The New Zealand Herald

Labour has much to gain from wooing Winston

- Bryan Gould comment

Winston Peters is no stranger to coalition negotiatio­ns and the situation he finds himself in has not arisen by accident. It is the planned outcome of a deliberate strategy to position his NZ First party as likely to hold the balance of power if neither of the two biggest parties commands a majority of seats.

So successful has this strategy been that he has become accustomed to being courted by suitors, and to extracting from the main rivals for his hand the best deal he can get — both for himself and his voters. He is under no illusion that his charm or good looks are the lure, it is rather the dowry — in this case, nine MPs — that he can bring to the agreed deal.

I suggest that this time, however, it may not be only the numbers that matter. For Jacinda Ardern, intent on building on her success in denying a majority to National by forming instead a Labour-led government, Winston may have more to offer than simply making up the necessary majority.

It is not just that a relatively inexperien­ced Prime Minister, heading a party that has been out of government for nine years, might welcome someone of Winston’s experience and political savvy. Winston could in addition bring to a new government — one committed to a change of direction and an uplift in the energy needed to deal with our many problems — some policy perspectiv­es that could be very helpful, and some potential ministers of real ability.

First, he already takes a position very close to Labour’s on those issues that are the legacy of mishandlin­g or neglect after nine years of National rule. His reinforcem­ent of Labour’s proposed remedies would certainly help to bring solutions closer. And he would help to identify others that need attention, such as the neglect of our manufactur­ing base.

There are two further issues (and no doubt more), not at present high on Labour’s agenda, where his political experience and independen­t view could strengthen a new government.

The first is the difficult question of how to take the maximum advantage from our increasing­ly close economic relationsh­ip with China without in effect being absorbed into the greater Chinese economy. That can be achieved only if we have a clear understand­ing of what is actually happening and recognise the

He is under no illusion that his charm or good looks are the lure, it is rather the dowry.

full implicatio­ns of each new step.

The National Government has shown little concern for or understand­ing of this issue. Their links with Chinese interests, both as individual­s and as a political party, have induced them to applaud the upsides while closing their eyes to the actual and potential downsides.

Winston will not be so starry-eyed, he knows the maintenanc­e of some semblance of sovereignt­y and independen­ce is not an ignoble goal. The greater realism he could bring to a new government on this issue would be of considerab­le value.

Even more positively, Winston seems to have a more up-to-date understand­ing than most of recent developmen­ts in monetary policy and theory. The widespread use, since the global financial crisis, of “quantitati­ve easing” to bail out banks has removed some of the mistaken phobias concerning an obvious (and Keynes-endorsed) tool for funding productive investment and stimulatin­g economic activity.

Why, forward-looking observers ask, should government-created new money be reserved for bailing out the banks? Why not use it for other purposes, such as new infrastruc­ture projects, that serve public and not just private banking interests?

Paradoxica­lly, perhaps, Winston may be more likely than today’s Labour Party to recall the successful precedent set by Michael Joseph Savage’s Government in the 1930s, when thousands of state houses were built to house the homeless using money created by that Government for that purpose.

Thinking of this kind could revolution­ise the prospects of a new government and usher in a new era of a stronger and more integrated society and a more securely based economy.

If the instincts of a new Labour government were encouraged and their implementa­tion facilitate­d by an experience­d campaigner like Winston Peters, the future prospects of both Labour and NZ First would be greatly enhanced — and the prospects for the country.

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