(First published in The Dominion Post, October 3.)
I WONDER, was this the most demoralising election result
ever for the New Zealand left?
There was an excited buzz in the left-wing blogosphere and in
social media in the weeks leading up to the election. There seemed to be a
sense that victory was in their grasp, even when the polls suggested otherwise.
But they were cruelly deceived.
Their optimism is easily explained. In the early stages of
the campaign, they saw the fallout from Nicky Hager’s book Dirty Politics dominating the news bulletins night after night.
After that firestorm had abated, the media turned its
attention to Kim Dotcom’s Moment of Truth, with its dazzling line-up of
high-profile journalists and leakers from overseas, all eager to tell us how
morally bankrupt our government was.
Those on the left observed the adulation heaped on Hager,
who was lionised at speaking engagements. They thrilled at the big turnouts attracted
by Dotcom and his incongruous handmaiden, Laila Harré. And they deduced from
all this that an unstoppable momentum was building, the inevitable result of
which would be the unceremonious dispatch of the Key government.
They were wrong. It was a massive indulgence in wishful
thinking, and it must have made the left’s defeat even more crushing
psychologically.
How could they have been so misled? That’s easy to explain
too.
Consider the enthusiastic capacity crowd at Dotcom’s Moment
of Truth event and the full halls he addressed on his barnstorming campaign
through the country. The left interpreted this as evidence of an irresistible
groundswell of discontent, when it was nothing of the sort.
Someone as novel and entertaining as Dotcom was bound to
attract crowds, especially in provincial centres where not much happens. In any
case, there are always enough true believers to fill halls and give the
impression something big is afoot.
Alas, it was all an illusion. The great mass of New
Zealanders, the Joe Average types who determine election results, were
unmoved. They watched the overheated
news coverage on television, read the headlines and marvelled at the unpleasantness
of it all. Then, on September 20, they went into the ballot booths and voted
National.
Now the left is in disarray, as is obvious from the painful
recriminations within the Labour Party. David Cunliffe inevitably became the
scapegoat for Labour’s humiliation even though he ran a tolerably good
campaign.
Ironically, the controversy over Dirty Politics and allegations of illegal state surveillance, all
of which should have been helpful to Labour, deprived Cunliffe of the opportunity
to articulate the party’s policies on issues closer to the concerns of ordinary
people.
The question now is whether Labour can recover from its
self-evisceration in time to mount a credible challenge in 2017. When a veteran
loyalist like Sir Bob Harvey is questioning whether the party should do away
with its traditional red and even consider changing its name, there’s clearly a
deep identity crisis to be resolved.
Labour still hasn’t determined whether it’s a party of the
blue-collar working class (think South Auckland) or of the university-educated,
inner city-dwelling liberal left (think Mt Victoria).
The Greens are licking their wounds too. They worked hard to
make themselves more palatable to the wider electorate. They mounted an
effective campaign and seemed supremely confident that this would be their
moment, but the voters had other ideas. The Greens’ message didn’t seem to
resonate beyond their core supporters.
They too must now withdraw to figure out how it all went so
wrong. Small wonder that we’ve heard barely a peep from them since election
night.
Internet-Mana is deservedly history. Never has a new party
made so much noise for so little reward.
Will Harré and John Minto get the message and ride off into
the sunset? Somehow I doubt it. Zealots don’t give up easily; they are
sustained by an overwhelming sense of righteousness and rationalise defeat by
convincing themselves that their fellow citizens are either suckers or knaves.
The net effect of the election result is that the New
Zealand left must contemplate the unpalatable possibility that it is now irrelevant.
The noisy activists and ideologues who used up much of the oxygen during the
election campaign have been exposed as hopelessly out of touch with the reality
of most New Zealanders’ lives.
They will of course continue shouting in their own echo
chamber. That’s what they do. But after the drubbing of September 20, it will
be a long time before they convince anyone that they have a message worth
listening to.
Internationally Green parties seem to have a natural barrier of about 10% with a wide range of 5-17% over the last 40 years.
ReplyDeleteThat shouldn't be too much of a surprise for parties with a supposed single issue of the environment. Tarting this up with other issues can work for a while but the public has a pretty firm idea that the Greens should really represent their core issue and let the bigger parties sort out the social and economic issues.
The NZ Greens ran a competent campaign based on.. what? The dalliance with KDC, lack of great angst when Harre shifted camp, no distancing from Hager, no change in the carbon tax proposed for dairying when it slipped below the profitability levels advised by its economist companies.. all these seemed at odds with the odour of sanctity the Greens exude.
IMO the Greens slipped into the muck of politics with little sign of resistance, in fact I think the implicit endorsement of green activist Hager killed their electoral expectations. Their party vote successes also anchored them firmly in the rich prick demographic in the leafy and elite burbs rather than the workers in Sth Auckland despite their social policies. In short and like Labour they aimed at an electorate of times past.
JC