How are the polar bears? Is NZ bothering?

Is our air and water getting warmer? If so, do we humans want to do something about it? If so, do we here want to be up with the leaders and innovators?

John Key’s answer at the recent Pacific Islands Forum was, in effect, yes, yes and yes. He signed up to a declaration of a “need for urgent action at all levels” and “a responsibility for all to act to urgently reduce and phase down greenhouse gas (GHG) pollution”. read more

The light on Labour's hill is a long climb away

Labour has a leader. Now what? There is a long hill to climb. Each of the three contenders described part of that hillclimb in their pitches for the job.

First there is the foothill, the 2014 election. Labour excited its troops by trumpeting that they were electing “the next Prime Minister” and the candidates joined that chorus. But actually, there is a fair chance the next Prime Minister will be a National MP — if John Key wins a third term, then moves on. read more

The ironies in English's market performance

Australia has elected “daggy dad” Tony Abbott (his daughter’s phrase). Here the Labour leader show is in its last week, an asset sales referendum has thrust democracy on John Key and a question is posed about Bill English.

Set aside the beguiling ovine image of Abbott being dagged. The issue for Australia is whether he will dag the economy — that is, fix the public sector (the budget) and prod private sector productivity with regulatory reform. read more

The transition waiting after Labour's leader vote

John Key likes to sneer that a Labour-led government would be “far left”. Yes, from his perspective, driving rightwards with energetic deregulation. But is it a true perspective?

At the first Labour leadership candidate hui at Levin on Saturday Grant Robertson encapsulated a potential counterattack to Key by ascribing to 1972-74 Prime Minister Norman Kirk a well-worn jingle summing mainstreamers’ wishes from life: somewhere to work, somewhere to live, someone to love and something to hope for. read more

The how, the who and Labour's long haul uphill

For a couple of months or so Labour’s leadership issue has been how to fix it and who should take over. Last Thursday David Shearer did one part of the “how” by pre-emptively saying he is resigning. Now for the second part of the “how” and for the “who”.

Labour’s need is to reduce disunity, so that the fight is against National, not within the party, and to energise Labour activists. read more

One hundred per cent pure … economic growth

Amy Adams: “An effective and efficient resource management system is an important part of our business growth agenda.” So, change the law “to ensure that our planning and resource management law enables economic growth as well as providing good environmental outcomes”.

Those comments underline that GDP growth is the cabinet’s dominant priority. When the cabinet has completed its extensive legislative programme on resource planning and use, the balance between environmental protection and economic development will have shifted significantly towards the latter. read more

Too big to fail — so the buck stops with you

Too-big-to-fail turned up in New Zealand this month — in triplicate.

Too-big-to-fail was the reason governments in the United States and parts of Europe gave for hosing taxpayers’ money into banks which had gone bust after reckless, deceptive and in some cases criminal behaviour.

The reason given for the bailouts was that to do nothing would have piled severe economic damage on the serious economic damage the banks had already done. read more

The bovver boy, the shock-jock and the geek

You know the cabinet thinks it has a public relations problem when it puts the bovver boy in the ring. Steven Joyce has that rare gift of seeming to smile while heaving an interviewer (or toughing it out in Parliament), topdressing flannel with “facts” the way a marketer does.

When Key gets in a jam, as over the mismanaged Henry inquiry, his body language shifts. He tries to sidestep — thus we have boat people coming, weapons of mass destruction and now Al Qaeda. He gives assurances that get falsified. Grant Robertson can then say he is slipping and sliding. read more

What's local and what's central? Time for a rethink

The celebrity royals delivered a celebrity baby last week to joyous celebration. Well, we do have our most royalist Prime Minister in 60 years — even if for a lot longer than that our governing modus operandi has been pragmatically republican in all but form.

The new heir might be a while taking up his inheritance. The Windsors’ long-living habit could hold George VII off till the 2080s. John Key will be long gone (off to republican United States?) and so, quite possibly, will the monarchy be gone from our constitution — though not from our celebrity media, if Britain keeps the Windsors on. read more

The liberal society and the GCSB spies

Governments normally try not to get offside with too many official bodies and lobby groups. It’s not good for electoral digestion.

So in June John Key flipped on Auckland transport (with some escape clauses). A senior minister explained it in one word: “voters”. If too many of Auckland’s many voters back the council against the government, that could be a problem. read more