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Chris Trotter says more and more, conventional wisdom sounds like conventional folly. In the end, no political party is entitled to people’s votes. Loyalty should be earned and renewed, not given blindly and regardless of repeated failures and betrayals

Public Policy / opinion
Chris Trotter says more and more, conventional wisdom sounds like conventional folly. In the end, no political party is entitled to people’s votes. Loyalty should be earned and renewed, not given blindly and regardless of repeated failures and betrayals
on its head

By Chris Trotter*

The two major parties, Labour and National, are already flexing their political muscles in response to the minor parties’ policies. Chris Hipkins has made his “Captain’s Call”, nixing any possibility of a Wealth Tax or a Capital Gains Tax while he holds the top job. Christopher Luxon, meanwhile, is indicating that Act can go whistle for its “Referendum on the Treaty” policy.

Supposedly wise old heads are backing these unilateral rejections with dire warnings of what would happen to any party which, rather than surrender what they flagged to their voters were matters of principle, dared to send the country back to the polling-booths.

Well, New Zealand may be heading into an election in which conventional wisdom gets stood on its head. It happens every now and again, usually in response to sudden and disturbing shifts in the way the world is seen to work.

Take the two great election landslides of the early 1970s: Labour’s crushing win in 1972; and National’s exact reversal of Labour’s 23-seat majority just three years later in 1975.

In 1972, Norman Kirk had made himself the avatar of the popular conviction, growing in strength since 1969, that it was “time for a change”. Somehow, Kirk was able to represent both the young voters’ impatience with the stifling post-war consensus, and the broader electorate’s expectation that life for ordinary New Zealanders could be improved without upsetting the mixed-economy apple-cart.

Just two years later, in the wake of the Oil Shock of 1973, Muldoon convinced those same ordinary New Zealanders that only he knew how to right the overturned apple-cart, gather-up the scattered apples, and restore something approximating the broad political consensus of the 1960s.

By 1984 it was clear to all but the most steadfast Muldoon loyalists that the rest of the world was now working in a very different way, and that New Zealand could no longer afford to pretend that it wasn’t. This time it was Labour’s David Lange who was offering “consensus”.

It was a promise with as little substance as Muldoon’s 1975 pledge of “New Zealand the way YOU want it.” Lange’s promise was, however, much more cynical that Muldoon’s, who actually believed it was possible to restore the status-quo-ante. Lange always knew that when he and Roger Douglas were through with it, the mixed-economy apple-cart would be a smoking ruin – along with the post-war consensus.

The neoliberal consensus which emerged from the reforms of 1984-1993 proved to be as durable as the Keynesian social-democratic consensus it replaced. Next year, 2024, will mark the fortieth anniversary of “Rogernomics”, a status-quo spanning two generations.

During that time, neoliberalism has shaped a society containing far fewer “winners” than Keynesianism. Unlike the “losers” of earlier periods, however, neoliberalism’s victims have failed to mount a successful fightback. Challenges to the neoliberal order, mounted by populist political parties of both the Right (NZ First) and the Left (Alliance, Greens) attracted insufficient electoral support to halt the steady decay of the country’s social, economic and physical infrastructure. A process which National and Labour, alike, did shamefully little to arrest.

Herein lies the problem. If not enough is done to halt its progress, infrastructural decay leads inexorably to infrastructural collapse. New Zealand is perilously close to passing the point beyond which collapse becomes an inevitability. The only solutions are political, but, being complicit in both the introduction and preservation of neoliberalism, Labour and National no longer appear equal to the task of responding decisively to its failures. What’s more, their easy dominance of the MMP political environment gives the two major parties very little incentive to try. The voices to their right and left, urging them to either advance neoliberalism even further (Act), or roll it back aggressively (Greens, Te Pāti Māori) can safely be ignored.

At the heart of the problem lies the seemingly inexhaustible loyalty of the major parties’ core supporters. Their willingness to go on bearing the burdens loaded upon them by their respective party’s egregious policy failures, no matter what, is reflected in the fact that upwards of half the New Zealand electorate votes exactly the same way election after election after election.

