I wonder, was this the most demoralising election result ever for the New Zealand left? There was an excited buzz in the left-wing blogosphere and in social media in the weeks leading up to the election. There seemed to be a sense that victory was in their grasp, even when the polls suggested otherwise. But they were cruelly deceived.
Their optimism is easily explained. In the early stages of the campaign, they saw the fallout from Nicky Hager’s book Dirty Politics dominating the news bulletins night after night. After that firestorm had abated, the media turned its attention to Kim Dotcom’s Moment of Truth, with its dazzling line-up of high-profile journalists and leakers from overseas, all eager to tell us how morally bankrupt our government was.
Those on the left observed the adulation heaped on Hager, who was lionised at speaking engagements. They thrilled at the big turnouts attracted by Dotcom and his incongruous handmaiden, Laila Harré. And they deduced from all this that an unstoppable momentum was building, the inevitable result of which would be the unceremonious dispatch of the Key government.
They were wrong. It was a massive indulgence in wishful thinking, and it must have made the left’s defeat even more crushing psychologically. How could they have been so misled? That’s easy to explain too.
Someone as novel and entertaining as Dotcom was bound to attract crowds, especially in provincial centres where not much happens. In any case, there are always enough true believers to fill halls and give the impression something big is afoot.
Now the left is in disarray, as is obvious from the painful recriminations within the Labour Party. David Cunliffe inevitably became the scapegoat for Labour’s humiliation even though he ran a tolerably good campaign.
The question now is whether Labour can recover from its self-evisceration in time to mount a credible challenge in 2017. When a veteran loyalist like Sir Bob Harvey is questioning whether the party should do away with its traditional red and even consider changing its name, there’s clearly a deep identity crisis to be resolved.
The Greens are licking their wounds too. They worked hard to make themselves more palatable to the wider electorate. They mounted an effective campaign and seemed supremely confident that this would be their moment, but the voters had other ideas. The Greens’ message didn’t seem to resonate beyond their core supporters.
Internet-Mana is deservedly history. Never has a new party made so much noise for so little reward.
The net effect of the election result is that the New Zealand left must contemplate the unpalatable possibility that it is now irrelevant. The noisy activists and ideologues who used up much of the oxygen during the election campaign have been exposed as hopelessly out of touch with the reality of most New Zealanders’ lives.
Karl du Fresne blogs at karldufresne.blogspot.co.nz. This article was first published in The Dominion Post.
6 comments:
The "New Zealand left" as you call it has been in government for the last 15 years, at least. Focussing on parliament misses the 5% wasted vote for the conservatives - when John Key tips the wink (in Napier say, doubly to trash Nash if Labour are stupid enough to make him Leader) that's another 10% of ground Labour has to make up.
The question now is whether Labour can recover from its self-evisceration in time to mount a credible challenge in 2017
No, that's not even an interesting question: neither is the question of whether they might just be up for 2020. The question is: whether NZ needs a Labour party any more (if it ever did).
It is far from a convincing future, There were several factors which were luck on the election day:
the weather; the socialista
lower call dirty politic: the insane Dotcrim: the madness of the lefts presumed superiority [ read the Stranded and Daily Bog ] : the Australian terror scare : the general acceptance of easy does it.
None of that will be there in 2017.
I keep telling the frothers over at Kiwiblog, spill your antagonism over Conservative at your own peril, NZ First will and must die slowly and surely.
As one one of those 95,598 ...."idiots that voted for the Conservative Party" .... who many months ago realised the Act Party was now in worse shape than the Labour Party, I still cannot fathom why John Key and his National Party election strategists passed up this one off opportunity to establish a feasible right of centre support party.
Maybe they are the same incompetent strategists who are responsible for letting Winston Peters back into the political arena in 2011?
NZ Native. Key is a success gambler. We are expecting a centre right Government again in 2017. However some of us will have to work. My proposition is that the work we do now is sustainable . That is that I will help Conservative win 5% in 2017. This is how you predict the future.
Look at what the left has done: we are internationally each as good as each as far as a claim on the geographic entity NZ. This is the anti racism that bleaches people and throws them into a cultural utopia where nnothing must be seen to go wrong.
I will be voting for the conservatives again in 2017. I think National will see them in a different light based on what actually happened.
Very convenient those raids in Australia,they could not have come at a better time. It could have been timed to suit the moment & bloody good on them I say !!!
Post a Comment