As John Key might put it, New Zealanders are showing their ‘socialist streak’ by backing the ‘underdogs’ in each Rugby World Cup match. We have an affinity with the underdog, and this has translated, so far, to an instinctive mixing of sport and politics, whereby in Dunedin on Saturday, New Zealanders appeared to support the Argentina over England by a significant margin. Then in Wellington last night – where there were vast numbers of South Africans in the crowd – it seemed that clearly pretty much everyone else there (mostly Kiwis) were with the Welsh.
There’s more to it than just the ‘underdog’ factor, and some other ideological attitudes appear to kick in. Our reluctance to support the English, for example, is possibly due to the fact that in England the sport of rugby has traditionally been the game of the Establishment, which does not sit well with more egalitarian ethos; not to mention the fact that England is the old colonial master of most rugby playing countries.
Similarly, New Zealand has a long-standing rugby rivalry with South African but there’s also the political reality that rugby was the sport of white South Africa and in this country the Springboks are indelibly associated with apartheid – even thirty years later. In fact in an interesting parallel, there’s still very strong support for the All Blacks by black South Africans – see for example, this article published in South Africa: All Black support grows in EL and Eastern Cape, which explains that although borne of apartheid, black South African support for New Zealand in rugby is now ingrained.
And of course, New Zealanders also seem to have an approach of supporting ‘whoever is playing against Australia’. Thus amongst most New Zealanders there appears to be a deep-seated aversion to England, South Africa and Australia that leads to wildly enthusiastic support for anyone who comes up against them. Beyond this aversion to these three, there seems to be a further hierarchy of teams that are deemed worthy of support in the RWC. Much of this is based on factors such as our regional big-brother role in the Pacific.
So below is what might be termed ‘A Politicos guide about who to support in the RWC’, based on very subjective and flippant criteria:
1. All Blacks (nationalism is far from dead)
2. Samoa (our old colony – guilt maybe)
3. Tonga (maybe on their way to number 2?)
4. Fiji (relegated to the bottom of the Pacific Islands because of Military rule)
5. Ireland
6. Wales
7. Scotland
8. Argentina
9. Japan
10. Georgia
11. Canada
12. Romania
13. Namibia
14. Italy
15. Russia
16. France (ex colonial bully boys - albeit with style)
17. Australia (the new colonial bully boys in the region)
18. USA (the biggest imperialist power)
19. South Africa (they are, after all, the Springboks; and Apartheid still lingers)
20. England (Republican-esque sentiments mixed with egalitarian ethos)
There will be many who will fervently disagree with these tongue-in-cheek rankings. Feel free to leave details of the ‘correct’ rankings on my liberation blog site.
Other interesting commentary on the politics of the rugby come from Anthony Hubbard (Conversion still needed to win), who argues that the sport has changed significantly in New Zealand, and from John Armstrong (Politics first casualty of RWC media scrum). Other important items include Catherine Masters and Geoff Cumming’s The oddball revolutionaries, Adam Dudding’s A prime minister's view from the top, and Neil Reid’s NZ military's 'spin' doctors under fire.[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]
Rugby World Cup - politics
Anthony Hubbard (SST): Conversion still needed to win
John Armstrong (NZH): Politics first casualty of RWC media scrum
Brian Easton: Do we deserve to host the RWC?
Philip Matthews (Press): Bugger the rugger
Matthew Hooton (NBR): Murray McCully’s World Cup triumph
Jonathon Howe (Manawatu Standard): Time cup boss got off his high horse
James Murray (TV3): Rugby World Cup winners and losers
Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Political Report: September 12
Editorial (Nelson Mail): Time to kick back and enjoy our time in the limelight
Bevan Rapson (NZH): Go Switzerland... oh, hold on, it's those Tongan fullas
Robert Winter (Idle thoughts): Nationalism, nation-states and the RWC
Michael Kimberley (Dispatch online): All Black support grows in EL and Eastern Cape
Rugby World Cup – opening shambles
Lloyd Burr (TV3): Party Central was 'Party Shambles' – Labour
David Farrar (Stuff): The train blame game
Duncan Garner (TV3): Say sorry and then heads must roll
TVNZ: Key confident RWC transport lessons have been learnt
Danya Levy (Stuff): Govt, Auckland council work to avoid new cup 'rail fail'
TV3: "We dropped the ball" - McCully on transport
RNZ: World Cup organisation failures unacceptable – McCully
John Pagani (electionresults): Murray McCully gone by the end of RWC?
Christchurch earthquake rebuild
Jo McKenzie-McLean and Danya Levy (Press): Red zone losses bother Key
NZ Newswire: Govt keeping pressure on insurance companies – Key
TVNZ: Red Zone residents rally for 'fairness'
Stuff: Dallington couple first red-zone settlement
Paul Easton (Dom Post): Bid to avoid Wellington quake 'wasteland'
Urewera terror raids
Catherine Masters and Geoff Cumming (NZH): The oddball revolutionaries
Matt McCarten (NHZ): Our only terror plot was a work of fiction
NBR: Lives at risk as Urewera terror facts emerge
Edward Gay (NZH): Urewera raid details remain suppressed
TVNZ: Tame Iti: Never a plan to attack
Editorial (NZH): Secret justice no justice at all
Matthew Theunissen (NZH): I'm no terrorist, I just wanted a wife
NZ and international affairs
Tracy Watkins (Dom Post): Opinion divided over Pacific help
Claire Trevett (NZH): China's aid its own to spend, says Key
Amelia Romanos (NZH): Troops to be withdrawn from Timor-Leste
Claire Trevett (ODT): French want to look forward – Juppe
Fran O’Sullivan (NZH): Chinese aid a sticking point
NZH: McCully scores with his A-list forum
Other
Adam Dudding (SST): A prime minister's view from the top
Michael Coote (NBR): NZ beside US on credit ratings’ slippery slope
David Farrar (Kiwiblog): Greens worried about blogs
Neil Reid (SST): NZ military's 'spin' doctors under fire
Mike Williams (Pundit): A real reason for road rage - Auckland's trains and no loop
Editorial (Dom Post): Seeing Afghanistan through naive prism
Neil Reid (SST): HART plan for first test
Simon Collins (NZH): Protesters 'betrayed' by plight of poor in SA
Dave Armstrong (Dom Post): Memories of tour that divided the nation
Lois Cairns (SST): Govt stands by NZ record on deep-sea fishing
Dom Post: Buyers for government BMWs
Bevan Hurley (NZH): TVNZ staff to lose jobs
Clare Curran (TVNZ): It’s now TV Auckland, not TVNZ
Danya Levy (Stuff): Hugh Barr to contest Ohariu for NZ First
Morgan Godfery (Maui Street): Annette Sykes will stand
Joseph Aldridge (Northern Advocate): Mayor says sorry for 'nigger', sex quips
Imogen Neale (SST): School libraries the poor relation
Lloyd Burr (TV3): Labour MP’s former assistant sentencing for stealing
Dom Post: Politics briefs - Monday, September 12