Pages

Friday, November 1, 2024

Mike's Minute: How does Labour deal with the Māori party?


Back to the review of the last election result we mentioned this week from the political brains trust at Victoria University.

Just to remind you, they analysed our votes, our issues, and our voting intentions and, and as a result, what sort of mandate they thought the current Government has.

My point was they overthought the whole thing, given we only have one vote and it doesn’t specifically buy a lot, or guarantee any sort of outcome, or even influence.

So it is on that note I pose this very simple premise - if and when Labour get back to power, they are going to need most likely not just the Greens, but the Māori Party too.

It’s the Māori Party that will potentially lead to a flurry of analysis and a lot of hard questions that I'm not sure anyone has even thought about yet.

The Māori Party are radicals.

When the police raided the Mongrel Mob the other day in Opotiki, Rawiri Waititi called it "state sponsored terrorism" driven by a race agenda.

How do the Labour Party live with that? How do they explain it? How do they justify being in Government with that?

To their credit, the Māori Party I think are long-termers, given Waititi seems to have a lock on his seat and that is far more reliable than 5%, which they will never get because they are radicals.

They are single issue zealots. But democracy allows this if you can find 5% to agree with you, or a seat where that sort of rhetoric sells. Waititi has that seat.

So when you vote for Labour or for the Greens do you think about a Government grouping that has the Māori Party radical element in it and, if you do, what do you think that will lead to?

What if the Māori Party have the NZ First card, i.e. the balance of power where you can't form a Government without them?

What do you think their price for that will be? How radical do you think that will be?

When the political wonks at Victoria University get to analyse that, their heads will explode.

What you thought you were voting for and what you got, will be unrecognisable. And yet in 2026 it's possible.

In 2029 it might even be likely.

Mike Hosking is a New Zealand television and radio broadcaster. He currently hosts The Mike Hosking Breakfast show on NewstalkZB on weekday mornings - where this article was sourced.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Fortunately for Labour most of the media will keep quiet about the TPM radical agenda

Anna Mouse said...

IMO they've already played that card hard with Labours 'maori' caucus in the last term.....

......what we saw then was the division by race in NZ and if they held such real 'king maker' power we would be held to a kings ransom (blackmail) that the country cannot afford either financially, politically, ethically and/or socially.

anonymous said...

Why is the Coalition allowing the msm to do so much damage to its agenda ( which was voted by the people) ? Although the gullible are the only ones still watching and listening , the constant negative coverage is dangerous.

Anonymous said...

Throw the Waitangi Tribunal and Mania Mahuta into the mix and where most certainly down the plug hole!
National should move NOW to get rid of the Māori seats. Cut out the rot, heal the wound and grow the Nation. Quite simple P M Luxon.

Anonymous said...

Mike I agree completely with your analysis. I'm hoping that 2026 and 2029 will be national/act/nzf if required coalition. They have been performing well and moping up the Jacinda train wreck.

However, eventually my fellow countrymen will get sick of a stable country, stable economy, fairly low crime, a great lifestyle, lowish inflation, non race based policies and go and vote the whackos back in.

I have a feeling they will be a one term wonder as they destroy the country quicker than ardern could.

We will still pay the price for our stupidity and once again we will vote competent non radicals back into power to mop up the far left disaster and the cycle begins again....