Manawatu Standard

A new Government eagerly exercises levers of power

- KARL DU FRESNE

It’s always interestin­g to watch a new Government bedding in, and never more so than when the Labour Party gets its hands on the levers of power after squirming with impatience on the Opposition benches for several terms.

National regards itself as the natural party of Government, which is perhaps understand­able when it’s been in power for 47 of the past 68 years.

National is also, generally speaking, the party of the status quo. It does what it needs to do to win elections and no more.

Labour, on the other hand, is a party of change. Whereas National in Opposition bides its time, confident its chance will come again soon, Labour chafes with frustratio­n at all the things that need fixing. By the time it finally gets a crack at the job, it’s jumping out of its skin.

History shows a clear pattern: long periods of stable but mostly unadventur­ous National Government, punctuated by short, sometimes exhilarati­ng bursts of reform under Labour.

People of a certain age will recall the speed with which Norman Kirk’s new Government changed the political settings in 1972 – recognisin­g communist China, withdrawin­g from the unpopular Vietnam War and adopting a forthright stance on apartheid and French nuclear testing.

Labour under David Lange in 1984 showed similar boldness, tackling the challenge of economic restructur­ing while simultaneo­usly honouring Kirk’s legacy by taking an independen­t line in foreign affairs. But it was utterly chaotic and fatally divided, ideologica­lly.

Under Helen Clark, Labour took a more cautious and discipline­d approach, probably realising that it needed to stay close to the political Centre if it was to defy the hex that had seen previous Labour Government­s tossed out after one or two terms. And it worked: Clark became the most successful Labour leader since Peter Fraser in the 1940s.

Now we find ourselves once again watching a new Labour Government – or at least a Labourled one – grappling with the unfamiliar demands of power. And as in the 1980s, it’s a bit like watching a high-wire act performed without safety harnesses.

One crucial disadvanta­ge for the new Government is that it’s wearing L plates. Jacinda Ardern ran a remarkably assured election campaign but she is new to the demands of power and has a Cabinet that is extremely light on ministeria­l experience.

Labour came to power with a highly ambitious – some would say reckless – 100-Day Plan that it seemed determined to fulfil even as neophyte ministers were still moving into their new offices, appointing key staff and getting to know the relevant officials.

I wonder whether it would have been wiser to take exactly the reverse approach: that is, do nothing for the first 100 days while it caught its breath, took proper stock of things and got over the intoxicati­on of finding itself back in power.

As it is, Labour pitched headlong into an unnecessar­y and avoidable spat with Australia over the Manus Island asylum seekers, and then fast-tracked a crowdpleas­ing but suspicious­ly light-on-detail no-fees bonanza for firstyear tertiary students that has been costed at $380 million for the first year alone.

Education Minister Chris Hipkins impatientl­y brushed aside Treasury concerns that the financial implicatio­ns hadn’t been properly considered. Officials didn’t get to determine political priorities, he haughtily pronounced.

Hmmm. Is this is a case of an over-eager reformist Government putting its heart before its head in its haste to get things done? It wouldn’t be the first time.

On other policies, Labour is having to learn that there’s a world of difference between making promises on the campaign trail and having to deliver results in Government. Supporters of Labour and the Greens will be disappoint­ed by the spectacle of the Government equivocati­ng and even back-pedalling on a range of key issues, from the TPPA to Pike River, but they daren’t complain too vociferous­ly because it would be letting the side down.

Similarly, fans of Winston Peters have been remarkably quiet about the convenient disappeara­nce of NZ First’s pledge to abolish the Ma¯ ori seats. But feelings of betrayal can only be suppressed for so long.

Speaking of Peters, there are bound to be bumps in the road ahead as policy tensions arise between the ‘‘progressiv­e’’ Labour Party and its socially conservati­ve coalition partner, NZ First.

We got a brief glimpse of this ideologica­l divide when NZ First’s Shane Jones recently espoused a ‘‘work for the dole’’ policy that Ardern promptly tried to douse because it conflicted with Labour dogma.

To all those pressures, add a large and formidable National Party Opposition, still seething because it believes it was shafted in post-election coalition negotiatio­ns that were controlled and manipulate­d by Peters.

We may never get to the bottom of what really happened in those talks, because Ardern doesn’t want to make the details public. This makes a mockery of Labour’s supposed commitment to openness and leaves her coalition Government seriously tainted by the shonky circumstan­ces in which it was formed.

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