Sunday Star-Times

Amid chaos, Labour’s

- Jon Johansson Former chief of staff to Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters, and now a Wellington-based communicat­ions consultant.

As the Government readies for its penultimat­e Budget before facing the verdict of voters next year, it will keep telling itself that it can defy gravity and recover its previous ascendancy.

Pre-Budget announceme­nts are adding up, but the public is well used to yearly gestures of good intentions.

But it’s delivery that matters.

What voters will be looking for next year is results and signs their material positions have improved.

Yet some months back Finance Minister Grant Robertson signalled where the big-ticket new spending was being directed in this year’s Budget – health and climate.

But the health restructur­e will not deliver one better service by next year’s election so lacks political power, however conceptual­ly appealing the new structures are.

Meanwhile, long waiting lists for non-Covid related health services, many existentia­l in nature, keep growing.

The Budget will also direct huge financial and regulatory resource towards climate mitigation through emissions reduction. They may or may not fuel transforma­tional change for the 50% of emissions the plan actually covers in tomorrow’s announceme­nt. But it will also bring into stark relief agricultur­e being out-of-sequence with the burdens now put on other sectors.

National has wisely endorsed emissions budgets while reserving its position on specific emission reduction policies. Take EVs. Judging by the endless advertisem­ents for the feebate on EVs and the high uptake of the subsidy by urban car owners, the scheme is going gangbuster­s.

But the feebate scheme was sold as fiscally

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand