Death by opinion poll. That continues to be Labour’s problem, and it seems nothing can turn things around for them. Today’s Fairfax opinion poll (Greens shoot up in poll) just consolidates the idea that Labour is, in the words of Tracy Watkins, ‘Dog tucker’. Hence Labour is vulnerable to losing its real and potential supporters into a ‘spiral of silence’, whereby it becomes particularly unfashionable and socially isolating to give a vote to that party. German social scientist Elizabeth Noelle-Neumann wrote in the 1970s about how the public constantly assesses the opinions held by the majority in society and this influences and modifies their own views, leading to essentially a reverse-bandwagon effect whereby once a party is somewhat unpopular it then spirals inevitably downwards. One study of the ‘spiral of silence’ found that ‘People monitor the climate of opinion and when they perceive themselves as a minority, individuals are less willing to express themselves politically’. National fell victim to this in the years following the party’s 1999 election loss.
The media, of course, continue to ‘sense blood’ haemorrhaging from both Labour and Phil Goff, and won’t let up on the pursuit – check out, for example, Patrick Gower’s Hunt for Labour Party leak intensifies and Claire Trevett’s Cunliffe: no 'Camp David' support. There are plenty of others willing to also analyse the poor health of Labour and its opinion poll results. David Farrar, for example, points out that on the basis of Labour’s 26%, the following would fail to be elected to the next Parliament: Carol Beaumont, Kelvin Davis, Carmel Sepuloni, Rick Barker, Stuart Nash and Steve Chadwick; and Andrew Little and Shane Jones are suddenly very vulnerable – see: Who would survive?. And, of course, it’s not just Phil Goff to blame – see Andrea Vance’s Dumping Goff not enough to save Labour.
It’s almost as if New Zealand is effectively turning into a one-party state, in which National is the only major 30%+ party, and this is particularly unhealthy for a political system. As Michael Coote has pointed out in the NBR, having a lame duck opposition would give National too much power, allowing it to ‘become increasingly overbearing, arbitrary, dictatorial and utterly wrongheaded’. Labour’s poor performance and weakness is therefore everyone’s problem, and the irrelevance of the political left means we have even less to choose from in parliamentary politics. Of course, Labour’s loss is partly the Greens’ gain, but as that party increases it’s pursuit of power and moderation it also becomes less effective as an alternative.
During its short existence, New Zealand Politics Daily has been particularly reliant on the output of the New Zealand Press Association (NZPA), which sadly closes today. There are a number of stories covering this such as Max Lambert’s NZ news agency signs off after 131 years, Clive Lind’s Years of change culminate in NZPA closure, Andrew Stone’s Farewell NZPA, hello three new services and even the Guardian’s New Zealand Press Association to close.
Media and communication is certainly changing fast, and three items worth mentioning in this regard are 1) the Scoop website now has a searchable page for NZ-related Wikileaks, 2) Tom Pullar-Strecker and Andrea Vance report Labour 'about face' on three strikes net law, and 3) my interview with MP Hone Harawira tomorrow at 12 midday will be live-streamed here, and you can follow and participate in the conversation on Twitter by using the #OUVoteChat2011 hashtag. The interview will take place in front of an audience in the University of Otago Media Production Studios filmed in High Definition by their three cameras, and eventually uploaded to iTunes. And on Friday I’ll be doing the same again with Annette King. If you have any questions for either MP, please tweet (@bryce_edwards) or email me. [Continue reading below for a full list of the highlights of NZ Politics Daily]
Below are the internet links to all the NZ politics material from the last 24 hours that are either informative, insightful, interesting or influential. This list and the links are taken from a fuller document, NZ Politics Daily, which is emailed out, Monday to Friday, to various researchers, academics, journalists, MPs and so forth. The document is purely for research purposes only, and if you would like to be on the subscription list, please email: [email protected]
Opinion polls: Labour and Greens
Tracy Watkins and Andrea Vance (Dom Post): Greens shoot up in poll
Andrea Vance (Stuff): Dumping Goff not enough to save Labour
Tracy Watkins (Dom Post): Voters pick up the dog tucker signals
Patrick Gower (TV3): Hunt for Labour Party leak intensifies
TV3: Phil Goff and the Labour leadership - full interview
Claire Trevett (NZH): Cunliffe: no 'Camp David' support
Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Political Report: August 31
Ian Llewellyn (electionresults): Latest Poll Drives Labour Lower
David Farrar (Kiwiblog): Labour drops to mid 20s
David Farrar (Kiwiblog): Who would survive?
Robert Winter (Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow): Labour, Polls and Leadership Rumours
The Dim-Post: Not rocket surgery
The Standard: Turning Green
Whaleoil: No-one wants to know Phil
Canterbury rebuild
TVNZ: Black Budget forecast following quake blowout
Adam Bennett (NZH): $7.1 billion Christchurch earthquake aftershock
Gordon Campbell (Scoop): On the EQC’s funding woes…
Fran O’Sullivan (NZH): Economy in danger and Govt must act
Kim Savage (Newstalk ZB): Election year may stop quake levy
Felix Marwick (Newstalk ZB): Labour questions quake cost
NZPA: $750k quake catering bill criticized
Tamlyn Stewart (Press): Christchurch rebuild predicted to run 15 years
The Press: Govt’s offer falls short for red-zone residents [Not currently online]
Asset sales
TVNZ: Govt expects strong demand for Kiwi assets
Kate Chapman (Stuff): Goff: State asset sale cap a con job
Kate Chapman (Stuff): Foreigners can buy into state assets: English
3 News / RadioLIVE: No discounts for Kiwis in SEO sell-off
RNZ: Shareholding cap planned on partial sale of SOEs
Rob Hosking (NBR): Why the govt's SOE plans could push up interest rates
Rob Carr (Political Dumpground): Selling Assets = Asset Sales
Farewell NZPA
Max Lambert (NZPA): NZ news agency signs off after 131 years
Clive Lind (Stuff): Years of change culminate in NZPA closure
Andrew Stone (NZH): Farewell NZPA, hello three new services
Guardian: New Zealand Press Association to close
RNZ: Last day for NZPA
William Mace (Stuff): News chiefs: NZPA demise ups the ante
Skynet law
Tom Pullar-Strecker and Andrea Vance (Dom Post): Labour 'about face' on three strikes net law
Chris Keall (NBR): Labour will wipe internet termination from Copyright Act
Dan Satherley (TV3): Labour promises to terminate Skynet law
Energy
NZH: Govt accused of being obsessed with fossil fuels
RNZ: Lignite project still alive - Solid Energy
Other
NZH: Maori Party plays tough with media
Claire Trevett (NZH): Third of Kiwis: Peters good for NZ
Bruce Munro (Dunedin Star): Hard to judge sport’s effect on vote: prof [Not online]
John Drinnan and Jamie Gray (NZH): Suitors get serious with TV3 owner
Matt Nippert (NBR): MediaWorks buyers bide time as sale complications mount
Editorial (Taranaki Daily News): It's time to drop the Bradford-bashing
Laura Black (ODT): It's time to apply some real solutions
Editorial (Dom Post): Round one goes to the liquor industry
Simon Cunliffe (ODT): Stop knocking the young
Leighton Keith (Taranaki Daily News): RTDs linked to crime, crashes
Brian Rudman (NZH): Cash for volcanic cones upkeep would show Crown remorse
Colin Williscroft (NBR): Renegade MP lands UN job
Adam Bennett (NZH): New governor-general sworn in
Chris Trotter (Bowalley Road): Nineties Nostalgia: Candidate's Speech
The Dom Post: Today In Politics: Wednesday