If you want to understand modern politics, elections and economics, you’d do well to read Chris Worthington’s NZ Herald opinion piece, Transformation by policy a pipe dream. Ostensibly about this week’s Budget, Worthington explains – and advocates – the mindset of contemporary establishment thinking about how to govern the country and make beneficial changes. A senior economist with Gareth Morgan, Worthington channels the low-horizon, low-expectation, slow-moving, cautious politics of modern political parties and state bureaucrats, in arguing against the role of ideology, ideas, and big changes in politics. He says such revolutionary or ‘big bang’ approaches to changing society and economies are destined to failure, and what really works is non-ideological, incremental improvements based on evidence and trials. This centrist thinking is essentially the ruling ‘ideology’ of our time, and Worthington bemoans the continued existence of those who want politics to be political and elections to be about ‘a contest of ideas’. He needn’t worry too much about that happening any time soon.
In fact, in another excellent analysis of the National Government’s approach to the Budget, Chris Trotter writes in the Press (Key deals restrained Budget hand) that Worthington’s centrist and relatively pragmatic approach is working very well for National. Trotter says that National has ‘made moderation their watchword’ and ignored the advice of the Business Roundtable, Don Brash, and Paula Rebstock. The ‘Key-English version of moderate-conservative poker’ has led the Government down a popular path whereby voters are unlikely to want their playing cards assigned to them by Labour and the Greens. Trotter would surely argue that National is more in line with Worthington’s prescription for boring but successful politics. Similarly, Bryan Gould bemoans in the Herald today that National’s ‘idea of managing the economy is simply to wait and see what turns up’ – see: A Key Budget? Wake me when it’s over.
Continuing the theme, John Armstrong emphasizes that the Government is aiming for ‘balance’ – in particular, an approach ‘that balances the need to chop back Bill English's record $16 billion deficit with this being election year’ – see: A matter of balancing the sweet and sour. Labour, too, isn’t particular bold at the moment in its economic approach – despite the severe economic conditions – and Armstrong rightly points out that there should in fact be a lot of political attention on decline living standards: ‘The cost of living is shaping as the one election issue that might derail National. The reason it has yet to become a red-hot political issue is that Opposition parties - like the Government - do not have any ready solutions beyond subsidising such things as winter household power bills’.
Colin James says that Labour is instead going to rely on demonizing Don Brash and Act as its election strategy. He points out that Labour has a problem in that it has lost it’s working class base and soul, but is yet to reconstitute any real voting base to replace it. Colin James’ column, Brash, the budget and building a new strategy, is in today’s Otago Daily Times, which is sadly the only daily newspaper that will be publishing him – incredibly, Fairfax has dropped him from both the Dominion Post and the Press. This move should give more grist to MP Clare Curran, who has written on Red Alert about The trashing of politics and media. But there’s always the blogosphere, and today Denis Welch gave his evaluation on the state of it in his Nine-to-Noon media slot – listen here. And for those of you wanting some quality analysis of the Budget on Thursday, tune into TVNZ’s Budget Special at 2pm, where I’ll be giving it a go! [Continue reading below for a full list of the highlights of NZ Politics Daily]
Budget
Bryan Gould (NZH): A Key Budget? Wake me when it’s over
John Armstrong (NZH): A matter of balancing the sweet and sour
Chris Trotter (Press): Key deals restrained Budget hand
Colin James (ODT): Brash, the budget and building a new strategy
Chris Worthington (NZH): Transformation by policy a pipe dream
Colin Williscroft (NBR): Goff picking grey, not black, budget
Simon Collins (NZH): Budget cuts set to hit big families
John Hartevelt (Dom Post): 'Some families will be worse off' after Budget
Kirsty Johnston (Stuff): Sickness beneficiaries fear budget changes
NZPA: Public Sector will feel the pinch in Budget
Tracy Watkins (Dom Post): Public sector can expect more pain
TV3: Government will chase student loans – Key
Alex Tarrant (interest.co.nz): Budget 2011 won’t deal with “complex Savings Working Group tax ideas
Alex Tarrant (interest.co.nz): PM Key says can’t “indebt” future generations
Alex Tarrant (interest.co.nz): Labour wants to increase home ownership, will introduce policies to stop further house price bubbles, Goff says
TVNZ: Phil Goff suggest alternative Budget
TVNZ: Phil Goff Interviewed By Corin Dann
Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): Commodity prices key to deficit recovery
NZPA: PM gives glimpse of budget
Phil O’Reilly (Stuff): Business ready to face up to an ambitious Budget
Paul Kane (NBR): Budget 2011: Why four beats three – election terms
Horizon: Kiwis enter Budget week feeling country on wrong track
Paul Holmes (NZH): Election means a grey Budget, not a black one
Thomas Pippos (NZH): Budget must set destination for NZ with plan on how to get there
Adam Bennett (NZH): Changes rattle KiwiSaver but fans say scheme still a goer
Stuff: Kiwisaver changes to boost savings – PM
NZPA and NBR: KiwiSaver costs could impact wage increases
Nadine Chalmers-Ross (TVNZ): Danger in KiwiSaver meddling
Sam Stubbs (NZH): KiwiSaver changes come as no surprise
NZPA: Greens offer alternative budget
Editorial (NZH): Budget comes with country’s right to choose
Matthew Backhouse (Stuff): Student loan plan could breach human rights
The Standard: The Sword of Damocles Budget
Joshua Hitchcock (Maori Law and Politics): An Alternative Asset Sales Policy
Rob Carr (Political Dumpground): KiwiSaver Cuts
Jordan Carter (Just left): Don't sweat the small stuff
Phil Quin (New Tasman): Jingles All the Way?
TVNZ: Budget 2011: Forget about a lolly scramble
Act Party and National
NZPA: PM slams Brash’s ‘hardcore’ policies
Adam Bennett (NZH): Brash letter not worth a Dear Don reply, Key says
Richard Long (Dom Post): Dear Don, I have moved on. Regards, John
Maori politics
Morgan Godfery (Maui Street): Here today, gone tomorrow
The Standard: Maori Party’s prognosis ‘grim’
Yvonne Tahana (NZH): Harawira matriarch faces marae ban
Other
Kate Chapman (Dom Post): Register details political gifts aplenty
Kate Chapman (Stuff): Key cautious about stirring in Fiji
Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Political Report: 17 May 2011
Lincoln Tan (NZH): Rally to oppose far right racism
Derek Cheng (NZH): Length of Hughes inquiry questioned
NZPA: Labour promises ageing commission
NZH Editorial: Dent-by-ding scrutiny of cars misses target
NZH Editorial: NZ's culture of honesty one to be cherished
Rob Carr (Political Dumpground): Maori Seats
Kathryn Powley (NZH): Death threat to PM a joke
Clare Curran (Red Alert): The trashing of politics and media
John Drinnan (NZH): Did TVNZ learn nothing from the Paul Henry debacle?
John Braddock (World Socialist Website): New Zealand SAS troops implicated in Afghan war crimes