It is the confidence of the major parties in the “rusted-on” character of their core support that causes them to treat their “natural” coalition partners with such disdain. The leaders of National and Labour simply do not believe in the existence of any combination of political circumstances capable of inducing a fatal collapse in their electoral support, and its decisive migration to one or the other of the ideological offsiders. It is this confidence that allows them to veto policies deemed too “extreme” well in advance of any votes being cast.

Except that loyalty, like infrastructural decay, has its limits. There are elements in all the minor parties whose willingness to swallow the usual dead rats dumped upon their plates by National and Labour is at an end. These are the MPs and party activists who advocate moving to the cross benches if, as usual, the senior coalition partner insists upon their party abandoning both its policies and the principles informing them.

The rebels preferred strategy is as brutal as it is simple. If the senior coalition partner attempts to rule out a core policy objective – as Chris Hipkins is attempting to rule out the Greens’ Wealth Tax – then the junior coalition partner will publicly announce that, once again, policies desperately needed by the nation are being rejected. Rather than capitulate, however, the smaller party is willing to precipitate a new election. Let the people of New Zealand deliver their verdict on whether or not these policies should stand – by voting for the party promoting them.

The conventional wisdom holds that any minor party attempting such “blackmail” would be wiped-out by a furious electorate. In normal circumstances, the conventionally wise would likely be proved correct. The key question, therefore, is: “Are we living in normal circumstances?” Or, has a majority of the electorate tired of swapping executive power between Labour and National, only to see the resulting governments continue to talk big, and deliver sod all?

If one, or a combination, of the minor parties, puts it to the electorate: “If you want action on the cost-of-living, housing, health, education and climate-change; if you want to keep the hands of the neoliberal establishment off the handbrake; well then, give us the tools and we will finish the job.” How many voters would oblige?

Since 1996, New Zealanders have voted for change and received only more of the same. In 2020, and in spite of the conventionally wise declaring it impossible under MMP, New Zealanders gave Labour an absolute majority – to get the job done. Has any government ever promised so much and delivered so little?

More and more, conventional wisdom sounds like conventional folly. In the end, no political party is entitled to people’s votes. Loyalty should be earned and renewed, not given blindly and regardless of repeated failures and betrayals.

Labour was once a minor party, until it convinced the voters that it meant what it said and, by keeping its promises, proved itself worthy of their trust.


*Chris Trotter has been writing and commenting professionally about New Zealand politics for more than 30 years. He writes a weekly column for interest.co.nz. His work may also be found at http://bowalleyroad.blogspot.com.

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82 Comments

Promised so much ?. Yes.

Delivered so little???. no , well compared to what was promised , but Covid aside this government did more in the first 3 years than National did in 9.

Short memories , but maybe 6-12 months ago , people were screaming to slow down all the changes, it was all changing to fast,lets water down and kick the can down the road.

Perhaps the government should not have listened a year ago , pushed the reforms through , and by now , people would have accepted them ,and thinking about what the govt had achieved, as they go to the polls..   

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Are you talking about the 'Year of Delivery'? That didn't go so well. Let's face it - the 2017 electorate elected a person (anointed by another person). That's the only rational explanation behind Labour's 2017 success - their policies didn't change, just the leader, and suddenly there was an uplift in their fortunes.

In 2020, the electorate doubled down, electing a person, not a party. Now, people aren't expressing their voting intentions based on people (maybe for the minor parties they are), but on policy. And the support is underwhelming.

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No he must be thinking of the 'Town Hall Reset' that they needed a year in because they had little progress on the policies they hadn't already abandoned or just stopped talking about.

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Did zilch except lock the whole country down. Worst government ever. Expect a complete rebellion on Election day.

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The changes have all been ideologically driven cultural and social changes e.g. renaming govt departments, attempts to centralize service, Te Titiriti application and co-governance over everything. They have not delivered on the substantive infrastructure promises e.g. housing, light rail, water reform, and etc.

They have reformed health services through merger of the 20 DHB into Whatu Ora and its Maori equivalent. However, the results have been mass exodus of staff, reduction in service quality and blown out budgets.

