The Shaky Isles have a new Government. At last. Christopher Luxon, with whom I spent a pleasurable day in Hawke’s Bay some years back when he ran Air New Zealand, is the new Prime Minister. Jacindarella is merely a grisly memory now. As is her successor, Chris “the vaccines weren’t forced on anyone” Hipkins.
There are two (alternating) deputy PMs, one a libertarian (David Seymour) and the other a complicated populist (Winston Peters), if you can believe that. Well, Argentina has a new leader too, a populist libertarian!
https://compactmag.com/article/javier-milei-s-anti-populist-populism
There is a bit of a right-of-centre/outsider revival going on abroad, what with Marine le Pen, Viktor Orban, Georgia Meloni and (now) Geert Wilders all in power or surging in opposition.
https://www.economist.com/europe/2023/11/25/geert-wilderss-dutch-election-win-is-a-headache-for-europe
Even Trump is ahead in the polls stateside and Robert F Kennedy Jr is causing serious grief for the legacy parties of the establishment. As Teresa Pinto notes:
Recent political events in Europe confirm the growth and consolidation of conservative right-wing parties, a trend that started in 2015 in Poland and has been steadily growing since then. Only five of the 27 European Union member states are now under socialist-led governments: Portugal, Slovenia, Malta, Denmark and Germany.
Over the past year, the radical right, conservative and center-right parties have won elections or joined government coalitions in Italy, Finland, Greece and Sweden.
In the Netherlands, the BoerBurgerBeweging (BBB), Farmer-Citizen Movement, founded in 2019, is leading the polls. The stellar rise of the BBB, which fights against the closure or mandatory state appropriation of livestock farms, exposes some of the critical political cleavages driving the conservative and populist momentum.
In Germany, the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) has overtaken the ruling Social Democrats in the polls. And while 2027 is still far off, Marine le Pen, leader of the French right-wing opposition, is positioned to win the presidential elections.
https://www.gisreportsonline.com/r/europe-conservative-wave/
And maybe it is happening here in Australia, too.
Airbus Albo is dead man walking. Dutton is a realistic shot at the next election. The unspellable premier in Brisbane is about as popular as flatulence in a space suit. Her frequent flyer points almost match those of her mate in Canberra. The Victorians might even be tiring of totalitarian, leftist crooks. The Rum Corps State and South Australia have Labor governments well to the right of their Liberal predecessors. The West has lost its Covid lunatic, McGowan.
Mind you, Paul Keating was wrong. If you change the government these days, you are by no means guaranteed of having changed the country. The re-colonisation of our liberal democracy will be a generation-long task, with not the slightest certainty it will come off. Parties of left and “right” come and go, and the State and society creep inexorably leftwards. Celebrations of pendulum swings are almost always premature and unwarranted. And yet, one hopes.
Perhaps there are lessons from across the Ditch.
One of the first acts of the new composite government finalized this past week – which just might have a little of the necessary “hybrid vigour” of a tough cross-bred to effect real change – has been to promise a full-on Covid commission of inquiry, to end any remaining vaccine mandates, and to question the proposed World Health Organisation pandemic treaty. Peters was on the side of the Covid angels before the election, and let us hope, still is.
(For a discussion of hybrid vigour, see https://quadrant.org.au/opinion/qed/2017/10/hybrid-vigour-true-diversity/ ).
Just as John Howard’s greatest achievement might well have been getting rid of Keating, the new Kiwi Government might not have to do much more than simply not being Labour. No, we have higher hopes than that. One of the hopes is that Winston Peters, who has been around since Moses was a boy, at or near the apex of government, might put a bit of stick about. Much written off, the old warhorse is back for more.
How have the Kiwis pulled off what we seem incapable of? That is, the election of a hybrid right-of centre government with two hovering “keep the bastards honest” types holding the timid centrists (the Nationals) in check. All we ever get is rich, green women (aka the Teals) and/or rabid greenies.
Once (in 2010), we got cross-benchers Tony Windsor and Rob Oakeshott, corruption-adjacent men whose greatest ambitions for the people of Australia were new roads and hospitals for Tamworth and Port Macquarie. I realise that all politics are log-rolling – you support me on “x” and I will give you “y” – but Tony and Rob raised the bar considerably. They put the pork into pork barrelling, but their own local punters were the only people to benefit from their “keeping the bastards honest” schtick.
The New Zealand result has been made possible by three things.
First, they had a government so bad that something radical had to be done about them. They have been filed under “d” for dustbin of history. Ardern knew the writing was on the wall well before election day. Her successor was always on a hiding to nothing, but he somehow made things worse. NZ Labour attempted, and largely succeeded, in turning their country into a race-based apartheid system co-run by radical, part-Maori activists. Then they tried to Covid-zero their way to the economic stone age, with lock-up policies on a par with those of Daniel Andrews, minus the rubber bullets. They cosied up to China. They pretended that they could change the climate. They out-woked the wokest in the world. (Wait a minute, isn’t that what Australia is doing, precisely)? The Kiwis had a government up there with Whitlam. It simply had to go.
