The ‘Occupy Wall St’ protests have also arrived in New Zealand, fuelling all sorts of political activism. The aim and political nature of the occupations are still rather vague. As TVNZ has reported, ‘Critics have slammed the occupiers for being incoherent and disorganised’ – see: Anti-greed protests sweep through NZ. But the main focus uniting the activists seems to be focus on corporate greed and increasing economic inequality – issues that are now resonating strongly around the world. In this regard, the Herald points out that a Statistic New Zealand study showed that ‘the top 1 per cent of New Zealanders owned 16 per cent of our wealth, higher than every country in the study except the United States and Sweden’ – see: 'Occupy' movement reaches New Zealand. Other useful opinion pieces on the local occupy movement include Chris Trotter’s They're Only 0.1 Percent - But It's A Good Start!, The Standard’s Over or Into The Wall?, and Jordan Carter’s Will the #occupation movements fly in New Zealand?.
Back in more orthodox mainstream politics, the election is also really heating up, with some interesting analysis arising. Political scientist Claire Robinson displays her usual strong grasp and alternative view on issues of political finance and electoral law in disagreeing with the recent BSA decision on the John Key RadioLive show – see: Of course it was electioneering, but so what?. Kate Chapman let’s us know what ‘Members of the political, business and farming elite’ think about politics in her Survey: Too many 'loonies' in Govt. Anthony Hubbard provides an interesting profile of Green Party co-leader Russel Norman in his feature, 'Being poor didn't mean we were bad'. It’s a fairly soft profile/interview, and so for a more analytical look at where the Greens are going, check out Niki Lomax’s series of guest blog posts on my liberation blog, starting today with Vote for Me (Part 1): The Green Party’s quest for success. John Moore has also written a very guest blog post examining the ongoing ideological and power shifts going on within the fledging Mana Party – see: The Sidelining of Mana’s left-wing. The very astute blogger Morgan Godfery has replied with Mana: a discussion. [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]
Rena oil spill
John Armstrong (NZH): Rena may blow National off its campaign course
Gordon Campbell (Scoop): On who should pay for the Rena clean-up
John Hartevelt (SST): Oil on troubled waters adds to Key's woes
Derek Cheng (NZH): Rena disaster has made Govt vulnerable: Banks
Derek Cheng (NZH): Rena oil spill: Missing $12m cover 'Govt error'
John Tamihere (Sunday News): Rena is PM's tipping point
Steve Matthewman (NZH): Use technology but plan for worst
Dave Armstrong (Dom Post): Oil slick ruffles our leader's silky-smooth feathers
Danya Levy and Kate Chapman (Stuff): Rena's leaser may have 'moral obligation' to pay
Herald on Sunday: Editorial - Perception has become reality
Matt McCarten (NZH): Leaders' blinkers on while bad tidings brew
Vernon Small (Dom Post): Fortnight horribilis for John Key
Grant Robertson (Red Alert): Rena and Leadership
Sean Plunket (Dom Post): Rugby result small potatoes compared to Rena failure
Rob Stock and Lois Cairns (SST): 'This should be a wake-up call'
Morgan Godfery (Maui St): Disaster of political management
Jonathon Howe (Manawatu Standard): Editorial: Blackening our image
Paul Harper, Matthew Theunissen and Derek Cheng (NZH): Rena oil spill: company pledges clean-up cash
Reading the maps: The Real meaning of Rena
Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Political Report for October 17
Kerre Woodham (NZH): Black sea of grief after Rena oil spill
John Roughan (NZH): Was anyone cracking the whip?
Ian Anderson (The Spark): Unnatural disaster
Paul Little (NZH): Nature will put power behind clean-up
John Braddock (WSWS): Ship grounding creates New Zealand’s worst environmental disaster
Chris Ford: Is the MV Rena spill John Key's Corngate moment?
