Patrick Gower interviews Laila Harre
Patrick Gower interviews Laila
Harre
Headlines:
Laila Harre to quit as Internet Party leader by Christmas when the party has completed its review, but would love to return to parliament
Says party considering options for its future including winding up and continuing in another form.
The future of its alliance with Mana depends on Mana and if the Internet Party continues, but “all bets are off”
Internet Party “completely mismanaged” the last month of the election campaign
However she says Labour and the Green Party are also to blame for their attitude to Internet-Mana, and bought into “John Key’s narrative”
Claims Greens leaked news of the collapse of Labour-Greens alignment talks earlier this year
She’s not on Kim Dotcom’s payroll anymore and the party has spent the record $3.5 million donation it got from him
Is confident Dotcom was not connected to Rawshark and says John Key knew it wasn’t Dotcom even when he was claiming it was the German entrepreneur
Doesn’t believe Dotcom forged Warner Bros email; doesn’t know if it’s a fake but knows Dotcom believes it to be real
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Patrick Gower: Good morning. Good to see you after a
while.
Laila Harre: Nice to be here.
Are you
still here as leader of the Internet Party?
Yes, I am
here as leader of the Internet Party, and at the moment I'm
guiding the party through a review of the future. I've also
made a personal decision that once that review is completed,
I will step down from the leadership of the Internet party.
All options are then open for whether or not the party
continues as an electoral force or moves into some other
formation and plays its part in politics in a different
way.
So that will be by Christmas? You will step
down by Christmas?
Uh... yes. The timeline at the moment
is that we will be putting together a couple of options that
members will engage on, will vote on and will take from
there. I just wanted to make it clear to the members, from
whom I've had tons of support, and there's been a lot of
good feedback to me personally from members, that continuing
as a political party does not— they can't make the
assumption that I will continue in the leadership.
Sure.
I've made a firm decision about that.
It's over; you're out. What does this mean for your
political career?
For me, it means that I'm no longer
leading the Internet Party. Whether the Internet Party
continues as an electoral party is up to the members. If
it—
What about Laila Harre personally? Is this
your political career over now?
Who knows? Look...
(LAUGHS) rumours of my political career being over have
circulated many times over the last, you know, 15 years.
Look, I would love to be in parliament. I would love to be
articulating the kind of fundamental agenda and values that
Internet-Mana promoted in the election campaign, and I'm not
prepared to say never again to being personally at the front
line. But I also saw emerging in our election campaign an
incredible set of younger candidates. And I feel a bit like
a mother hen here. I want to enable them through my decision
to step down to explore all their political options too
rather than be trapped in this year's political entity and
this year's political tactic, you might say — to explore
their options more.
It may— it may be, by what
you've said there, that the Internet party doesn't continue
as an electoral-type party.
That's definitely one of the
options that we're actively canvassing with members.
It could become a lobby group or be wound up.
It
could be wound up. It could— the capacity that we've
built. Look, we've had massive engagement on our
policy-development platforms, in our social media—
And the merger with Mana — that isn't going to
continue?
Well, I mean, that will be up to Mana and if
the Internet Party continues as an electoral party, the
Internet party. Um, the Mana Party are having their AGM in a
couple of weeks' time. The agreement with Mana was always
predicated on the assumption that we be in parliament. So,
of course, all bets are off there, but there's very strong
goodwill. And again, for me personally, that was one of the
strengths of what we did this year — was engaging our
constituency with a kaupapa Maori party, which I think is
critical to the future of New Zealand politics.
Let's reflect on the campaign now, cos we know the
story. Internet-Mana went from 2.3% on the 3News-Reid
Research poll, higher than that on some other polls, then
you started to crash. In the end, Hone Harawira didn't make
it; nobody did. What went wrong?
Um, well, what went
wrong was that we completely mismanaged the last month of
the campaign. We had amazing momentum before then. The road
trip, I think, worked extremely well. What other party just
went out there on the front line, engaged with such large
audiences?
What was the mismanagement?
