The New Zealand Herald

Top office too great a prize for 10% partner

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hope because it gets attention as opposed to it being a legitimate considerat­ion. This can not be taken seriously. Why? Because this is MMP and the tail doesn’t wag the dog.

If Peters ends up being Prime Minister it will be because someone caved, someone was so desperate for power (apart from Peters) that they acquiesced in a way most New Zealanders could not, should not and would not stomach.

You don’t get 10 per cent of the vote and get the top job.

The fact he asked to be Prime Minister when he was dealing with Helen Clark should not warrant suggesting it could ever actually come to pass.

The request is all you really need to know about Winston and his motives. For the bloke who laughs off baubles of office, the Prime Minister’s job as a result of being a minor partner in any potential coalition is not just a bauble but a gangster-size prize, demanded only by those associated with standover tactics.

Other tricks of the Peters election trade? His bus isn’t new, although it was a good idea when he first rolled it out and remains vaguely relevant.

His great advantage of course is he is a brilliant campaigner, the best of the lot by quite some margin this election unless there is talent in the rest of them I have yet to see.

Bill English can be relieved he won’t go head to head with Peters in the debates because he’d get killed.

Peters is good with the one-liners. He is excellent with the faux bluster. He is exceptiona­l at not answering a question while at the same time lambasting the person who asked it.

He barely blushes when he goes back on his word, while at the same time explaining you completely misreprese­nted him.

The only real change to the Peters approach this time round is he seems to have swapped the race card for the provincial one, and in that I think he’s made a rare campaign mistake.

He will tell us provincial New Zealand is broken, that they’re missing out and all the latte sippers have forgotten them.

The reality of course is — and look at any forecaster­s’ sentiment or the growth surveys — the regions are booming.

Provincial New Zealand, with the exception of a couple of areas, hasn’t seen growth and prosperity like it for decades.

You cannot roll into town in your bus and tell the locals that their life is hopeless when it isn’t.

I admire Peters for still being relevant after all these years, but, if you’re new to all this, look up the history books for the last time Peters was in government. None of us who were there wants a sequel. Listen to the Mike Hosking Breakfast on Newstalk ZB from 6am weekdays

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