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Thursday, December 26, 2024

Dr Bryce Edwards: National decline in 2024


While support for Act and New Zealand First has remained fairly steady over the last twelve months, the average of the last five public polls shows National declining from an election result of 38.08 down to 32.94. This is a significant fall. Most commentators identify three key liabilities for National. Its leader, Christopher Luxon, has poor communication skills and poor judgement, the economy appears to be deteriorating under his watch, and the public does not trust the Government to manage the public health system.

National has had a busy year. They’ve delivered on many of their campaign promises, including rolling back most of the Labour Government's policies, cutting taxes and increasing transfer payments, laying off public servants and redirecting funds to the “frontline” of the public sector, and cracking down on gangs.

They’ve introduced the Fast Track Approvals Bill (discussed in previous Democracy Briefings) and established a National Infrastructure Agency. They’re making changes to the education curriculum, have banned cellphones in schools, and begun work on fifteen new “roads of national significance”.

National can, therefore, point to significant policy achievements after only a single year in government. So, why aren’t voters happy with them?

Why Christopher Luxon is not “sorted”

The most savage attacks on the Prime Minister came from rightwing commentator Matthew Hooton, who recently published a widely shared column in the New Zealand Herald questioning Luxon’s capabilities. Hooton believes that Luxon's long absence from the country, from 1995 to 2011, means he has little understanding of the nation’s economic, social, and ethnic challenges and displays little capacity to learn.

Hooton cites the Prime Minister’s obliviousness in agreeing to support David Seymour’s Treaty Principles Bill through first reading because he simply didn’t understand the background of the Treaty debate. Hooton also suggests Luxon has alienated some of his caucus colleagues by gossiping about them behind their backs.

He argues that Luxon’s inability to take the public with him comes from a lack of intellectual substance, writing, “Luxon’s language is often derided as business-speak, but no genuine businessperson uses so much corporate twaddle. His language more resembles a cheap self-help book. Extraordinarily, he communicates even less substantively in the media and in person than the lamentable Dame Jacinda Ardern.”

A similar line of criticism came from Post journalist Andrea Vance, who wrote “His lack of loyalty to his own ministers (and staff) is a frequent topic of gossip and speculation around Wellington’s pre-Christmas parties. A prime minister who is so unpopular with the public is not one who can afford to be so cavalier with his caucus relationships. He seems blithely unaware of this. And he still can’t properly weigh political risk.”

The Prime Minister’s lack of depth was on display in a recent interview with Q+A journalist Jack Tame. Luxon had declined to be interviewed all year, and finally fronted in early December. It was not an impressive performance, and many commentators noted the number of times Luxon said “What I would say to you Jack.” Clips of him repeating the term twenty-six times went viral on social media.

Communications experts tell their clients to use phrases like this as a “bridge”, in which they transition from the question they’ve been asked to the question they’d prefer to answer. Tame asked the prime minister a number of questions about his government’s performance and its plans to improve the nation’s economic prospects, and Luxon repeatedly bridged to attacking the previous government.

It was all a vivid demonstration of Hooton’s critique. It’s not clear that Luxon has the depth to do his job well.

When the Government was formed, Luxon’s preferred prime minister rating averaged across three polls was 31.3%. A year later it had dropped to 24.4%. He suffered a loss of public confidence in March, when it was disclosed that he was having Premier House refurbished, staying in his Wellington apartment in the meantime, and charging the taxpayer $52,000 per annum to pay his own rent. He repaid the money.

In the second half of the year, he sold a number of investment properties, and struggled to explain why his hundreds of thousands of dollars in capital gains shouldn’t be taxed, when workers pay such high rates on their income. He even seemed confused as to why journalists were asking him about it.

National will be looking around their caucus table and wondering who they could replace their current leader with. Nicola Willis, Chris Bishop and Erica Stanford are the most likely candidates.

But Luxon is not under immediate threat. Spills can be enormously destabilising. When they replaced Simon Bridges in 2020, it triggered months of chaos, leading to a devastating election defeat. A leadership coup while in power could call the legitimacy of the Government and the integrity of the coalition into question. But eventually, National’s MPs will choose the uncertainty of a spill over the high probability of a loss under a poorly performing leader.

