Kapiti Observer

Own goals and sins of omission

- GORDON CAMPBELL TALKING POLITICS

To mix up the sporting metaphors, when the government was on the ropes last week, the Labour opposition still somehow managed to score an own-goal.

Just as the Todd Barclay taping scandal was threatenin­g to do serious damage to the Prime Minister’s preferred image as Honest Bill, the no-frills straight shooter… in rode Labour, and deflected the media’s attention.

For months, Labour leader Andrew Little has invested a lot of his political capital in allegation­s that low quality, poorly paid students and migrants have been depressing wages, competing for housing and (even) contributi­ng to road congestion in Auckland.

Subsequent­ly, the news has surfaced that Labour itself imported over 80 foreign ‘‘interns’’ to work on its election campaign, and housed many of them in allegedly sub-standard conditions.

Barclay would have been grateful for the respite.

In fact, Barclay had many reasons to be grateful, despite the fallout from his secret taping of his electorate staff. It has hardly been a case of him cleaning out his desk and being turfed onto the pavement.

Reportedly, the CluthaSout­hland MPwill remain on the public payroll for three months until the election, and for three more months afterwards.

Since the pay rate for backbench MPs is $160,000 a year, that amounts to a circa $80,000 payout for being engaged in potentiall­y criminal behaviour.

In the meantime, the government will be happy to use Barclay’s tainted vote in Parliament to help pass its legislativ­e agenda.

English hardly covered himself in glory, either. His claim that he had made a statement last year to the police (kept under wraps) and to the electorate

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