Out on the edge, how do you build your vote?

On the wings of our electoral system are two parties which claim the future. But they could hardly be more different futures and they could hardly promote them more differently.

The Greens want ecological harmony, humans linked to nature in economic as well as spiritual life. ACT instals the individual at the centre of the universe and insists true harmony comes from individuals following their best instincts. read more

The deeper issue in the road tax aggro

Bill English, a Southlander, is fomenting aggro between the provinces and Auckland. This is an interesting tactic.

Of course, more people live outside Auckland than in it. And the JAFA syndrome is alive and well. But an aspiring Prime Minister usually seeks to unite, not divide.

And an aspiring Prime Minister seeks especially not to make Auckland a target. When tax-scourge John Banks is on the side of higher taxes, one ought to register that something is up. read more

Now for the next Anderton party?

Pity the proletariat, the teeming masses with nothing to lose but their chains. They are losing their champions.

However the drama plays out in the Alliance now, the party’s hard-left council ideologues holding aloft the revolutionary standard are in real danger of oblivion.

It is now close to irrevocable that Jim Anderton will head a different group, perhaps constituted around the disgruntled Democrats, into the election and into the next Parliament. This move may come by end-April and may end “staunch” Laila Harr�’s cabinet career. read more

Time to rethink our national symbols?

The Queen will come amongst us on Friday. This is a signal event.

OK, she’s not making a special visit to cheer up her loyal subjects. She’s en route to Australia to preside at the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting.

But she is our head of state and commands all due respect. It’s not often she trips out this far from her British fastness. read more

The spectre that stalks Bill English

A spectre stalks Bill English: the National sympathiser who votes Labour to block out the Greens.

This sort of talk has been around for the best part of a year. It quietened after Jenny Shipley was dumped in October. But it revived when English and his party disappeared during the summer.

The line goes like this. Labour looks odds-on for a second term. The Green peril is on the rise. So vote Labour to give the Labour-Alliance coalition a majority and leave no levers in Green hands. read more

Eat your cake and grow it too

Now we have the government’s manifesto for a second term. That manifesto is: “Eat your cake and grow it, too.”

The innovation strategy announced to Parliament yesterday rejects any suggestion that hard choices are needed between social and environmental spending and economic policy if growth targets are to be met. All three will proceed in parallel. read more

Innovating with the private sector

Embedded in Prime Minister Helen Clark’s annual statement to Parliament on February 12 fleshing out her ambition to “transform” the economy will be lashings of private sector thinking.

This itself represents a transformation — of government-business relations. Two years ago ministers scandalised business with policies friendly to their core supporters but hostile to business. After the smoke cleared from that battlefield the government and some in business began gingerly to explore paths across no-man’s-land. read more

Waitangi: It's about power-sharing now

The Treaty of Waitangi was supposed, its British signatory famously said, to make one people of two. Today it signifies two cultures, not one.

And the unified power system imposed by the British assumption of government which the treaty legitimised no longer goes unchallenged.

That is biculturalism. Get it right and the future looks promising. Get it wrong and we risk a mini-Palestine. read more

Making a nation still eludes us

This non-nation will struggle through — or simply ignore, except as a holiday — its notional national day next Wednesday.

Twenty-nine years ago a nationalist Prime Minister, Norman Kirk, who made February 6 the national day, said the Treaty of Waitangi gave two peoples “the gift of opportunity”. read more

Getting poorer to get richer

A marvellous thing happened on our way into the twenty-first century. Our economic prospects started to feel better — but that is partly because we got poorer.

Provided no international economic calamity takes us all down, this decade is shaping up not too badly.

Exports have gone well these past couple of years and the proceeds have been flowing into the cities. Migration has turned from an outflow to an inflow. The stockmarket, while hardly rocketing into the ether, did well above the world average last year. read more