Weekend Herald

Peters’ new deputy could be a stayer

Jones tipped as next leader but Tabuteau may be one to spark devoted core of voters

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New Zealand First is often the forgotten party in our politics. That is partly because it lives so much in the shadow of its founder that it appears to be little more than an extension of himself. It has had no other leader in 25 years of existence and few would bet on its chances of surviving Winston Peters’ eventual departure.

But our profile of its latest Deputy Leader, Fletcher Tabuteau, today illustrate­s that the party does have a solid core of politicall­y conscious voters in the country. It may not be merely a vehicle for those undecided between Labour and National at any given election. At age 18 Tabuteau attended the party’s launch in 1993 with his enthusiast­ic parents and has been committed to it ever since, a candidate at three general elections before coming into Parliament on the party list in 2014.

He displaced Defence Minister Ron Mark as deputy in a caucus election held the same week National elected a new leader and, once again, NZ First’s event went largely unnoticed. If there is to be a successor to Peters, now 72, it appears more likely to be Shane Jones, who has yet to establish a personal following.

Despite his advancing age, Peters gives no sign of departing before or at the next election. Polls say his party has slipped below the 5 per cent threshhold and it has not previously survived an election after a term in government. But this is the first time it has been in a first-term government and it has one or two other unusual things in in its favour this time.

The party leading this Government did not beat its main rival at the election. Labour needs to build more support at the next election but not at the expense of both its partners, as seems to be happening in polls since the election. It needs to do more than major parties have previously done to help its partners survive.

Jacinda Ardern appears to be very conscious of that need. At her postCabine­t press conference­s she has made a point of having ministers from NZ First or the Greens alongside her whenever there was a decision to announce in their portfolios. She might have done this anyway, she impresses as a naturally inclusive person. But it is certainly an effective political gesture and one that Sir John Key and Bill English might wish they had employed.

It is also noticeable that Peters has been alongside the Prime Minister on most of the overseas trips she has made. As Foreign Minister he probably does not always need to be there, and as Deputy Prime Minister he ought to be in the country when she is not. Especially if when

 ??  ?? Letter of the week Reuben McGregor-Sumpter, Epsom.
Letter of the week Reuben McGregor-Sumpter, Epsom.

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