They have reduce the prison populations, but this has resulted in a predictable escalation of crime and social issues.

They have spent millions trying to ram through water infrastructure reform with no benefits to show for it.

They have spent many more millions funding their cronies and whanau business interests. 

There's not enough space to list all of their failures here. In fact everything they have touched has been an expensive and unmitigated disaster. The country cannot afford another 3 years of these turkeys and their apartheid/communist coalition partners. We will become another Zimbabwe-like failed state with hyper-inflation, racial and social chaos.

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Damn right!

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Had Jacinda truly believed that a CGT  was the answer then in 2020 one could have been introduced without much of a backlash. 

A revised tax structure  could have accompanied it and we could have moved on as a country.

Labour with 65 seats Greens with 10 and TPM with 2 gave the left block 64% of parliamentary control and the job would have been done.

By now it would have been well settled in and much like gst the voters would have been well used to it.

I am a centre right voter but support a flat rate CGT at 10% or thereabouts but David Parker has blown it now with his wealth tax options and it will never happen.

The left have nobody to blame but themselves. 

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'infrastructural decay leads inexorably to infrastructural collapse.'

That key to the problem. No Party - not the current Greens, for sure - are looking at sustainability, as in real maintainability.

https://www.newsroom.co.nz/page/collapse-is-not-a-dirty-word?amp=1

We need to be pushing these politicians now - our media should be asking the hard questions.

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That article you linked was very well written and powerful.

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The Greens with Davidson are now pushing for relitigating everything the Treaty of Waitangi Tribunal has done.

That is a body made up of half Maori, and half other ethnicities, negotiating with all Maori Iwi, and somehow according to her this wasn't fair, looks more than fair to Maori to me, they had more people at the table than anyone.

Any money that could go to other things would go to Davidsons endless grievance industry, anyone voting for the Greens needs to have a look at what they really stand for it, and most of it has nothing to do with the environment, and a vote for Labour may as well be a vote for the Greens.

There sure as heck wouldn't be much money for anything else, infrastructure included it Davidsons clown show took off.

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...nice summary as to why to vote TOP. 

Lab & Nat continue to be wasted votes.

"We had our chance" should be their new slogans.

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In it for you(r vote)

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IN IT FOR (POWER)

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In it for taxpayer-funded failure

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Reminds, and risking censor here, of the old desert explorer coming across a lady of her tribe buried up to her neck in sand, and left to die. “Dig me out” she pleads. “What’s in it for me” he says. “Sand” she says. In other words a political slogan with no more than sand in an hour glass, I say.

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Proposed slogan for TOP: Solutions not slogans.

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Well done, Chris Trotter.  I do not always agree with your columns but I do on this one.

We do need a visionary political leader, and the 2 main parties are not doing it for anyone, and haven't for 25 years. 

Let us all bring about change and vote for a true centrist party in TOP.

An old one but a good one, Change the "old" guard.

Raf has the commonsense that is required in NZ Politics today.  Looking forward to the worm on the election debates.

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TOP look to be the only choice for the centrist vote.  They are evidence based with a good balance between economic, social and environmental considerations. I just wish they could get more air time. 

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My personal electoral focus group of people who almost always voted Labour since 1972 are unanimously voting ACT this year.

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Why? It can't be for change, they're no different to natbour.

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Voters angry with labour but can not vote for National as they are the same but blue, and they do not look at other options like TOP

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maybe they do look at TOP and just dont like what they see

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People need to vote strategically and a vote for TOP is not a vote to get Labour out if you want them gone. Personally I cannot wait for a National/ACT government. National will have to work with ACT which will be a whole lot better than total chaos mix of the other lot. 

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Then you have no idea what's ahead.

Just like them.

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Or you, or anyone else for that matter.

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powerdownkiwi has some idea about what's ahead. Anyone who looks at the facts can have an idea.

Exactly what will happen is unknowable, but once you look at the facts the broad path of the future can be conceived.

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The main feedback TOP gets is that people like their policies but don't want to "waste their vote".

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So will vote against their own self interest so their vote isn't "wasted".  Hang on...

