Star[dust] Performer: The image of Jacinda quite literally serving the people (with bacon butties!) will do nothing to diminish her lustre in the eyes of most New Zealanders.
“SMOKE GETS IN YOUR EYES”, wrote Jerome Kern’s lyricist,
Otto Harbach, in 1933. The tears well-up even faster, however, when your eyes
are full of stardust. This latter affliction appears to have struck just about
every journalist assigned to cover the Waitangi Day celebrations of 2018. Simon
Wilson’s eyesight, in particular, seemed to be quite seriously impaired. How
else to explain his confusing the arrival of Prime Minister Ardern with the
Second Coming of Christ?
Which is not to say that the PM didn’t put on a very good
show. The image of Jacinda quite literally serving the people (with bacon
butties!) will do nothing to diminish her lustre in the eyes of most New
Zealanders. When it comes to contriving the perfect photo-op, New Zealand’s
youthful PM is a true professional. Her speechifying skills are also up there
with the best. Whoever wrote her address from the porch of the whare runanga
certainly knew what they were about.
All-in-all, as she settles back into the Beehive routine,
the Prime Minister has every reason to adjudge her 5-6 days in the Far North an
unqualified success.
The early images of any prime-ministerial term make a huge
difference to the way he or she is perceived in the longer run. Think of John
Key swigging beer from the bottle as Prince William barbecues their steaks. Or,
going back even further in time, recall the image of “Big Norm” leading a
little Maori boy across the Treaty Ground in 1973. Priceless shots. And now,
the image of Jacinda, radiant among the bacon and sausages, must be added to
this memorable slide show. Smoke gets in your eyes, indeed!
But, no matter how bulging Jacinda’s good-will account may
have grown after Waitangi, the day-to-day exercise of raw political power will
soon empty it out. On a multitude of fronts: international trade, health,
housing, and poverty-reduction; her government’s mediocre performance (read
John Minto’s excellent summary, here) presents a stark contrast to its soaring and benevolent rhetoric.
Even the Labour-NZF-Green government’s grand gestures appear
puny when placed alongside the grand gestures of its progressive predecessors.
Compare Jacinda’s Waitangi Day barbecue with the gesture I describe in No Left Turn:
“Shortly after his election as Labour Party leader in 1961,
Arnold Nordmeyer was asked by the New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation to
recall for its listeners ‘My Most Memorable Christmas’. He spoke movingly of
the first Labour Government’s decision, in December 1935, to advance the
equivalent of an extra week’s relief payment to all the unemployed as a
‘Christmas Bonus’. That single act of state generosity, he said, sent ripples
of hope and goodwill through thousands of destitute families and hundreds of
cash-strapped communities. By Christmas its effects were evident across the
whole of New Zealand.”
The newly-elected Labour Prime Minister, Norman Kirk, did
something very similar in December 1972.
Not such an arresting image as Jacinda serving-up bacon
butties to the Waitangi crowd, but I’ll wager Savage’s and Kirk’s gestures
filled more bellies!
Perhaps, I’m being too harsh on the Prime Minister. Perhaps,
in 2018, the public’s willingness to countenance giving away a whole
week’s-worth of social assistance to every beneficiary in the country just
isn’t there anymore. Perhaps, after 30 years of neoliberal brutality, we are no
longer the caring and generous people we used to be.
Bluntly, my problem with Jacinda’s stardust is that, while
it’s in the air, it’s difficult to focus on anything else. Amidst all the
glitter it’s easy to lose sight of the fact that, apart from a handful of
long-overdue inquiries, and a return to the status quo ante in employment law
(read all about it on Richard Harman’s Politik website, here) very little of any real substance has been done.
Unless, of course, you consider signing-up to the
“Comprehensive and Progressive” TPP a singularly worthwhile achievement.
Personally, after reading Professor Jane Kelsey’s analysis of the CPTPP, I
can’t help feeling that the whole tawdry exercise should be understood in the
spirit of The Who’s incomparable line: “Meet the new boss, same as the old
boss.”
And, please, all you Labour apologists out there, don’t tell
me that all this inaction is about the fiscal cupboard being bare.
How much would it have cost the Minister for Social Welfare,
Carmel Sepuloni, to stand up in front of an appropriate audience (the PSA
springs to mind) and deliver a speech in which she set forth the new
government’s expectations of all those employed by the Ministry of Social
Development? What, precisely, would have been the price of her instructing the
people at Work and Income to treat their clients with a modicum of compassion
and respect? Surely, a public reaffirmation of every citizen’s right to public
assistance in times of hardship and affliction would not have bankrupted the
Treasury?
Likewise, with the Minister of Labour, Ian Lees Galloway.
Could he not loudly and publicly have proclaimed the government’s rock-solid
commitment to protecting and expanding the right of every citizen to fair
treatment in the workplace? Could he not have urged every New Zealander in a
position to do so to join a trade union? And could not Jacinda, in the course
of her negotiations with NZ First, have told Winston Peters that while she was
prepared to compromise on many issues, on the question of workers’ rights –
specifically the 90-day fire-at-will legislation – Labour was not for turning?
In her speech from the porch of the whare runanga, Jacinda
urged Maori to hold the Labour-NZF-Green government to account if it failed to
deliver on its promises of uplift and renewal. They were fine words. But, then,
Jacinda has a thing for words. She is always promising to engage in
“discussions” and “conversations” about the problems confronting so many New
Zealanders. Ideally, however, political discussion and conversation is what
happens after political action has
been taken.
The “other half” of New Zealand is crying out to this
government for brave deeds – not fine words. The last thing Jacinda needs to be
remembered for is substituting stardust for substantive action.
For blowing smoke into our eyes.
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Thursday, 8 February 2018.
