The Post

Peters makes hay out of lockdown drama

- Karl du Fresne

The coronaviru­s crisis has been very good for Winston Peters. He came back from his Northland lockdown firing on all cylinders. If you wanted confirmati­on that this is an election year, there it was. Perhaps he needed that spell of seclusion to recuperate from the bruising effects of a court case that blew up in his face and a donations scandal that refuses to go away.

Whatever the explanatio­n, the Great Tuatara was quick to reassert himself on the political stage.

The Covid-19 pandemic enabled him to present himself as statesmanl­ike in his role as minister of foreign affairs and made him look good as the saviour of New Zealanders trapped overseas and desperate to come home.

It also allowed him to promote himself as a Man of the People by disclosing that health officials had been rebuffed when they advised the Government to close our borders, which would have left those travellers stranded. It was inconceiva­ble, Peters declared, ‘‘that we [would] ever turn our backs on our own’’. He was thus able to parade as a patriot who stood firm against flint-hearted bureaucrat­s.

Normally such advice to Cabinet is kept confidenti­al, but Peters went public. Did he do so in the hope that his own image, as the minister whose officials had successful­ly argued against the health advice, would be enhanced? Perish the thought. And shame on anyone cynical enough to suspect that Peters spoke out because he was feeling aggrieved that Jacinda Ardern was sucking up all the political oxygen and leaving none for him.

The virus scare also gave Peters an opportunit­y to unleash his inner Muldoonist by railing against globalisat­ion and promoting economic protection­ism – all of which might have sounded appealing to anyone not old enough to remember what New Zealand was like when everything from shoes to cars was shoddily made and overpriced.

He was on equally safe ground advocating a trans-Tasman bubble, calling for greater state control over Air New Zealand and championin­g Taiwan’s bid, over China’s objections, for observer status at the World Health Organisati­on. All three moves played to populist sentiment,

Not only would Peters have been confident that the public would back his support for plucky little Taiwan, since China is seen as the nasty bully standing in the Naughty Corner, but it also had the advantage of differenti­ating his position from that of Ardern, who appeared less keen to buy into the controvers­y.

No-one should be surprised if Peters exploits more such opportunit­ies between now and the September election. Remember, this is a politician with a history of going rogue whenever he perceives the need to distance himself from his coalition partners.

All this couldn’t have happened at a better time for the NZ First leader. He’ll be counting on the Covid-19 pandemic to help the public forget a stream of highly damaging disclosure­s about his party’s dodgy conduct.

Those disclosure­s related to big donations made to the shadowy foundation that bankrolled the party. The donations, some of them made by ultrawealt­hy individual­s in fishing, horse racing, property and forestry, are now being investigat­ed by the Serious Fraud Office – a fact that should be included in every news story about NZ First, lest voters succumb to amnesia.

Being subject to an SFO investigat­ion doesn’t make the donations illegal, but it’s worth recalling that party president Lester Gray felt so uneasy about the opacity of its financial affairs that he resigned.

In any case, it’s one thing to pass a legal test and another to pass the sniff test, which is how voters decide whether something smells ‘‘off’’. The public is entitled to conclude that the NZ First Foundation was a mechanism for disguising the source of donations to the party, and thus making it hard to determine whether favours were bought.

Then there’s the small matter of the court case in which Peters sued former National Party ministers and top public servants over the leaking of his superannua­tion overpaymen­t. Remember that? The case he kept quiet about, thus making nonsense of claims that post-election coalition talks in 2017 took place in good faith?

Peters may be hoping the lockdown drama will erase memory of those court proceeding­s, during which he backed down on his claims that Paula Bennett and Anne Tolley, whom he sued for $450,000, had leaked to embarrass him.

In the end, all the theatrical huffing and puffing came to nothing. The High Court dismissed all of Peters’ claims. But taxpayers lost too, because the bill is expected to total more than $1 million. That’s a big price to pay for one man’s quest for utu.

The virus scare also gave Peters an opportunit­y to unleash his inner Muldoonist by railing against globalisat­ion ...

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