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That is the problem. The negative becomes of greater priority to the individual than the positive. Removal and/or prevention over installation. Unavoidable  negation thereby of both innovation and progressiveness. 

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very different - maybe a check of their polices are required

I remain impressed that David as a single ACT MP got End of Life legislation over the line. No mean feat given what he was up against and demonstrates to me that good policies and leg work can win out for small parties.

Not to mention that ACT's candidate list is made up of people who have specialist expertise and have been out there "doing it'.  Farmer's, civil engineer's, business owners, teachers etc

I am betting that there will be a referendum on one vote/co-governance and the principles of the TOW  - and it will be driven by ACT

So already different to Nat's and Labour in a big way

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It's the main reason I have voted ACT ever since I made the mistake of voting National in 2008.  I looked at the line up of the various parties and noticed that the majority of other parties have Bachelor of Arts graduates.  Hell, Nicola Willis for example has a Degree in Journalism and everyone is swooning over her.  

Yet as you say you look at ACT, most candidates have extensive experience in the areas they are spokespeople for.  

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Same here. Overheard a group of my staff in the mealroom discussing politics. All staunch labour voters. Minimum wage etc. Couldn't believe the concensus amongst them was David Seymour made the most sense and he would get their vote. How times have changed.

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Unlikely story.

Labour supporters are typically somewhat empathetic - Seymour is missing the 'em'.

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I think you are wrong. Fully expecting ACT to get 20% of the vote this election when people are finally forced to put pen to paper.

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Motivated reasoning.

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I can believe it, but really only because Labour haven't actually started their campaign yet.

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Powerdownkiwi, i'm just reporting what I heard. Couldn't give a toss if it offends your left wing thinking. Unlikely story in your dreams only.

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I'm - to channel Cohen - neither left or right.

I'm about the Limits to Growth, our overshoot, and what to do about it.

 

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More likely a religious fanatic with dial stuck on repeat

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I'm guessing you didn't read that link.

Which wasn't a 'repeat'.

Arguing from a POV stance is always fraught...

:)

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Thumbs up kiwikidsnz,we need Labour gone or this country is finished.

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Maybe the problem is not the parties, it is party politics itself?

Maybe we need a more policy-based approach that allows people to choose individual policies they want rather than this broad brush approach?

 

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The problem is MPs receive their salary regardless of outcomes.  Why not structure key election promises into KPI's once elected?  Give them a base salary indexed to Median wage, and then scale up the pay on achieved outcomes.  

Might make wishy washy promises such as building 100k homes in 10 years go away.  

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the Left would not like performance based outcomes for themselves only for everyone else.

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Now you're sounding like all the others.

Performance related to what criteria?

 

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Limit them to two terms.  Prob is they become career focused and base decisions on getting re-elected.

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Either that or set an achievement floor of 50%.  If they fall below 50% of KPI's achieved during a term, then they've proven themselves to be unfit to Govern and should be ineligible to be reelected on that basis.  It's simple.  Don't make promises you cannot keep.  

People talk about running the country like a business, let's start with this shall we?  How many people in the C-Suite of private companies would get away with such incompetence?  

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Nearly every time I witnessed astoundingly dumb decisions being made in the corporate world, you could trace it back to someone ticking off their kpi / collecting their bonus.

And before you say it must have been a poorly thought out kpi, they were kpi's that looked reasonable enough such as "increase revenue by x%", "increase profit by x%", "reduce costs by x%", "achieve share price x", "achieve zero lost time injuries".

The main problem was the kpi was a short term measure not necessarily consistent with long term optimal performance. I could see the same issue occurring in the political scene. 

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KPIs are retarded metrics used by brainlets trying to apply scientific management and statistical approaches to human management. Anyone working jobs that do not have quantifiable outcomes of performance are going to work to the KPIs and not to the job. Go to a hospital and see this with things like the Triage Nurse who ensures you were seen by a Nurse on arrival but has very little function other than filtering you onto the right ED department with some time delay relative to your injury.

It only works in measures like the rates of production on factory floors, call centre call engagement rates or whatever. Roles where the human is performing a simple process repeatedly, not anywhere in which the worker must perform complex planning, lateral thinking or whatever.

