Where is the “centre” in populist times?

Helen Clark doesn’t know when to bow out. That is not a statement about her bid to boss the United Nations. It is about her bossing the Labour party.

Labour needed, she told Radio New Zealand last week, to hold the “centre ground”, as she said she had.

That implies that Andrew Little’s Labour party, shacked up with “left”-ish Greens, has tilted too far “left”. It glosses her failure in 2008 to hold the “centre” against John Key’s National party. read more

Now for a revamp of “tertiary” education?

John Key declared on The Nation that he would serve out a fourth term if re-elected. That would make him the third-longest-serving Prime Minister.

King Dick Seddon did four and a-bit terms from 1893 to 1906 — 13 years, 41 days.

Farmer Bill Massey did most of four terms, from seven months after the 1911 election to six months before the 1925 one — 12 years, 10 months. (One term was five years.) read more

Rule by citizens and remaking the constitution

Rule by citizens: that ideal is what a leading Young New Zealand First man said drew him to be active in Winston Peters’ party.

This young man, like most of his expanding cohort in the party, is a university student, not a gullible yokel. He is completing a master’s degree.

On cue, New Zealand First passed a remit at its conference two weekends back that pushed for citizens’ initiated referendums (CIRs) to be binding, needing signatures from only 5% of the electorate to get it up (against 10% now) though requiring, on Peters’ intervention, a 66% yes vote to pass. read more

Robertson’s task: to build something to be proud of

Three National ministers and an MP proclaimed in Parliament last Wednesday their “pride” in what their government has done on climate change. Really?

The cabinet’s proud record is an emissions trading scheme which exempted farmers and traded in crooked units from Russia and Ukraine plus tentative moves on transport and heating and research on animal methane. read more

Immigration is about much more than houses

Winston Peters has banged on about immigration for close to a quarter-century. In the 1996 election it was his salient point of distinction, as Asian migrant numbers climbed.

His party got 13% and he got to be Deputy Prime Minister.

Immigration wasn’t Peters’ only line. He was pitching against market-liberal economics, soothing ageing survivors of Sir Robert Muldoon’s “Robsmob”. read more

Investing in a public sector transition – to what?

Dorothy Adams, head of Bill English’s social investment unit, is from the Ministry of Social Development (MSD), has a State Services Commission (SSC) email address and is quartered in the Treasury. Meet the new public sector.

Actually, most of the sector will remain in its various bunkers.

But another different bit is the proposed ministry for vulnerable children (as the New Zealand Herald labelled it last week). It is intended to be able, like the Accident Compensation Corporation, to buy the services it needs for its at-risk children. read more