Ele Ludemann (Homepaddock): Left parties unite to go backwards to future
Local bodies: Maritime New Zealand Underfunded
Catherine Delahunty (Frogblog): Rena Oil Spill – Day Ten
Catherine Delahunty (Frogblog): Rena Oil Spill Day 12
Lyn Webster (Waikato Times): We need solutions, not moaners
Michael Laws (SST): Politicos fail to pour oil on troubled waters
Occupy New Zealand
The Press: Editorial – Protests catch on
Chris Trotter (Bowalley Road): They're Only 0.1 Percent - But It's A Good Start!
Jordan Carter (Just left): Will the #occupation movements fly in New Zealand?
The Standard: Over or Into The Wall?
Chloe Johnson (NZH): Anti-corporate protesters raise voices
Steven Cowan (Against the Current): Occupy New Zealand
Election
Claire Robinson (Spinprofessor): Of course it was electioneering, but so what?
John Weekes (NZH): Election 2011: Worm won't use iPhone
Anthony Hubbard (SST): 'Being poor didn't mean we were bad'
Taranaki Daily News: Editorial - No love lost in these debates
Lois Cairns (SST): Politicians' names up for a titter on Twitter
Joanne Carroll (NZH): May best tweet win, says Goff
Kate Chapman (Dom Post): Survey: Too many 'loonies' in Govt
Eric Crampton (Offsetting behaviour): Rena or arbitrage?
Ian Llewellyn (electionresults): ACT In Free Fall?
Global dialogue: Is a Christian Conservative coalition emerging?
Steve Kilgallon (SST): Kiwi billionaire warns voters to keep politicians on their toes [Not currently online]
TVNZ: Q+A: Epsom debate
Rachel Morton (TV3): Peters starts election '11 campaign
Niki Lomax (liberation): Vote for Me (Part 1): The Green Party’s quest for success
John Moore (liberation): The Sidelining of Mana’s left-wing
Morgan Godfery (Maui St): Mana: a discussion
Ele Ludemann (Homepaddock): Meeting the candidates
Jordan Carter (Just left): Liberal foundations: equality is at the core of our politics
The Standard: Is it Phil Goff’s time?
Gordon Campbell (Wellingtonian): Don Brash: unlikely friend of the Left
Media, communication and IT
Adam Bennett (NZH): Labour targets web monopoly
TVNZ: Labour for web regulator
Claire Rogers (Dom Post): Labour reveals 'radical' internet ideas
Clare Curran (Red alert): Labour commits to a digital nation
David Farrar (Kiwiblog): Labour’s ICT Policy
Chris Keall (NBR): Labour's single watchdog plan a potential worry for Sky TV - analyst
Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): Vision needed from politicians on broadband
Tim Selwyn (Tumeke): Point of convergence well telegraphed
Economy
Rob O’Neill (SST): Battle lines drawn on tax
Brian Gaynor (NZH): A bit more pessimism would be good for us
Simon Collins (NZH): Super value: Giving KiwiSaver a push
The Standard: A plan to fix the pay problem?
Southland Times: Tiwai aluminium smelter up for sale
Other
Fran O’Sullivan (NZH): Pity Key didn't find a way to tap Power power in Government
Anthony Hubbard (SST): Let the highest court reign Supreme
Derek Cheng (NZH): 575 inmates on 'three-strikes' ladder
Deborah Coddington (NZH): Rugby World Cup's joyful voyage must not falter on reef of doom
Marc Greenhill (Stuff): Protesters demand to know fate of homes
The Press: Editorial – Safety risk too high
Waikato Times: Editorial - NZ's dirty fishing secret
Dan Satherley (TV3): New Zealand's wackiest political parties - part 1
John Hartevelt (Dom Post): National reveals plan to revamp pre-schools
Tony Garnier (NZH): Stronger Auckland - stronger New Zealand
Joshua Drummond (Waikato Times): Bitter political ideologues left students worse off
Dom Post: Today In Politics: Saturday
Dom Post: Today in Politics: Monday