For example, if you are a software engineer and you are tasked to build an ERP, CRM or whatever complex application for internal or external users, how do you KPI that? Software Development is a well defined process now with all sorts of philosophies and practises which are well known. But the systems you build can not be measured by KPIs in any reasonable way. Lines of Code Per Week? Expect thousands of rubbish lines. Project delivery on time? Expect broken trash software. Kanban/Sprint task completion rate? Expect thousands of tasks made to cover a piece of work so the developer completes 100s per day. It is nonsensical and incentivises bad practice.

Politicians are far less defined, more dependent on networks and context specific knowledge. You can not put KPIs on it and expect it to work.

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Go to a hospital and see this with things like the Triage Nurse who ensures you were seen by a Nurse on arrival but has very little function other than filtering you onto the right ED department with some time delay relative to your injury.

That's the definition of triage - make a quick assessment and prioritise based on need/urgency of need.

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That is what I was pointing to. It is a quantifiable job where the triage nurse determines priority in the treatment queue. It can be measured and a rational judgement applied. But more complex thinking and harder to define work does not fit this.

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Yes but we're not talking about KPI's in the business sense.  We're talking about publicly made election promises and those politicians being made accountable for not achieving those promises.  Maybe KPI was the wrong acronym to use.

So how would you actually make politicians accountable for their promises?  Once they're in, they're in for 3 years with a guaranteed juicy salary.  Particularly the Prime Minister.  "Oh, we just vote them out next year".   Okay....that works does it?  

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Ok then, how would you propose to measure the effectiveness of ACT's policy to sell hospitals to foreign landlords and then rent them back?

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Are you talking about the policy where investors stump up with the $500m or so needed to either build a new hospital, or spend a considerable amount of money refurbishing existing hospitals and in return the Government enters into a leaseback arrangement?

I'd rather see us invest our own money into upgrading our healthcare, but we're increasing superannuation spend by 1 new hospital per year and boomers think it's their god given right to not means test, so maybe a PPP leaseback is the best option?  

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It's just a matter of time before super is means tested or similar,  but that is a separate issue. 

Renting our hospitals?...thats a NO from me.

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Shrug.  We'll get to a stage where our hospitals continue to crumble while the number of dependants soar.  The eventual means testing of super will be just a bandaid to keep core crown spending in other areas at bare minimum, with nothing left for capital expenditure without borrowing the country into bankruptcy.  

We'll have no choice but to accept foreign investment into our health care assets, unless we can convince the Aussie banks to gift us a year's collective profits.  

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The problem is not the parties, it’s ‘us’. They are simply a reflection of us. Because to sum up ‘us’, ‘we’ are overwhelmingly comprised of the following (in isolation or in combination):

- self centredness

- apathy

- short termist / reactionary 

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But what if you really approve of one policy from a party but disagree with a lot more?

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+1

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Amazing article from Chris, 100% right.

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Anything to keep the bull---t going.

And someone upthread was lauding them.

Sigh.

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What a DISGUSTING party. Anything to keep the bubble going. Imagine realising that younger people are so poor in cashflow, they can't afford rental bond and you decide to let them rob their retirement savings to enable them to pay a landlord.

Stuff the Gnats, what foul scum who literally only serve the moneyed classes.

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Every rental property that I was in, the Landlord/Property Manager always looked for ways to claw back as much of the bond as they could at the end of the tenancy, most of which being pre-existing damage e.g. small cut marks in a 20 year old benchtop.  Fortunately all pre-existing damage I had documented with photos and dated prior to moving in, and managed to avoid such theft.

Continue the transfer of wealth by stealing from young people's Kiwisaver.  

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You are not very smart are you! The bond goes to the tenancy tribunal. Provided the tenant doesn't trash the house then it will be paid back to them at the end of the tenancy.

I'm not saying I support this policy however if you look at the stats you will see that rents have gone up massively more in the last six years than they did in the previous nine. But I'm sure that you wont let that minor detail get in the way of you irrational ranting!

