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Monday, May 8, 2023

Karl du Fresne: Hipkins goes the full sausage roll


Labour’s re-election strategy is now blindingly clear. Chippy Hipkins is going the full sausage roll.

Hipkins’ fondness for the humble pastry snack has already become entrenched in New Zealand political mythology. On his trip to Britain he was presented with sausage rolls not once but twice – first by King Charles and again at No 10 by Rishi Sunak. It would be no surprise if his benefactors had been tipped off in advance that this would be an appropriate gesture.

The media loved it, of course. “Chris Hipkins charms London with sausage-roll diplomacy”, read a headline in the Left-leaning Sydney Morning Herald.

This plays to Hipkins’ carefully cultivated image as an unpretentious working-class boy from the Hutt. We can expect the sausage roll to become a defining emblem of his prime ministership as he seeks to erase the ideological taint left by his predecessor, Jacinda Ardern.

Labour’s survival at the next election hinges on the party retaining at least some of the middle-New Zealand voters who crossed over from National in 2020 and delivered  Ardern the first clear majority of the MMP era.

To achieve this, Hipkins must convince those swinging voters that this is a different government from the one Ardern led – one that’s concerned with bread-and-butter issues rather than the polarising identity politics that have caused Labour’s support to collapse.

The sausage roll, with its reassuring connotations of the less confrontational New Zealand that predated Ardern, meshes neatly with this objective. Hipkins needs to convince middle voters that he’s no threat, and the sausage roll is the perfect political prop. After all, who doesn’t enjoy a sausage roll? It’s tailor-made as a comforting symbol of national unity at a time when people fret that the county is being torn apart by the ugly ideological forces unleashed during Ardern’s term.

But Hipkins’ “Boy from the Hutt” shtick extends further than sausage rolls. He told Stuff’s political editor Luke Malpass that he gets his most useful “informal” advice while shopping at Pak’nSave. Forget all those highly paid apparatchiks cluttering the Beehive; if Hipkins is to be believed, it’s the Pak’nSave checkout ladies who keep him in touch with what’s going on in the real world.

Note that he shops at the correct supermarket chain – the egalitarian, no-frills one. None of your fancy-pants New World snobbery where they pack your shopping bags for you.

Oh, and Hipkins wants us to know he can be found with other Mums and Dads on the sidelines at Saturday morning sport, where he’s brought down to earth by the realisation that there’s more to life than politics. It’s his way of assuring us that he’s one of us – or if not, that he’s at least in touch with the public mood.

Even in his anachronistic use of language, Hipkins seems keen to evoke the tone of a less fractious era. “It’s a blimmin’ good day for Kiwis living in Australia,” he quaintly said of Canberra’s decision to create a pathway to citizenship for New Zealanders – conveniently ignoring the fact that it’s in Australia’s interests, and potentially very damaging to New Zealand, to smooth the way for skilled and highly educated Kiwis looking to jump the Ditch.

The folksy vernacular, the sausage rolls and the paeans to Pak’nSave and Saturday morning sport should all be seen as part of Labour’s big rebranding project – a distancing of the party from ideological crusades that alienate the vast majority of New Zealanders.

Another critical component in this transformation is up-and-comer Kieran McAnulty, whom New Zealand Herald political writer Audrey Young recently described as perhaps Labour’s most important politician after Hipkins and Grant Robertson .

If Hipkins is the boy from the working-class suburbs of the Hutt, McAnulty is the boy from the rural heartland. You don’t get much more country than Eketahuna, where – as he was eager to stress to Young in her complimentary profile of him - his family roots are. McAnulty is Labour’s point of connection with the vital provincial electorates that abandoned National in 2020. The party needs to lock them in come October and you can be sure it will work the former TAB odds calculator like a drover’s dog.

There’s nothing unsubtle about McAnulty’s pitch. He may have sold his ancient Mazda ute, a political prop that charmed the media as successfully as Hipkins’ love of sausage rolls, but he still positions himself as an uncomplicated Kiwi bloke whom ordinary voters can relate to and trust to do the right thing. Except that he's not, any more than Hipkins is. They're both politicians to the tips of their toes.

No doubt it was because of his affable, blokey quality that Labour chose McAnulty to sell Version #2 of the diabolical Three Waters proposal. Labour strategists would have reasoned that if anyone could make the rehashed package seem harmless, despite its racist co-governance provisions remaining essentially intact, it would be him.

