Pages

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Simon O'Connor: MPs behaving badly ...


No political Party is exempt from poor behaving MPs, but it does seem treatment of them varies.

So, another week and another Green MP is in trouble. This time Julie-Anne Genter, who broke the rules of Parliament when aggressively crossing the aisle and physically fronting government minister. It then turns out she has allegedly been aggressive to several business people in Wellington as well. I suspect there is more to come – the old, ‘where there is smoke, there’s fire.’


Click to view

Parliament has rules for a purpose, including that MPs can only speak from their seats. This is for the very simple reason that you don’t want literal face to face arguments as you sometimes see overseas. As you can imagine, tensions can get quite high in parliament as MPs express their strongly held views against others who hold equally strong, but opposite ideas.

A key aspect to stress of course, is that no political party holds the moral high ground when it comes to the behaviour of MPs. The Greens are certainly going through a rough patch currently with two MPs being reviewed for misconduct, and two others having resigned recently due to their actions. National had its fair share in recent years, from dishonesty to disgraceful family conduct. Labour is not immune, nor ACT. As I say, every Party. Parliament is made up of fallible human beings after all!

What is striking to me however, is how the various excesses or errors of MPs are treated. It seems some get a rather light touch by the commentariat, while others are harangued, pilloried, and harassed endlessly. Take for example how Julie-Anne Genter is being treated as compared to National MP, Tim van de Molen who apologised for his aggressiveness during a select committee last year. Arguably, similar incidents and yet handled quite differently. For Tim, it was near daily coverage, being chased for comment, and constantly challenged on what happened. For Julie-Anne, it seems that many commentating are content to accept that she is ‘on leave’ or to list an array of excuses including she was under pressure (who isn’t in this modern world!!). Granted, as I write, the pressure does seem to be slowly rising but again, for other MPs the pressure existed from the very beginning and never let up.

Now, I am not arguing for the unrelenting pursual of MPs. They are human too. But there should be some consistency around accountability. There is a line between appropriate public holding to account and what can sometimes be outright bullying. I recall a now former colleague of mine being literally chased around the parliament by a frenzied media pack. The latter had smelt political blood and where akin to sharks searching out a sensational story. So stressful was the situation that security was posted around the corridors to stop reporters coming into areas they should not, and MPs keeping a constant watch on a now overly stressed colleague.

With the Greens, expect to see much more hand-wringing and excuses for what is happening with their MPs. There are of course reasons why people act the way they do, but they are rarely excuses. We should also rightly hold them to a higher account not simply because they are in a public role (and this applies to all MPs from all Parties) but also because the Greens make so much of their ‘anti-bullying’ work. Put bluntly, they talk a big game in this space and yet many in the Party are bullies themselves. Whether it is - the behaviour of Julie-Anne Genter, the vocal support of protests and words designed to intimate New Zealand’s Jewish community, or how the Greens facilitated and supported the violence in Albert Park last year - there is much hypocrisy to be pointed out.

One final point. It is easy to focus on this poor behaviour of MPs across the parliament. What we should not forget, is that there are many more who are working hard and just getting on with their job. Many you will never hear of in reports but they are doing long hours, spending weeks away from home, and feeling the enormous pressure and stress that this role entails. We should be grateful to them and perhaps, if we get the chance, say thanks to them for taking up the mantle on behalf of our democracy.

Simon O'Connor a former National MP graduated from the University of Auckland with a Bachelor of Arts in Geography and Political Studies . Simon blogs at On Point - where this article was sourced.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks Simon, a very well written and balanced piece. I wish our media were as well balanced ! If they were I think the public would be shocked at how insidious and toxic the left leaning parties actually are.

Also I beg to differ a bit with you, for some reason the right leaning parties just seem to have a better quality of person....I don't know why, but they do. Yes, granted there will be a rotten apple on the tree, but that's better than having a tree full of terrible immoral rot like only the left leaning parties seem to attract and select.

Murray Reid said...

Methinks she will slip away quietly quite soon.