Free trade with the free — and with the unfree

In apartheid days support for rugby tours used to be called “building bridges”. Opponents, among them today’s Prime Minister, thought sports boycotts more likely to effect change. The argument spilled into the streets in 1981.

But trade with South Africa was small. Trade with China is very big and about to get bigger with a free trade agreement (FTA). read more

What is the place of the sacred in this modern society?

Easter is a holiday. Or Easter is a sacred time. Take your pick. Most picked holiday these past few days. So is anything sacred?

“Sacred” usually connotes religion. And for some people religion connotes anti-science and/or violence and intolerance. Hence recent scathing books by biologist Richard Dawkins and social and political commentator Christopher Hitchens. read more

The enduring damage of George Bush's wild Iraq adventure

This week is the fifth anniversary of George Bush’s invasion of Iraq. He claimed victory six weeks later. The war grinds on. Iraq subdivides.

None of the reasons/pretexts for the invasion has been validated.

Was it one battle in the “long war on terror”, following on from the swift ousting of the Taleban in Afghanistan after the September 11 atrocity? Not if by that were meant land battles: the “war on terror” is now prosecuted in intelligence databases, customs offices and at ever more paranoid airport security checkpoints. read more

The long and the short of offsetting a slowdown

Who gets hurt when the economy slips? How can that hurt be eased? This is where the economic debate is turning. And there is more to it than tax.

A slowdown hurts the poor first. No one much notices, except food banks, which for some time have been reporting rising demand, and budget advice services, helping people trapped in loan-shark debt and/or skewered by rising prices for essentials. read more

The other globalisation which will make us over

We are used to globalisation now. We surrender assets to foreigners. China makes more and more “New Zealand” goods. We bought our houses on Japanese housewives’ money. We get music off the internet. On balance we are richer for it.

There is another globalisation: of people — fleeing poverty and catastrophe, hunting riches. Are we, will we be, the richer for that? read more

When the art of political management counts

What has Helen Clark got that John Key hasn’t? Deep experience in management of policy, foreign affairs and government.

What did Clark have that Don Brash didn’t? Competence at political management — managing the politics.

What did she fall down on last year? Political management. Why is the Owen Glenn affair a bother now? Because of past and continuing failures of political management. read more

Educating under-5s — perhaps Labour's biggest idea

When it comes time to memorialise Labour’s fifth spell in office, it may be remembered most lastingly for early childhood education.

Note: education, not care. Childcare is the minding of children while parents are at work. Early childhood education prepares children to learn.

Of course, educating 3-5s also involves care. And if the state pays, it helps working parents by cutting the cost of that care. But it reaches well beyond care. read more

How can Clark possibly be 'fresh' like John Key?

Here’s an idea for Helen Clark, under suspicion for her Electoral Finance Act: name the election date today in her annual opening address to Parliament, then propose future election dates be fixed and regular.

Playing the time-dishonoured cat-and-mouse game with the election date this year might risk compounding the impression many voters have that Clark somehow set out to undermine democracy with her election finance law. read more

The changing shape of our almost national day

Each Waitangi Day we edge a little farther from memories of empire, as Sir Edmund Hillary’s non-Royal funeral reminded us. Each Waitangi Day these past few years we have come a little closer to embracing it as our national day.

For a quarter-century it was a day of disruption, protest and (literally in 2004) mudslinging. Helen Clark stopped speaking at Te Tii marae in protest at the protests. read more

The Key to the door for a party that wants to win

Sir Robert Muldoon had to wait 15 years after coming into Parliament to make Prime Minister. Jim Bolger took 18 years. So did Helen Clark. Can John Key do it in a bit over six and set a record?

First, Key has to see off Clark.

Clark has already shown her fighting spirit: impeccably groomed and magisterial centre-stage at the Hillary funeral, thereby stating her identification with “the nation”; her decision, after years of rejecting advisers’ urgings, to do an “Orewa” scene-setting speech this year, a day after Key’s own “Orewa”. read more