Off the tracks

National is also struggling with an ongoing recession caused by the Reserve Bank’s monetary policy, responding to the high inflation of the Covid era. During last year's election campaign Luxon talked about the country “losing its mojo” and promised to “get New Zealand back on track”. But so far, the economic and financial measures adopted under Luxon’s government amount to little more than tinkering.

Robert MacCulloch, a professor of economics at Auckland university summarised the very bleak prospects for the economy as revealed in Treasury’s recent Half-Yearly Economic & Fiscal Update:

“On both Real GDP and GDP per capita bases, our actual performance is now 7% lower than where NZ was expected to be, before the pandemic. Treasury predict we will keep underperforming at that level for the foreseeable future. To put numbers on these amounts, we're talking $28 billion per year in lost output. Should it go on indefinitely, it will add up to a $560 billion total loss (=28/0.05, with a 5% discount rate used). In terms of personal incomes, we're losing $4,000 per year, compared to where we should be tracking. The bottom has fallen out of NZ's economy.”

This was confirmed by a recent report by the Economist magazine contrasting the economic performance of 37 wealthy countries in 2024, using standard metrics like inflation, growth, deficits and unemployment. New Zealand came 33rd, and the only nations lower on the list were proximate to wars, political instability and/or an energy crisis: Turkey, Estonia, Finland and Latvia.

The number of corporate insolvencies has soared. This number is now higher than the depths of the global financial crisis. The Prime Minister and Finance Minister Nicola Willis have made much of recent reductions in interest rates, which they hope will drive economic growth, but both Treasury and the Reserve Bank are warning that the recovery will be muted.

Luxon and Willis protest that they’ve inherited a mess from the previous government. They’re not wrong – but their promise during the campaign was that they’d fix the mess. They’d get the country back on track.

There’s no evidence that this is happening, or that there’s any plan equal to the challenge the Government now faces. Treasury are indicating that balancing the nation’s books will require both tax increases and significant spending cuts.

National’s challenge here is both political and economic. The party is ideologically opposed to more tax cuts, and if it reduces spending it risks slowing the economy even further. And even if it were inclined towards either of these options, Act will oppose additional taxes, and New Zealand First will not support an austerity budget. National is trapped between two very capable coalition partners.

To make matters much worse, there’s an increasingly popular narrative that the Government has been captured by vested interests, driven more by corporate lobbyists than by the public interest. It’s doing the bidding of wealthy individuals and entities, while poorer New Zealanders and the natural environment are the victims. If it is to turn around its 2024 decline, in 2025, National will need to convince New Zealand that the party is actually the opponent of “tribal politics” and stands for the “national interest” instead.

The Sick health system

In their recent survey of ministerial performance, The Post’s political team ranked Health Minister Shane Reti at 3 out of 10. It reflects a terrible year across this portfolio.

The Government broke its promise to fund cancer drugs in the budget and scrambled to compensate, costing it an extra $600 million dollars it could not afford to spend.

Much of Reti’s job appears to have been outsourced to the newly appointed Health Commissioner Lester Levy. There’s considerable uncertainty about the veracity of the Government’s claims about the financial state of the health service, and whether the cost-cutting is impacting core services. As with the economy, the Government does not appear to have a coherent plan to address problems in this sector.

Health was the domain of two broken election promises. The first was the failure to fund a number of cancer drugs that were promised during the election campaign in the budget. The decision was reversed after intense criticism, and the Government then announced $600 million over four years in additional funding to Pharmac. This is a significant cost, given how tight the Government’s operating allowance will be during this period.

The second broken promise has not been reversed. In 2017, Jacinda Ardern promised to commence the rebuilding of Dunedin Hospital before 2020 and complete it before 2027. Labour failed to begin by 2020 and made a number of cuts to the project, as well as pushing the timeline out to 2029. Shane Reti promised to deliver a full rebuild during the 2023 campaign, but in late September Reti and Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop announced that they were scaling back the project to reduce costs. Now Chris Hipkins has promised that if Labour are re-elected, they’ll complete the build.

All of this happened against a backdrop of reports about patients dying after being sent home from emergency departments, provincial hospitals closing overnight due to lack of staff, recurring cutbacks at HealthNZ and an expanding deficit. In October, RNZ reported that Health NZ was projected to overspend by about $147 million a month, adding up to $1.6 billion a year.

That same month the polling company Ipsos reported that Health had become the second most important issue for voters, and that voters were significantly more likely to trust Labour to manage the sector. The most important issue remained inflation/cost of living: National remains slightly ahead of Labour but continues to decline.

