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Friday, February 10, 2023

Point of Order: The Great Unwinding – but jettisoning distasteful policies is easy; let’s see if a bread-and-butter focus is more palatable

 




Buzz from the Beehive

Further critical steps in The Great Undoing were announced yesterday as the Labour Government, under new management, strives to claw back the electoral support it had been losing before Jacinda Ardern bailed out as Prime Minister.

The Beehive website recorded Ardern’s resignation announcement on 19 January but it does not record Hipkins succeeding her as Labour’s leader and the country’s Prime Minister.  That was a party matter (although the “news” section of the Labour Party website records neither Hipkins’ elevation to top spot in the pecking order nor Carmel Sepuloni’s becoming Deputy Prime Minister).

The next big step in The Great Unwinding (on January 31) was the naming of Hipkins’ Cabinet along with a pointer to a new policy direction.  The new Cabinet would be focused on core bread-and-butter issues like the cost of living, education, health, housing and keeping communities and businesses safe.

Yesterday came news of the programmes that would be modified, jettisoned or stowed somewhere out of public sight until (or if) Labour wins a third term in government.

Hipkins announced –

  • Work on the TVNZ/RNZ public media entity will stop. Radio NZ and NZ on Air will   receive additional funding
  • The social insurance scheme will not proceed this term
  • The Human Rights (Incitement on Ground of Religious Belief) Amendment Bill will be withdrawn and not progressed this term. The issue is to be referred to the Law Commission for guidance
  • The biofuels mandate will be stopped
  • Government will consider changes to the Three Waters programme “soon”
  • The minimum wage will be increased by the rate of inflation from 1 April

The announcement was made in a press statement headed –

Government takes new direction with policy refocus

Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has announced a suite of programmes that are being cancelled or delayed in order to put the Government’s focus on the cost of living. 

Since then two more announcements have been posted on he Beehive website  –

Radhakrishnan to attend international forum tackling people smuggling and trafficking

Associate Minister for Workplace Relations and Safety Priyanca Radhakrishnan will lead the New Zealand delegation at the Eighth Bali Process Ministerial Conference tomorrow.

 Carbon positive project to research impact of regenerative farming practices

The Government is backing new research on the potential of regenerative farming practices to boost soil carbon in arable, vegetable and other crop growing systems.

The statement from Hipkins – the most substantial of the three new Beehive posts – was to announce –

“… a suite of programmes that are being cancelled or delayed in order to put the Government’s focus on the cost of living.

“The Government is refocusing its priorities to put the cost of living front and centre of our new direction,” Chris Hipkins said.     

“I said the Government is doing too much too fast, and that we need to focus on the cost of living. Today we deliver on that commitment.”

More accurately, he should have said the Government has been delivering too much that is politically unpalatable.

This includes the Three Waters programme.

The need for reform is unquestionable, Hipkins said.

“The events in Auckland have once again demonstrated the limits of our existing infrastructure and the need for change”.

True.

“But careful consideration is required.”

True, too (or too true).  Here’s hoping former Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta is giving careful consideration to whatever she might be doing in India as Minister of Foreign Affairs.

Meanwhile, Point of Order notes headlines that tell us Hipkins has

Axed Ardern’s projects and taken the wind out of National’s sails

Newsroom says the front bench under Chris Hipkins’ leadership looks almost identical to that of his predecessor’s, but on Wednesday the Prime Minister took an axe to a bunch of policies that had been defended at length by Jacinda Ardern as recently as December last year.

Hipkins has kicked hate speech legislation and the social insurance scheme to at least next term, and the RNZ/TVNZ merger and biofuels mandate are gone for good.     

Lit a policy bonfire

In the New Zealand Herald, Dr Bryce Edwards says Chris Hipkins’ policy bonfire yesterday is exactly what the Labour Government needed to do.

“It sends the most powerful signal yet that with Jacinda Ardern’s departure, a new direction is being embarked upon – one that is less concerned with ideological pet projects, and more with delivering the things that matter to the public.

“Ditching or kicking down the road policies that seemed half-baked around media mergers, hate speech laws, biofuel mandates and social insurance was the right thing to do politically. These are policies very few voters care about, so they won’t be missed by many. The big question is what Hipkins will replace the jettisoned policies with.”

Precipitated a big strategic retreat

The Guardian says this strategic retreat is a serious one, and an indicator of just how much the government has lost control of the narrative in recent years.

These policies might have been unpopular in some quarters, but they were well progressed and pushed by some of Labour’s most senior MPs. Already a lot of political capital and actual capital has been spent on them, and now they are either history or doomed to the too-hard basket.

Opened a hole in the carbon budget

Stuff says Hipkins has canned a biofuel mandate, and opened up a hole in the country’s carbon budget.

Hipkins on Wednesday announced the “first tranche” of the Government’s policy purge, including the culling of a biofuel mandate that he said was set to increase the price of fuel.

But the mandate – which would have required supposedly carbon-neutral biofuels to be added to petrol – was accounted for in the carbon budget, a series of three plans that map out how New Zealand will head towards its 2050 net-zero emissions target.

Point of Order is a blog focused on politics and the economy run by veteran newspaper reporters Bob Edlin and Ian Templeton. 

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Labour are toast, no-one trusts them even a little bit. National are up the creek without a paddle and in white water.
NZers are screwed and more are getting to realise it. I have a sense of anticipation about what happens next?
MC

robert Arthur said...

Hi Anononymous. If i had accurate anticipation I could probably make a fortune. In my case it is more trepidation interspersed with abject terror.