Weekend Herald

Judging the Government’s judgment calls

- John Roughan

We don’t know this Government very well yet. We know its principles and policies and its coalition programme but we don’t know whether it has good judgment. It is only when events occur that challenge a government to put aside its principles in a particular case that we begin to get a reading on its judgment.

We know the Labour Party has a lot of unequivoca­l compassion for asylum seekers and indeed refugees in general. We don’t know how rigorously a Labour immigratio­n minister would check individual situations. I have some sympathy for Iain Lees-Galloway. If a man told me his life was in my hands I’d lose sleep over a deportatio­n decision.

Putting aside all we know about Karel Sroubek now, it is easy to say the crimes Lees-Galloway knew about ought to have outweighed the risk to the life of a drug importer with gang associatio­ns. But did they really? Often it is not until you sit in a decision-making chair that the right

course of action becomes clear.

To me, the significan­ce of the crimes for this decision was the question they raised about Sroubek’s honesty and therefore the credibilit­y of his claim to be in mortal danger in the Czech Republic. Lees-Galloway ought to have asked his officials to check that claim more closely. They would easily have discovered the court records showing he’d been back to his homeland on business at least once, albeit under the false name he used when he entered New Zealand.

It is easy to blame immigratio­n officials for not doing these checks of their own accord but, again, it’s the person in the hot seat who can see these needs clearest. It worries me that Lees-Galloway did not ask enough questions of this supposed refugee and surprises me that Jacinda Ardern quickly endorsed his decision on Monday. A Prime Minister sits in the ultimate hot seat and is usually hyper-alert to political danger.

It worries me because mistakes in dealing with refugees can undermine public confidence in immigratio­n overall. If one single event triggered the whole Trumpian nightmare for good government in Western democracie­s, it was the sight of refugees walking in vast numbers into Europe in the summer of 2015.

For the media everywhere it was simply a heart-rending story of people escaping the Syrian civil war, containing no explanatio­n of the reason all these people were suddenly on the road. To this day most people are probably unaware of the monumental misjudgmen­t by Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel that opened the door.

Merkel, who announced the first step in her departure from politics this week, has been one of the best leaders of the 21st century. She had been 10 years in office by the time she made the fateful decision. She made it with good intentions. After an appeal from Greece, where refugees were coming ashore in boats, Merkel announced asylum seekers could go to Germany to have their applicatio­ns considered, unilateral­ly relaxing a European Union rule that they should be processed in the first EU state they reached.

She did not realise the consequenc­es and the EU had to quickly do a deal with Turkey to stem the flow. But the political damage was done, not just to Europe but to the United States. Donald Trump knows what those images from Balkan roads did for him the next year. He is making the most of a “caravan” from Central America walking through Mexico at present, hoping they will generate Republican votes in the mid-term elections on Tuesday.

The backlash against immigratio­n did not become apparent until 2016 when it played a large part in the Brexit decision and the US election. New Zealand has largely escaped the nightmare so far but not entirely. At our election last year the parties in the present Government all campaigned against the record immigratio­n we had been attracting since 2013.

I happen to think we need a lot more people and was glad to see National’s vote last year did not suffer, but I’m under no delusion that a majority of New Zealanders agree with me on immigratio­n. Labour people, I think, may be under a delusion that a majority agrees with them on refugees.

New Zealand’s offer to take 150 refugees a year from Australia’s offshore camps seems superficia­lly popular because Kiwis like criticisin­g Australia, but two weeks ago it became quite possible the Australian Government would accept it — with the condition that those New Zealanders have no right to enter Australia.

Amazingly, Ardern and LeesGallow­ay are willing to accept that, though Winston Peters is not. He is right. On these issues, Labour needs better judgment.

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