The Post

Here we go again. Ardern faces litmus test over Peters

- Duncan Garner

Here’s one for all you smart, knowledgea­ble followers of New Zealand politics: name the last time Winston Peters finished a full three-year term in office?

Take your time, and read on. Peters will argue the toss over this question and answer, and will no doubt take such wild and unsubstant­iated innuendo to the highest court in the land, but here’s my answer.

I don’t believe he has ever managed to finish a full term in government. Not ever.

Think about it. Not in the 1990 Bolger Government. Not as part of the 1996 Bolger/Shipley MMP arrangemen­t with Peters, and not as part of the 2008 Clark Government.

In 2008 it was a donations scandal that rocked Peters and, by associatio­n, Helen Clark. I was there. It was disastrous.

Clark tried to wash her hands of it, claiming she had no ties to Peters, but he provided her with the numbers to be the PM, and Clark and Labour were dragged down daily by the constant leaks and informatio­n that challenged Peters and his ability to tell the truth.

Truth is Labour suffered by associatio­n after Peters denied receiving a $100,000 donation from the expat Kiwi transport and logistics billionair­e Owen Glenn.

Peters said, at the time, the $100,000 was given to his lawyer, Brian Henry, to cover legal fees. He said Henry did not tell him about it, and that it did not need to be declared.

Henry told Parliament’s privilege committee that the money was paid directly to cover a legal debt, and did not need to be declared. During a Serious Fraud Office investigat­ion into the same donation controvers­y, Henry also gave evidence.

Glenn contradict­ed Peters’ statement, testifying before Parliament’s privileges committee at the time that Peters had solicited the donation and that he knew about it.

And here we go again. Jacinda Ardern must stand ready to look at all possibilit­ies, and I don’t rule out an early election should Peters and his party fail the truth test with the Electoral Commission.

I hope they have the nuts to be brave and courageous in their investigat­ion of Peters and his murky party structure and this foundation that sought and funnelled funds to somewhere.

Maybe it was the party funding machine, but is that still OK? National says no way.

Remember, Labour made itself the electoral finance moral guardian by passing new laws a decade ago, so standing idly by now is far from acceptable or consistent.

It is politicall­y convenient to look the other way and say Peters is within the spirit of the law, but that’s code for it’s also outside the law. Ardern and her inexperien­ced Government already face enough challenges without this distractio­n. But she can’t run or hide, and her links to Peters go beyond politics. She owes him one.

She will be forced to make a call whether Peters has breached the law and, even if he hasn’t, the fineprint matters on what the experts say.

But for Ardern to stand aside and say ‘‘Nothing to do with me’’ is farcical, and we aren’t that stupid. It has everything to do with her, as she’s only there because Peters chose her.

She will feel a sense of loyalty, and back him by saying nothing. But silence isn’t good enough, and neither are weak weasel words.

The PM will soon face her judgment day on Peters, and that might mean at the same time she is forced to call an early election.

Be careful when someone invites you into bed with them. The prize might seem great, but the price is always paid a little later.

It is politicall­y convenient to look the other way and say Peters is within the spirit of the law.

 ?? COLLETTE DEVLIN/STUFF ?? Jacinda Ardern can’t turn her back on Peters and say "Nothing to do with me", says Duncan Garner. It has everything to do with her, as she’s only there because Peters chose her.
COLLETTE DEVLIN/STUFF Jacinda Ardern can’t turn her back on Peters and say "Nothing to do with me", says Duncan Garner. It has everything to do with her, as she’s only there because Peters chose her.
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