The other cost of climate change

Most of the argument about climate change, apart from whether it is really happening or whether humans are causing it, is about how to stop or slow it. But there is another costly game in the interminable global negotiations: who pays the bill for adapting to the changes we are told are coming.

If the United Nations scientists are right, the world will have no choice but to adapt to different and variable weather, sea level rises and other impacts. read more

Enhancing MMP — and on to a republic?

John Key thinks MMP is working well. So why is he going to put you to the expense of two referendums to decide whether to have a different voting system?

Once a Prime Minister had only his party’s caucus to whip into line. Patronage and party discipline usually sufficed, though there were occasional rebellions. One over proposed potato regulations in 1979 was the first shot in what exploded into the 1980s economic deregulation revolution. read more

Task for Turia: build permanent influence

Tariana Turia is fixing a personal health matter and will continue as Maori party co-leader after the 2011 election. The party needs that.

The party was born in anger and has been sustained in aspiration. Now it needs to drill foundations into the substrate of politics. That means members, money and organisation — and a message embedded in a long-term strategy. read more

Stopping crime turning into a big event

Judith Collins will officiate at another police “event” today — but not one with the flashing lights, sirens and fast cars that have become synonymous with police. She is to launch a new policing venture — to be done by the public.

This is not cost-cutting. The aim is to catch, charge and incarcerate more criminals and make the country more peaceable. The public is, or was, the point of having a police force. Which is the point Commissioner Howard Broad wants to re-emphasise. read more

The ETS's lesson for consensus-builders

Sue Bradford is leaving the Greens’ caucus next month. She lost a majority vote. That is not very Green.

Bradford is a battler. She has added a dimension of tough social activism to the Greens which they will not readily replicate. Not many MPs could have done her section 59 bill.

But Metiria Turei beat her in a majority vote to be co-leader. The Greens went for a change of generation. Bradford is baby-boomer 57. Turei is generation-x 39. Post-Bradford, the Greens will be less social-activist and more small-g green. read more

Taking the long view to Bill English

Bill English is about to get another reminder from the Treasury of the challenges ahead if the country is to stay fiscally prudent. And with it will come a prod to start thinking long-term about big decisions some government will have to make sometime.

The reminder will come in the Treasury’s second 40-year fiscal projection. This first was in 2006. read more

Hide: minister for constitutional change

While the Labour party in Rotorua was plotting a republic in a decade or so, back at the shop Rodney Hide has been getting on with constitutional change in the here and now.

Most obviously that change is coming in the new super-Auckland, with enhanced powers for its mayor. Auckland will be a bit like a state government. When the mayor of a third of the population speaks, a Prime Minister will have to listen. read more

Labour's challenge: to make post-2014 policy

Don’t look for despondency at the Labour party’s conference this coming weekend. This is not a party in mourning. It is a party sensing opportunity.

In part that is due to the influx of 14 able, mostly younger, MPs, in part due to the clean leadership changeover straight after the election, matched by a quick transition at the top of the party outside Parliament, and in part due to the Mt Albert by-election success. read more