It’s rarely that I feel moved to write in defence of a
Labour Party leader, but TV3’s attempt to skewer Andrew Little over an unpaid
bill is pure mischief-making.
Two nights in a row, Patrick Gower has tried
to beat this up into a major embarrassment for Little. Last night he went so
far as to say it signified the end of the honeymoon for the Labour leader. The rest of the media don’t seem too excited over it, but when TV3's political editor says it's the end of the honeymoon - well, it is, at least as far as TV3's concerned.
Gower does some very good work, and I’m mostly a fan. But when
he gets bored, he tries to inflate minor issues into crises. Conflict and drama
are meat and drink to him, and when there isn’t any he’ll manufacture it. On
this occasion his friend and stablemate Duncan Garner, on RadioLive, seems to have been an
enthusiastic accomplice.
If the affair of the unpaid bill is embarrassing to anyone,
it’s Little’s chief of staff Matt McCarten. Everything Gower has reported
suggests that’s where the blame lies for not paying freelance journalist David
Cohen the $950 owed to him for advice given during Little’s bid for the party
leadership last October.
That’s as it should be. Party leaders can’t be expected to
deal with the minutiae of housekeeping.
Little could probably have got himself off the hook by
saying the problem lay in McCarten’s office, but of course he wouldn’t because
it would look like he was dumping on his right-hand man. And what fun Gower would
have had with that.
The most interesting aspect of the non-story to me is the
revelation that Cohen was engaged to work for the Labour Party.
I know that freelance journalism is a precarious way to make
a living, and that there’s a powerful temptation to take work wherever you can
get it. But conflict of issues arise when people who comment on matters of
public interest (Cohen is National
Business Review’s media columnist) are simultaneously involved in political
work behind the scenes.
I suspect this goes on much more than we know. Cohen has
come out in the open because he was understandably pissed off at not being
paid. Otherwise his relationship with Labour would probably have remained secret. How
many other notionally independent commentators, I wonder, are potentially compromised
by connections we don’t know about?
2 comments:
I was surprised as you were to hear that Cohen did work for Little. Lets remember too that it was work for Andrew not the Labour Party.
I find political commentary on TV in New Zealand is just awful-the Aussies do it far better. As for paddy Gower-he would be much better on radio......
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