighting became modus operandi number one. Honestly, the Ardern government destroyed my faith in anything to do with governments. In the middle of this government clusterf...Ardern was pushing through some extremely vague wishy washy hate speech laws, simultaneously ignoring actual crimes. I can accurately say, to shut down any opposition to their edicts. You only have to look to the UK to see how badly that is going.
We were painted a strictly unquestionable picture so dire that we were closed off from the world, told to stand 2 metres apart, banned from the sale of takeaway coffee, dictated to who we could associate with who. To forbid hair dos, end childrens education on a whim, ban non believers to the margins of society for having the audacity to disagree, and close it's biggest city from its country was a disease of the mind most lemming governments took, as they all leapt off the cliff of reality, (closing Auckland off a very Labour NZ speciality). Yet regardless, what does this apocalyptic recipe of doom remind you of right now, that demands insane untested dismantling of industry and farming, forced communality and control that is bound to destroy our society? Climate change anyone?
This government inherited an unholy uncosted mess no government before has ever had to wear. Good on it for giving climate change lip service, its horse shit. And this is coming from a person who has never once voted National. I can't even guess if NZ will ever get back on its feet again after just 3 years of that unbridled Labour. This current government is imperfect, yes, could do a lot better, for sure, but light years ahead of the dishonest idiots that governed us 2020-2023. I'll take a average to vanilla government for all the people any day so long as we are at least headed in the right direction.
When is a deep dive analysis coming for the horror years of the Ardern/Hipkins/Jackson years going to happen? Everyone, most especially their kindred spirits in the legacy media seem to want to assign that to the Ministry of Truth!
I didn't realise you wrote a review of Michael Belgrave's book Chris
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/the-listener/books/aotearoa-or-not-historians-lofty-view-falls-flat/EWAWNHO75ZC6PJNXRBUG7AL6ZE/
Unfortunately I only subscribe to the Herald and not the Listener.
On his Brian Bruce interview he shows his colours as he equates the homogeneity of the 1950's with the Nazis, whereas I think you have to look at it through an evolutionary lens as a cohesive society. The earilest migrants Allie and Roseannes parents in a Slice of Heaven (RNZ) were welcomed but then they blamed Winston Peters once people realised this was a new policy of "people replacement".
Belgrave called George Grey a liar but Paul Spoonley wrote that:
As with debates about biculturalism, the media play a critical role in determining the nature of public discussion and private/public understanding. Along with certain institutions, especially the education system, the media provide one of the most important, and possibly the most important, point of contact. The media, in all its diverse forms – print, radio, television, electronic – is a key institution in the creation and
distribution of images and messages about our community(ies). Those significant others in our community, in the absence of in-depth personal contact or experience, will be described and explained to us via the media. It helps confirm who we are as individuals and members of various communities. As the demographic make-up of New Zealand has
changed since the late 1980s, the media have played a critical role in exploring what this means for all of us.
The media tends to be made up of Don Quixotes born with silver spoons in their mouths and so they don't feel the burn that comes with the competition that arrives on shore from off shore. Therefore they are forced to advocate for one position over another. After all you wouldn't want to give solace to literal "Nazis" would you?
I demand you post that Listener review on Bowalley Road Chris!?
He talks about rights and laws as social contracts, but doesn't like populism.
As an example of Becoming Aotearoa he cites Christchurch where descendants of a tiny minority (<2% of the population in the 1971 Census) laud it over the ordinary racist. B**** if I can see why I can we couldn't have a Canterbury Public Library with a crane for raising wool bales and a concrete Habgoods truck outside. Dalziel said Turanga returned the soul to the city.
Thanks to The Press for getting her elected.
A good review Chris:
Are you equating oral history with weeds?
But, perhaps, it is not the resilience of the tangata whenua that is driving Belgrave, but the perfidy of the Pākehā.
As someone who helped draft the History Curriculum he needs to explain why:
The Understand element identified three ‘big ideas’:
1. Māori history is the foundational and continuous history of Aotearoa New Zealand
https://youtu.be/93y6g6wOaWk
At The Shalom Society Free speech Debate a woman questioned Paul Spoonley was challenged on his focus on white violence versus Muslim. She said he got really angry as though he was going to hit her.
I think these people are above all, unquestionable; power is about what can and cannot be asked in the public sphere. Belgrave may have guarded his nest and never been challenged.
We are back in the 19th Century Chris
https://youtu.be/Iw78bJYolOs
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