(First published in The Dominion Post and on stuff.co.nz, May 17.)
The kerfuffle over rumours about Clarke Gayford, Jacinda
Ardern’s partner, came as a double surprise to me.
The first surprise was that the rumours existed. The second,
which kind of flows inevitably from the first, was that I hadn’t heard them.
I suppose this is what happens when you’ve been living in
Masterton for a few years (well, 15 actually). You get disconnected.
Mind you, I’d suspected for a while that I was no longer “in
the loop”. A friend used to email me whenever he heard reference to some dark
secret about a public figure or wanted to know the identity of someone
important whose name had been suppressed in a court case, assuming that I’d be
able to fill him in on all the salacious detail.
The email inquiries stopped coming long ago. My friend
obviously deduced, not unreasonably, that I was a fraud – someone who gave the
impression of knowing important and sensitive stuff, but in fact had no more
inside knowledge than the guy who came to unblock his drains.
I suppose this is what happens when you no longer work in a
newspaper newsroom, which functions as a kind of clearing house for rumour and
gossip. Working from home, I can go for days – nay, weeks – without so much as
a phone call.
I’m so isolated that I get excited if someone knocks on the
door to ask if I’ve seen their missing huntaway. So hearing that Gayford was
the subject of malicious scuttlebutt – scuttlebutt apparently so persistent
that the police had to issue a statement saying he wasn’t under investigation –
merely confirmed for me that I was pathetically out of touch with what was
happening out there in the real world.
To this day I have no idea what the Gayford rumours were
about, still less where they originated or who was circulating them.
What’s more, I don’t want to know. So I’ve made no effort to
find out what lies people were spreading, even though I probably only need to
ask the next-door neighbours or the woman behind the counter at the corner
dairy. I’m sure they know, because the media kept telling us that the rumours
had been so widely circulated that the police felt compelled to act.
I suppose that as someone who has worked for (gulp) 50 years
in journalism, a game whose practitioners generally know a lot more than they
actually report, I should feel disconcerted by the realisation that I no longer
know things that other people don’t.
But in fact it feels strangely liberating, because perhaps
the least appealing aspect of politics is the febrile, overheated atmosphere it
generates among camp followers, and the toxic bile spread by angry, bitter
bottom-feeders and mischief-makers.
No one should delude themselves that Gayford was targeted
simply because he’s the partner of a Labour prime minister. I recall that within
days of John Key announcing he was resigning, left-leaning friends were
regaling me with juicy versions of the “real” reason for his sudden departure.
Malicious gossip is ideologically non-prescriptive in whom it chooses to
vilify.
We could learn something from the Baha’i Faith, which
strongly disapproves of gossip. “Breathe not the sins of others so long as thou
art thyself a sinner,” wrote Baha’u’llah, the religion’s founder.
He was just rephrasing Christ’s injunction to the mob that was
stoning a prostitute: “Let him who is without sin cast the first stone”. But I
get the impression that followers of the Baha’i Faith adhere to the rule more
conscientiously than most people who call themselves Christians.
David Lange used the famous phrase “demented reef fish” to
describe panicky share-market investors, but it can be applied equally to the
hangers-on who infest the extreme fringes of politics – on both Right and Left
– and who swarm around looking for morsels of malice to feed on.
Social media has given these cowardly malefactors a powerful
amplifier for their venom. It has also had the effect of magnifying the binary
them-and-us nature of politics, because it’s easier to hate when you’re safe in
an ideological echo-chamber surrounded by people who share your rage. It’s also
easier to dehumanise your perceived enemy and to construct your own cyber-age
version of a witch’s wax effigy to stick pins into.
The effect on the body politic is potentially poisonous,
because the time may come when only an exceptionally courageous, foolhardy or
egotistical few will risk running for public office knowing there’s a chance
that they will be subjected to vicious calumnies and anonymous abuse.
Exile to the Auckland Islands would be an appropriate fate
for the perpetrators of this unpleasantness. They might tear each other apart, in
which case well and good. But on the other hand they might be forced to co-operate
in the interests of survival and thus learn something about their common
humanity.
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