Second, New Zealand has this weird, and mostly bad, electoral system that they copied from the Germans in the 1990s. The MMP (mixed member proportional) system, where voters get two cracks at representation, one with traditional electorates and the other with “list” candidates elected to reflect national tallies by the parties.
https://elections.nz/democracy-in-nz/what-is-new-zealands-system-of-government/what-is-mmp/
Mostly, this system has the likelihood of delivering unstable coalitions in power and policies for which no one voted. You see, once the election is “decided”, then you get a month or two of “negotiations” in which the major party hoping to get the baubles of office agrees to give up some of its policies – the policies on which it was elected – and add a whole bunch of policies on which it was NOT elected. And this is called ‘democracy”.
Yet, this time, it may just deliver a good outcome for the country.
Third, the Kiwis have a populist party with a leader of national standing and clear policies developed over decades. We do not. We have a bunch of micro freedom parties competing with one another and a total lack of cut-through and profile. The majors only ever get two thirds of the primary vote now. But they survive, only ever by the skin of their teeth and without anything like a mandate for the radical changes they routinely visit upon us. But they survive. We kick out a government that locked us all up for no good reason and hosed a trillion dollars of money they didn’t have up against the wall, only to get a replacement government that wished the previous lot had tried even harder to screw us during Covid, and that has found new ways to screw us, even worse than its predecessors.
And we have an electoral system that, in the House of Representatives, massively favours the two branches of the UniParty. In a few inner-city seats, where hard left green radicals congregate in numbers, you get a leftist candidate that can enough preference votes to defeat Labor. You decidedly do not get a Winston Peters or a David Seymour (the NZ Act Party leader). Those of us who might want to start an Outsiders Party have a snowball’s chance in hell of getting members elected, what with our geographic spread across the suburbs and regions. The only potential outsider party here, the Nationals, are brokeback-woke on most issues – decidedly not the voice, to their credit – and are minded only to get goodies for the bush. Those of us in the regions are, indeed, outsiders, but the Nationals are one-dimensional on outsiderism.
The new collaboration in New Zealand may work. And by “work”, I mean make a real difference and actually undo some of the demonic work of the other side, not just hang together for a term or two and occupy the Treasury benches with little effect. Can a libertarian/populist combo work?
The model might be Argentina’s Javier Milei. He inhabits the corrupt failed state that is home to Juan Peron, Pope Francis, a Peronist’s Peronist, and (according to at least one theory), an escaped postwar Hitler. (Yes, there is an absorbing and much critiqued book, Grey Wolf, that placed the Fuhrer in the back blocks of Patagonia post 1945. Postwar Argentina was certainly a refuge for escaped prominent Nazis and their loot, on Peron’s watch). Peronism is a strange ideological brew, and not of concern here. Simply to note that Peronist “populism” is a fair old distance from Post Covid outsiderism.
Back to Milei. Geoff Shullenberger argues:
Milei has been called “Trump of the Pampas,” and the 45th US president seemed to confirm their equivalence with a congratulatory post predicting Argentina’s president-elect will “Make Argentina Great Again!” But beyond an idiosyncratic coiffure and a flamboyant disregard for political niceties, these two nominal “populists” appear diametrically at odds on a range of matters of policy. What originally set Trump’s MAGA agenda apart was the candidate’s repudiation of the small-government consensus that had dominated the Republican Party since Ronald Reagan. Milei’s Southern-Hemisphere MAGA, in contrast, is Reaganism on steroids: The chainsaw he has campaigned with symbolizes his promise to cut government down to size.
Not so fast.
Libertarians and populists both hate corrupt big governments. Post-Covid outsiders have anarchist genes, as do libertarians. Just look at Albert Jay Nock, libertarian godfather and author of Our Enemy the State. They both hate crony capitalism. Libertarians have all read their public choice theory. Populists now intuit it. We know how the system works, with governments captured by client corporates and now working in cahoots with them to effect policies that defenestrate the people. Large corporates are about as far from Hayek and the Austrian economics school as you can get. The Covid State and its successor surveillance state, with all the tech-tools and trappings of totalitarian control, cut to the very core of the beliefs of both real liberals and outsiders.
The key to hoping in the prospects of the unconventional marriage is to recognise that big, overreaching States with a will to control more and more of our lives and in bed with crooked corporates like lying, cheating, chancer pharmaceutical companies are a giant political target around which anarcho-liberty types, outsiders and cranky centrists might all happily congregate and conspire.
This could work. It might be the hope of the side. And if it does work, we in the land of Oz should observe and ponder.
Winston’s moment.
Paul Collits
26 November 2023
‘Observe and ponder’ probably the best we can hope for. Both major parties adherents of the WEF and globalists. Climate policy? Hardly a difference. Covid policy and signing up to WHO control? Hardly a difference. Immigration? Labor just outshining the Liberals but both on that Ponzi scheme. Debt? Both heading all of us down the path to the Third World. Ceding power that should be in the hands of the Federal Government? Both still running the National Cabinet rubbish.
Little hope for any new political dawn on our horizon.
Luxon looks like a manager to me. I think when a centre right politician goes soft on life and death issues and stops listening to their base then all you get is more managers in government.
I still have the email from Dutton’s office calling beliefs in traditional age old virtues bigotry and hateful. So my faith in Dutton is not great.
We don’t need more managers in power.