The Lightless tunnel

The Government will face a number of challenges next year. The ongoing debacle around replacing the Interislander ferries will drag on. Winston Peters is the new Minister of Rail and he has until March to find a superior solution to the option of delivering lower cost ferries without the rail enablement that blew out the spend in Labour’s scheme.

There’s also the problem of the electricity market. The midyear power crisis wiped out a number of manufacturers. One analyst estimated it inflicted $300 million of damage in foregone export revenue alone. Business leaders have complained that high energy costs were one of the biggest handbrakes on the New Zealand economy this year. The Government has announced a review, but it will not begin until the new year. It’s unlikely to deliver before the next winter, which is when power crises usually occur.

Economic forecasters are predicting a flat year. Hopefully slightly better than 2025, but not by much, and a number of events could make it significantly worse. Failures in the Cook Strait, or the energy sector. Trade tariffs from the Trump administration, or a trade war. More blow-outs in the health sector provoking more cuts. Civil unrest around David Seymour’s treaty legislation.

New Zealanders lack confidence in Christopher Luxon to lead us through these challenges. His own caucus sounds increasingly sceptical. New Zealand politics could look very different by the end of next year.

Dr Bryce Edwards is a politics lecturer at Victoria University and director of Critical Politics, a project focused on researching New Zealand politics and society. This article was first published HERE

7 comments:

anonymous said...

In short:
Luxon is competent and probably a decent chap. But he is in thrall to a nameless and invisible National cabal which is clearly in bed - and for a long time - with Iwi.

Two issues prove this: Luxon /National have blocked the 2 most important initiatives of the Coalition re. race relations:

1) the MACA Amendment Bill - a key NZF element of the Coalition deal. Now on hold ( on advice from Finlayson) following the Supreme Court judgement promoting tikanga. A new Bill returning to the 2004 law with Crown ownership is required.

2) ACT's TP Bill : a key element of the Coalition deal . National continues to block this - regardless of citizens' support.

What is National's long game? To give Iwi more than Labour to gain power. Where are citizens in this game?

Anonymous said...

Anon 3:39am You are onto it. National’s behaviour has gone beyond perplexing. There has to be more to it and I too suspect there is some kind of understanding or deal with iwi that National is not telling us about. They need to come clean. If I’d voted for them I’d be feeling hugely betrayed. For goodness sake Judith Collins has just appointed a tikanga academic to be an Appeals Court judge - major pub test fail! On the big issues that shape NZ’s long term future National is only window dressing while blocking real change promoted by their coalition partners. National voters will need to get a whole lot angrier in 2025. I also hope lack of foreign investor interest due to the risks of costly cultural complications may encourage National to reconsider. No company in their right mind would pump serious money into NZ right now.

anonymous said...

Right. So, let's get cracking in 2025. Otherwise - reside elsewhere and let gullible NZers stew in their juice . They have had ample warning,

CXH said...

Hooten seems to have become rather bitter after he was shown to have the judge of a dead rat by backing Todd Mueller for the top job. Since then he has been like an angry monkey, sitting on the sidelines throwing turds at one and all.

I don't rate Luxon that highly, but he gets a pass when Hooten dumps on him. It is also hard to take Bryce seriously when he takes Hooten's rambles as serious commentary.

Anonymous said...

Here is another viewpoint: ACT and NZ First support stays the same and Nats go down. So it is the centre voters that are unhappy - and they are so needed if we want to have another term of centre right government!

Paul Peters said...

Anan at 4:48 is correct in my view. A cousin predicted that after the Maori Party hikoi and antics in the House polls would show a surge for Act and NZ First and the Nats might dip slightly but, overall, the centre right would increase its combined percentage in the polls. The opposite happened. Act and NZ First barely changed, the Nats struggled and the propoganda re the march and treaty bill worked. The combined Labour, Green, TPM vote increased, especially the latter. The Nats contain more than a few very pale blues who waffle or are on the LGTPM side slightly or more so on treaty issues. They don't see it as a big issue and still think appeasement is best to ''trouble'''. They can easily swing to Labour in the belief Labour can ''manage'' the TMP.

Anonymous said...

No-one can manage the Tea Party Miscreants, the Maori seats must be disestablished to stop the lunatics taking over the asylum ... before ... oops, too late they already have ...