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So the Government should bring in rent controls?  

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If you break a market, and you don't like the symptoms, you should fix the market, rather than break it further. 

 

So no. Absolutely not. Almost as economically illiterate as a wealth tax.

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Landlords always try to stiff you for the bond. Never had a landlord who didn't.

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I hate this Labour government but I might still vote for them because of the prospect of a National-Act government, which I view as marginally worse.

What a cruel predicament.

 

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Not really, you already know how bad Labour has been for the last 6 years, National have not yet had a chance so how can you possibly judge them ?

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Wow having access to your own money, shock horror that's terrible it should be confiscated for life and given to you when you are 65, that's if you make it to 65 and if you don't I suppose it should all go into the Labour party coffers to pay for their election campaign ?

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Zwifter - I'm going to formally report you if you keep that up.

And I haven't voted Labour since '84... (they changed, I didn't).

How about something with reasoning, logic, that kind of thing? Cést possible?

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I see the Greens have put sime meat around their “land back” policy. Good on them. Give the people something to vote for or reject. Stand tall. Between them and Te Pati Maori they might shake up the status quomwith their sharemof the vote. I can only hope so. As Chris rightly points out. Voting for National or Labour gets the country nowhere except BAU which is not working. With progressive tax policies from Green and TPM we might be able to create a few morw ‘winners’.

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You can't tax yourself to prosperity, especially when the people receiving that money have little or not incentive to work. 

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If not enough is done to halt its progress, infrastructural decay leads inexorably to infrastructural collapse. New Zealand is perilously close to passing the point beyond which collapse becomes an inevitability.

Hyperbole? I think so.

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I don’t think so at all. Especially when you consider infrastructure in its broader sense includes social infrastructure such as Health and Education, amongst other things.

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These things are hardly likely to "collapse"

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Chris this article is very much long overdue. I have argued several times in the past that 'conventional wisdom', while perhaps a commonly held belief is more often based on the weight of an individual's personality rather than their logic. Facts and reason do not hold much sway when dealing with'conventional wisdom'. We need to be better at challenging everything we are told and hear.

I liked your point about Lange. I must say he was extremely convincing in his arguments, and many still hold to them even today. The nuclear free legislation is a case in point, where today we would be better off being able to debate it's application. But in Lange's time we didn't have the internet to do our own research, so it was hard to do any form of balanced consideration of his perspective. In the end though I believe people voted for Lange over Muldoon, simply because we knew Muldoon had to go. There was only really a choice of two (devils?).

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It would be nice to see politics without the parties also attempting to appeal to a perceived racial and moral baseline.

Sensible economic principles that support middle class people and families without also dog whistling to racial divide.

Environmental conservation that doesnt attempt to do the impossible to the detriment of the environment and peoples livelihoods and passions.

Regulation by meaningful targetted approach, not adding another poorly conceived tax with no regard for the second and third order effects.

Road and driver policy that is targeted at safe and efficient transport, not what language the signs should or shouldnt be in. 

More cops but no fences at the top of the cliff, tough on crime but no meaningful change, language of signage but nothing to tangibly change road conditions or driver behaviour, relitigate the treaty but no attempt at meaningful policy debate, and my favourite - this party wont work with that one but that one doesnt care anyway. What a waste of time.

Is this really how low politicians opinions of voters has gotten that they think we care about this junk debate? I wish it were possible to vote for seats to be left empty.

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Agreed tough on crime, but no recognition that the prime driver of crime is poor economic policies which deprive people of opportunities and decent living standards. And the political parties seem trapped in the'conventional' view which locks them into more infrastructure decay. Not a lot to hope for really. 

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'Environmental conservation that doesnt attempt to do the impossible to the detriment of the environment and peoples livelihoods and passions.'

EH????

You a Nat Party front-bencher? Just asking because of the illogic in that sentence.

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Thats the point. Trying to revert 200 years of environmental change to our national parks is neither realistic or good for the environment as it is. Better utilisation of the priceless natural resources we have including invasive pest species is something i would like to have the option of voting for.

The current options are either "mine it all and who cares" or "nothing introduced has value".

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