(First published in the Nelson Mail and Manawatu Standard, December 2.)
I hesitated for a couple of days before casting my vote in
the flag referendum last week. I thought it might be too difficult.
I can be a shocking ditherer. Just deciding what to have for
breakfast can leave me paralysed with indecision. But as it turned out, when
the flag choices were starkly set out in front of me, I made up my mind almost
instantly.
I had the advantage of having seen all five flags flying
alongside one another only days before. They were flapping in a stiff
north-westerly, which is how flags are most often seen in our wind-buffeted
country. But I also saw how they looked during lulls in the gale, so was able to assess their merits both under stress and in repose.
I opted for the Kyle Lockwood design featuring the silver
fern and the Southern Cross, but with red in the top-left quadrant rather than
the black of the other Lockwood design included in the five alternatives.
Is it wise to reveal how I voted? Probably not, given the
vehemence of the flag debate. I should probably brace myself for hate mail and
death threats.
The intensity of people’s feelings about the referendum has been a surprise. All
sorts of strange emotions have been uncorked.
A debate about the flag is all very well, but this one has
become overheated to the point of inciting paranoia. On a talkback radio
station last week, I heard a caller say he had phoned the Electoral Commission because
he was worried that if he placed the figure 1 in the square underneath his
favoured design, someone might turn it into a four.
Another caller was convinced that the ballot paper had been
designed so as to subtly encourage voters to support John Key’s personal
favourite, which was the first option on the left.
It’s almost comically ironic that the country is tearing
itself apart over what’s supposed to be a symbol of unity. But since I’ve declared
my first preference, I might as well go further and list the order in which I
ranked the designs.
My No 2 choice was the black and white silver fern and No 3
was the second Lockwood design. I ranked the koru fourth and the so-called red
peak last. If there was a way of showing that I felt the red peak should have
been an extremely distant last, I would have so indicated.
Explaining why I voted the way I did is difficult because
these things are subjective, but I found the two Lockwood designs aesthetically
pleasing and unmistakeably emblematic of New Zealand, which is surely what a
flag is supposed to be. This is not to say there may not be better
alternatives.
The monochromatic fern I quite liked because it’s simple,
clean and emphatic. The koru design, too, is graphically strong and would be
instantly recognisable wherever it was flown.
People have attacked some of these designs as resembling
corporate logos, but I have yet to see anyone explain what mysterious quality
distinguishes a flag from a logo. Neither can I see how the red peak magically
avoids the disparaging logo comparison.
A flag, it seems to me, is simply a national logo as opposed
to a corporate one. Its essential qualities, surely, are that it should be
instantly recognisable and should engender feelings of identification, empathy and
pride.
The Lockwood design strikes me as being capable of doing all
these things, although it may take time (as it did for Canadians to embrace the maple leaf).
On the other hand, the red peak design fails from every
standpoint. But the very fact that it was included in the referendum, at the
last minute and largely as a result of a noisy social media campaign, says a
lot about how the flag debate has been derailed.
The proposal for a new flag is widely regarded as John Key’s
vanity project. It therefore was seen by his opponents as a means of damaging
him politically.
Key may poll highly but he’s nonetheless a polarising figure.
People who dislike him, and there are plenty of them, have used the flag debate
as an opportunity to get at him.
You’d have to say they largely succeeded. The late inclusion
of the red peak design was seen as a defeat for Key because he’s known to favour
a flag featuring the silver fern.
In other words the issue has been politicised in a way that
might not have happened had the change of flag been promoted by someone less
polarising.
If the binding referendum in March results in a decisive rejection
of the new flag, as seems likely, it could be as much a vote against Key as a
statement of support for the present ensign. We won’t know, because the waters
have become too muddied.
An opportunity for an emphatic new statement of nationhood may
have been lost because the issue has become so politicised. But at least no one will be able to say it
hasn’t been thoroughly debated.
I voted for the same design, the red and blue with the silver fern and Southern Cross - but unwillingly.
ReplyDeleteI thought, why pander to John Key? And wouldn't it be better to wait till the last of the old soldiers who fought under our flag have departed this so truly mortal coil?
So I dropped my vote, in its envelope ready to post as per my husband's reminder, in the rubbish bin.
I think the whole point for the ultra left Nat govt and its MFAT drivers is they want the union jack off off our flag so our primitive fattening milk powder can be sold to the middle east , Russia , China and India . My retaliation to Tim Groser and bill English has been to write much of the cold war wiki ship articles for the RN and RNZN, my flagship piece being HMNZS Royalist to maintain historical truth against the MFAT Maoist destroyers of definition.
ReplyDeleteI didn't see my idea of whats important to NZ on any design.
ReplyDeleteSurely a representative flag would have a dove on it, plus a figure hugging a tree and a third protest figure waving a flag under the motto of "Whatever it is. Ï'm agin it".
Another appropriate flag would have a stream of Waka rowing away from a long black cloud called world reality with our steadfast navigator (Russel Norman?) pointing powerfully towards a lighter cloud called Purgatory.
Anyway, I'm happy with any of the flags with a silver fern on it.
JC