He played his assigned role to the hilt, even to the extent of opening the press conference with the words: “The guts of it is …” As Young remarked, it was as if he’d just walked off the set of a Fred Dagg skit. Labour would have counted on voters feeling reassured that Three Waters had been stripped of its obnoxious bits. After all, how could a straight-shooting, hard-case Kiwi bloke like McAnulty hide ulterior ideological motives?

And it may have worked. Even Young, who gives the impression of having fallen under McAnulty’s spell, said he seemed to have taken the heat out of the issue.

There’s one other crucial element in Hipkins’ attempts to persuade the public that Labour has shed the toxic ideological skew that it adopted under Ardern. While the party’s top people work hard at promoting an aura of benign Kiwi authenticity, Labour is simultaneously keeping its scary monsters out of sight.

Actually, make that scary monster, singular. Nanaia Mahuta has done more than any single figure to promote unease and distrust about Labour’s agenda. Hipkins realised she had become a liability and moved quickly to demote her from eighth to 16th in the cabinet rankings while also stripping her of responsibility for Three Waters and co-governance.

The 13-strong Maori caucus, however, remains a powerful force within the government – in fact stronger than ever, with a record eight Maori members in the cabinet. It would be wildly fanciful to assume that Treaty activism, the single most virulent source of potential political conflict in New Zealand’s future, has been conveniently neutered within the government following the change in the party’s leadership. More likely the extremists and agitators have been instructed to lie low so as not to imperil Labour’s bid for a third term.

Two questions arise, then. The first (and there are no prizes for guessing the correct answer) is whether the Treaty activists within the government will revert to form if Labour, with the support of the Maori Party and the Greens, secures a third term. The second is how long Hipkins and McAnulty can persist with the already strained Kiwi bloke routine before the voters cry for mercy.

Karl du Fresne, a freelance journalist, is the former editor of The Dominion newspaper. He blogs at karldufresne.blogspot.co.nz.

7 comments:

K said...

Fakes.

Unknown said...

Dear Mr du Fresne.

I am immediately writing to all NZ Bakeries, and asking them to remove the "sainted Sausage Roll", from their products on sale, for the following reasons-
1. - that they could contain a Political Message, that is not suitable to all
2. - that the contents could be "coloured red", which could be mistaken for Tomato sauce
3.- that this one emblem would have more impact than what National and/or Act could do/ which would be unfair - in political strategies
4. - customers maybe coerced to buy more, than their current Household spending/budgets would allow
5. - it "may" used as devise toward all those 16 year old's, who seek to vote
6. - and those on diets may find the the "sales pitch (to buy, buy)" may/will interfere with their food management plans.
7. - and that in future, the sausage roll may/will be associated with a failed election campaign, by Labour and forever confined to posteriority.

So, Sir, I hope you see my conundrum, regards from -

Anon, in the Land of New Zealand

Anonymous said...


In essence:

Ardern advanced the He Puapua agenda - then left.
Hipkins must ensure a 3rd term coalition - then will leave.

Then NZ's ethnocracy will be in place with Iwi in control.

The current government action is treasonous - noone has the guts to say so.

Get active... and fast.

Terry Morrissey said...

About the only people that are taken in by Hipkins and McAnulty's sham good guy personas are confirmed communists, those on mind altering drugs, the bought and paid for media and those who read or listen to the corrupted media. I would not be at all surprised to see more of the maori caucus exit stage left in the near future in an attempt to bolster the maori party. I hope they do as that may even wake up a lot of undecided. It could also trigger an early election and that would be another nail in the coffin of the labour/greens/maori cult.
Bring it on labour maori caucus.

Anonymous said...


Two of the most dangerous politicians in the current government.

Peter Young said...

Yes, these two, Hipkins and McAnulty, are quintessential liars and in days gone by would have been prime recipients of a visitation to the gallows on account of treason. In terms of 3/5/Affordable Waters, neither have mentioned the power of veto or the effective ownership rights that go with Te Mana o Te Wai Statements. Likewise, what’s install for us with the RMA reset, Education, Health and is also coming our way with the DoC Estates, the Foreshore and Seabed (thanks to Key and Finlayson), and otherwise in respect to all other resources in terms of the He Puapua ideological takeover.

One can only hope the average, easy going, far too complacent NZ’er wakes up in time?

But thanks Karl.

Anonymous said...

All completely staged along with the Watties Tomatoe sauce. The joke is Watties TS is made in Australia.