Where's the opposition?
Labour, Green Party and Te Pati Māori have been relatively quiet as the Coalition government move at breakneck speed to sell NZ and transfer wealth.
Let me start with -
Yes, I know National, ACT and NZ First are very well funded and supported by friendly platforms, promoters, and our wealthiest - pre and post-election.
I also remember when David Seymour personally attacked journalist Benedict Collins, then 'suggested' he would "review" TVNZ and make them pay a dividend despite its financial struggles.
Seymour went on to call NZ media "hateful" and promised to change the media landscape with over 800 new appointments, as his host advocated for a "pogrom" of government critics.
i.e. The media is struggling financially but also significantly weakened under this government.
Next - our system is predicated on money.
In the 2023 electoral year, National raised $10.3 million, more than doubling the $4.7m raised by Labour.
RNZ has a graph showing that:
Overall, the Coalition government's donations significantly outgunned parties on the left.
And while there were wealthy folks who donated to Labour and the Greens, it was incomparable compared to NZ's richest individuals and families donations:
3 more points:
These are only the known and declared donations
Paul Goldsmith buried the Independent Electoral Review recommendations ie. canned electoral donor transparency.
ACT and National are supported by cashed up groups which act for them - during elections and after.
For example, Taxpayers Union has been called "ACT in drag" and a "political apparatus" of the National Party in Nicky Hager's 'Dirty Politics'. Taxpayers Union had income of $2.8 million in 2022.
These right wing allies including Taxpayers Union, Groundswell, Hobsons Pledge & an unverified American group called "Vote Better NZ" all spent big during the official election period last year for the Coalition.
i.e. A lot of money went in - and the right wing government won.
Even before hand, Jordan Williams boasted to Atlas Network it was in the bag:
"An upcoming election is expected to deliver a government more favorable to market-based thinking in New Zealand..[We will] establish New Zealand as a pro-freedom policy laboratory.”
Finally, one of NZ's richest families, the Wright Family which runs Best Start, funds Sean Plunkett.
Now that is all said to make clear the right is extremely well resourced.
Overpoweringly perhaps.
Still and despite this all -
Where is the opposition?
To be fair - I have seen the left bloc parties in Parliament and they are all doing a great job at holding our government to account there - and responding through press releases.
This is one I recorded -
But still - it’s not enough.
The media is not leading with Opposition headlines - as they did when Luxon and Seymour were in opposition.
Many are not even bothering to properly cover opposition perspectives in their articles. e.g. Stuff when quoting Simeon Brown's 3 Waters comments earlier in the year.
And Stuff were very happy to pursue Golriz Ghahraman over a few dresses, and camp outside her home for days - but exhibit restraint and relative silence when it comes to Casey Costello’s obvious tobacco links that will cost Kiwi lives, or Nicola McKee’s gun lobbyist ties and her lying about her role in the Christchurch terrorist gun laws.
The opposition leaders and narratives are not coming across.
So where is the responsibility?
Is it a matter of money and resources?
Media alliances? [Ignore NZME1 - there is no doubt here]
Influence?
David Seymour’s “promises” having a chilling effect on media?
Corporate ad money?
The strategy by this government to throw so much out so fast that media simply cannot catch up?
Struggling media landscape - hemorrhaging money in some quarters such that their resources are unable to cope anymore?
Chlöe Swarbrick once said she wanted the Green Party to be the leading left wing voice. Which I thought at the time meant a non-collaborative approach. And Chris Hipkins and Labour appear to be re-calibrating after their loss. Te Pati Māori are solid in Parliament, but largely absent from media.
So many are wondering where the opposition is.
I personally see the unions speaking up and standing strong - and that is very welcome - especially for a sector that has been effectively annihilated in strength through successive Labour and National governments.
But can we have more leadership all round?
Yesterday, David Seymour announced the government would make it easier for wealthy foreigners to buy up NZ - our precious and limited resources and lands.
That's after revelations Ministers Chris Bishop, Shane Jones, and Simeon Brown instructed their fast-track projects "independent” advisory panel to ignore all and any environmental implications, and take all applications on face value i.e. accept whatever the applicants say.
No coincidence $500,000 of political donations overlapped with 'successful applicants.
Then there’s the rapid increase in jobseekers from a government that has eliminated almost 7000 public service roles while simultaneously making it harder for people out of work, crashed the construction sector before moving in to underwrite private developers with taxpayer money, increased debt – not for productivity measures – but rather $12bn of govt borrowing for tax cuts, put more children into poverty, overturned ~10 years of NZ court decisions to bring seabed mining to NZ, and increased speed limits around school zones despite evidence it saves lives.
And I haven’t even touched on Luxon’s message that everything in NZ is up for privatisation under their government – our hospitals, health systems, schools, water infrastructure – while his govt. systematically underfunds Health in a replay of the UK, and facilitating simpler money laundering.
So I think it would be good – if possible – for Labour, the Green Party, and Te Pāti Māori to form a united front and muster genuine co-operation.
That could be a strength.
Can it be done?
I don’t know.
But I think it’s a country over party type of moment – and I for one hope that we’ll see more of our Opposition united, co-operating and leading.
One last but important point - to anyone reading and who cares, don’t wait for someone else to act too - do your part - positively and peacefully where and how it makes sense for you.
For too long, we as humans want someone else to stand up, to do the work, to speak first, to get chopped down if necessary [and we can then praise them], but life presents us a conundrum: it’s no longer about asking others to do the work, but look also to what we can do for others too. We’re in it together so we might as well start acting like it and chip away at our own habits too.
Isn’t that what it’s about, Kiwis?
NZME has a close relationship with Atlas Network’s NZ Initiative.
Id like to hope at the moment the left are giving the CoC enough rope to hang themselves (polls beginning to show that). I do hope that collectively, behind the scenes the left are formulating an alternative plan to failed neoliberalism that is concise, logical and easily sold to the swing voter.
Thanks MT, another great substack. I hear people ask why the opposition "arent saying anything and standing up to this government" alot. So many people dont realise that so much of the media is privately owned and gets to direct the narrative. Thank goodness for social media and Al Jazeera etc or we'd probably all be swallowing Zionist propaganda right now. The Greens and Te Pati Maori work together well and often. They work with Labour sometime but I sense that Labour still has a bit of a FPTP mindset and sees the Greens as a threat to their vote and their status as 'the opposition'. I know that some Labour MPs resented having to work with the Greens on policy implementation to gain their support previously. Although I dont think the left/right dichotomy is that relevant in NZ anymore, I'll use it just to make this point. My observation is that parties on the right of politics in NZ are quite capable of 'swallowing dead rats' just to get in power. i.e they will lie through their teeth as we have seen with this current government - 'say anthing to get elected'. The parties on the left tend to stand on their principles and policies alot more, they dont want to have to reneg or back down on their promises, to their detriment when they start squabbling over detail and lose sight of the big picture. I still think there are some outstanding MPs within Labour, The Greens & Te Pati Maori. I also would like to add that I think getting behind Tangata Whenua to protest the Treaty Principles Bill and other policies that hurt Maori the most is extremely important. If they can undermine Tangata Whenua then that will really will be the final nail in the coffin. Just look overseas to see how Neo Liberal/Atlas Network policies have undermined and destroyed indigenous peoples rights and created open and free exploitation and destruction of the environment..... The one think holding that back here is Te Tiriti.