Rotorua Daily Post

Fieldays likely to be litmus test for PM

Ardern may find her rock-star shine has faded somewhat, writes Jamie Mackay

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If tractor sales are the barometer of success for Fieldays exhibitors this week, then adoring throngs gathered are the equivalent for politician­s. I’ve been a regular attendee at Fieldays since the mid-90s, meaning I’ve seen Bolger, Shipley, Clark, Key, English and Ardern come and go. And it would be fair to say that only two of those prime ministers, past and present, have enjoyed rock star status at Mystery Creek.

I fondly (sort of, if you excuse the fog diversion from Hamilton Airport), remember picking up a fellow stranded traveller for the drive down to the Tron from Auckland. It must have been about 2012 or 2013, because David Shearer was the leader of the Labour Party at the time.

Like me, and any number of other passengers who were diverted to

Auckland, he needed to make his way to Fieldays.

We had a rental car. He was (in true egalitaria­n Labour fashion) going to take a bus. We had a spare seat. I insisted he hitch a ride. He obliged and we thoroughly enjoyed his company, even stopping to broadcast our midday radio show on the side of the road somewhere near Huntly.

I’m far from being a paid-up member of the Labour Party but I’ve often thought Shearer, given the chance, could have made a good prime minister. His problem was he just couldn’t stand in front of a television camera and deliver a soundbite off the cuff.

So, when we eventually arrived at Mystery Creek, some four hours late, we were wandering in and no one, I kid you not, even made a cursory glance in Shearer’s direction. I don’t think anyone even recognised him.

The only passer-by to engage with us was Damien O’connor, these days Minister of Agricultur­e and Trade, who ribbed his boss by saying to him, “What are you doing here with that Tory bastard?” I assumed it was a good-natured reference to yours truly. Mind you, back in the day, O’connor was never shy when it came to firing from the lip.

Remember this was the bloke who, in 2011, had to apologise for saying Labour’s list selection was dominated by “self-serving unionists and a gaggle of gays”.

Barely had we encountere­d O’connor’s comedic coarse retort when we turned a corner to be greeted by throngs of people, including an inordinate­ly large number of excited teenage girls. In a scene reminiscen­t of the Pied Piper, all attention was focused on one man, as they dutifully followed him. That man was the Prime Minister of the day, John Key. From 2009, until he stepped aside in 2016, he received unpreceden­ted adoration at Mystery Creek.

That was until a woman who once worked in a Morrinsvil­le fish and chip shop and proudly claimed to have “bunked off school to go to the Fieldays” turned up at Mystery Creek in 2018, in her capacity as PM.

Jacinda Ardern certainly gave Key a good run when it came to star power in those early days of her tenure in 2018 and 2019.

The first Covid lockdown put paid to Fieldays in June 2020, but we managed to sneak one past the goalie in 2021, in between lockdowns. By

June 2021 though, it would be fair to say, the novelty was well and truly wearing off both the Covid response and the Government.

Fieldays 2022, Covid-postponed until summer for the first time in its more than 50-year history, will be a real litmus test for the Government.

Farmers are facing a tsunami of regulatory change — climatic, environmen­tal and financial. Some of it necessary, some of it downright poorly put together and unworkable.

In a case of don’t shoot the messenger, Agricultur­e Minister O’connor is the most likely to be facing the music at Mystery Creek.

I witnessed first-hand at Agfest in Greymouth the frustratio­n and negativity that met him. And that was in his own home patch!

The reception Ardern gets, providing of course she’s there, will be interestin­g. Like Key, she’s a consummate performer. Regardless of your political leanings, there should always be respect for the office of Prime Minister. How much is shown at Mystery Creek will be intriguing.

 ?? Photo / Alan Gibson ?? Jacinda Ardern and Damien O’connor are likely to be facing the music at Mystery Creek this week.
Photo / Alan Gibson Jacinda Ardern and Damien O’connor are likely to be facing the music at Mystery Creek this week.

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