The New Zealand Herald

Why Collins’ hopes of leading the country should be crushed

National’s leader is temperamen­tally ill-suited to the job she seeks

- Shane Te Pou (Nga¯i Tu¯hoe) is a company director at Mega Ltd, a commentato­r and blogger and a former Labour Party activist.

‘You’re lucky I’m a Christian,” Judith Collins said to me, like a bolt from the blue, in a radio studio the other day. I was incredulou­s. “Why’s that, Judith?”

“That way, I can forgive you,” she replied.

“Forgive me for what? I’m not seeking your forgivenes­s.”

Instead of elaboratin­g, she turned to the other panellists to tell them what kind of person I was. Much awkward shuffling ensued.

Usually, I would observe the unspoken kaupapa that what happens off-air stays off-air. But the truth is, this kind of unpleasant interactio­n is a rarity — in fact, I’d go as far as to say it was a first for me. Despite what you see and hear in the media, those of us who participat­e in the New Zealand political discourse are almost always respectful, friendly even, to one another when nobody’s watching. We might disagree fiercely on issues but rarely does that translate to personal hostility.

New Zealand’s too small and, frankly, life’s too short to turn every political disagreeme­nt into utu.

So why am I sharing details of my exchange with Collins? It’s simple. She wants to be Prime Minister, and what her conduct reveals about her temperamen­t and mindset should be taken into account when we consider whether she’s up to the task.

Collins’ comments reveal almost translucen­tly thin skin. I am a former union official, lifelong Labour activist and unapologet­ic Ma¯ori progressiv­e, so I’m baffled any conservati­ve party leader might consider criticisms I make of their leadership in any way surprising, let alone demanding of forgivenes­s. Can you imagine Jacinda Ardern saying anything of the sort to, say, Matthew Hooton? Not in a million years.

Former US Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes famously said of Franklin Delano Roosevelt that the Depression-era President possessed a “second-class intellect but a first-class temperamen­t”. Snobbishne­ss aside, it’s an astute insight into what makes a successful leader: Personal and political courage; measured confidence in oneself; the capacity to retain perspectiv­e, to curtail impulses of ego, and see the forest for the trees.

The combinatio­n of intellectu­al grunt and stable temperamen­t is optimal, of course — Barack Obama springs to mind — but, if you had to

If her response to the defeat is to petulantly offer forgivenes­s to critics, taking personal umbrage instead of dealing with the substance of the criticisms themselves, the party’s prospects for any kind of comeback with her at the helm are dim.

choose one, you’d opt for the latter every time. Kevin Rudd, for instance, is an undeniable brainbox but failed miserably in both stints as Australian Prime Minister because of his out-ofcontrol ego and propensity for rage and resentment­s. Likewise, David

Lange’s tenure as Prime Minister was cut short by personal insecuriti­es, despite possessing the sharpest mind of any Kiwi politician in my lifetime.

Collins may be bright enough but she is temperamen­tally ill-suited to the job she seeks. Snapping at me the other day was just the latest example, and hardly the most egregious.

Under Collins’ leadership, the National Party got shellacked this year, no bones about it. But if her response to the defeat is to petulantly offer forgivenes­s to critics, taking personal umbrage instead of dealing with the substance of the criticisms themselves, the party’s prospects for any kind of comeback with her at the helm are dim indeed. Plenty of her colleagues have said as much to me.

National’s predicamen­t wasn’t helped by its woeful recruitmen­t this year. The newly diminished caucus isn’t just ethnically monochroma­tic; it lacks diversity of any kind, whether in terms of profession­al background or lived experience­s. It’s like the Koru

Club lounge, only whiter. Of its current MPs, only Chris Bishop could hold his own in a smoko room and only Shane Reti brings any mana to engagement with Ma¯ori.

To paraphrase American late-night television host Stephen Colbert, the rest are about as compelling to most Kiwi voters as manilla folders stapled to a beige wall.

National strategist­s are wrong to believe they can trust Collins to hold their floor of support at 29 per cent while they slowly coalesce around who best to replace her. I can see the party dipping into the teens under her stewardshi­p, at which point any future leader won’t have much in the way of furniture to save.

Since this is my last column before Christmas, however, I’d like to end on a positive note. While political leaders and Ashley Bloomfield have deservedly received the lion’s share of praise over the Government’s Covid response, far less has been said about the role of the Ministry of Social

Developmen­t in marshallin­g resources to deliver the unpreceden­ted wage subsidy scheme that helped mitigate the social and economic fallout. It’s because of such efficiency and effectiven­ess that New Zealanders retain such high levels of faith in government, the best antidote to the cynicism and mistrust that pervades politics in so many other countries.

It was a titanic effort — and we owe both Minister Carmel Sepuloni and her dedicated MSD officials a word of appreciati­on. They have thoroughly earned a few days off over the holidays.

Please accept best wishes for the festive season from my wha¯nau to yours, and let’s look forward to a comparativ­ely boring 2021.

Meri Kirihimete.

 ?? Photo / mark Mitchell ?? Under Judith Collins, National got shellacked this year.
Photo / mark Mitchell Under Judith Collins, National got shellacked this year.

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