I think
the kind of beginning of that, really, was Georgina Beyer's
attack on Kim Dotcom, which fed into what became a narrative
of a rift and division, and it was one that we just couldn't
knock through the rest of the campaign. It became completely
distracting from the release of policy, for instance. I
mean, we launched a full employment policy that was second
to none and did not get one minute of coverage on, you know,
national news.
That's because Kim Dotcom stood up
and talked about hacking,...
Well...
...and Pam
Corkery attacked the media on the same—
Well, no, it's
because the media chose to focus on sideshows rather than to
allow us to present ourselves in the way that we were
presenting ourselves. So, you know, the media made a
decision to focus on Kim, and in a very negative way during
that period. The only way that we could have avoided that
was to take him completely out of the picture. And of course
then there would have been all the stories of 'what's
happened to Kim Dotcom?' And 'has he been side-lined?' And
so on. So we're kind of in the lose-lose position. Beyond
us—
Do you have any regrets in all of this? Cos
you must have.
I have absolutely no regrets about
choosing to get involved in this project. Back in April—
late April when I was first approached to consider the
leadership, it was very very clear that Labour and the
Greens were not going to make it over the line. I was
utterly committed to a change of government, and in order to
change the government, we had to make sure every single
progressive vote would count. For that to happen, Internet
Party votes had to count. For the Internet Party votes to
count, they had to do the deal with Mana. And for Mana to do
that deal, they needed a leader that Mana had some
confidence in.
Sure.
So I said yes. I put myself
into that position, and I think it was absolutely the right
thing to do. What I regret is actually the failure of the
Left overall to get its act together in a strategic and
tactical way during the election.
Gower:
What do you mean by the failure of the Left
overall?
Harre:
Well, let's go back to early April when the Greens and
Labour pulled the plug on each other. At that time I was on
the Green Party campaign committee. I felt that was a
terrible error by both parties. I thought it was a major
error by the Greens to leak the collapse of that
discussion.
You're saying that you were
working inside there at the time and the Greens
leaked...
I was
on the campaign committee as a volunteer. I wasn't working
for the party, but when the Greens decided to leak the
collapse of their discussions with Labour, I felt really
concerned about what that meant for the election campaign,
because what it meant was what I went through before the...
around the 1996 and previous elections, that this was going
to become a competition for votes on the Left rather than a
cooperation of Left parties to change the government.
Here's the counter argument, and you know it.
Labour and the Greens put the failure of the Left at your
feet.
Well,
it's very convenient.
They blame it on
Internet-Mana. Andrew Little, all of the Labour leadership
candidates all say being connected to Internet-Mana and to
Kim Dotcom helped bring the Left
down.
I think,
actually, what brought, overall... I mean, this was always
going to be a very— Can I just give you my view on this?
This was always going to be a very finely balanced election
outcome. There was no way, no way, never in any polls that
Labour and the Greens were going to get sufficient support
to form a majority government. That meant we had to rescue
progressive votes to. To do that—
I
understand all of this. But what also happened was National
romped home. It wasn't close. The Left got thrashed. You
guys have been blamed for helping bring down the Left and at
the same time there's an argument that you pumped up the
Right. People who were scared of Kim Dotcom. People were
scared of Internet-Mana. People didn't like to deal with
Hone Harawira. Not only did you tear down the Left, there's
an argument that you helped John Key win by
more.
Well,
let's look at some of the facts here. The Internet-Mana
Party deal led to an increase in support for the combined
two parties. The early part of our campaign, which Kim was
very actively involved in in the road trip, saw a growth in
support for Internet-Mana. It was at that point that the
Right went fully on attack against Kim, and used Kim and the
Internet Party-Mana agreement as the basis for an attack on
the Left. At that point, Labour—
And it
worked.
Yes,
but why did it work? Because at that point Labour and the
Greens had a choice. They could either join John Key's
narrative, or they could do the only thing that would have
made it possible to get over the line, and that was to
accept that putting together a majority in parliament, this
time round, that did not have National as part of it was
going to depend on working constructively with other
parties. Labour ruled out just about every other party
during the course of the election campaign, and I think that
was a big mistake.
So in summary, those
parties not supporting Internet-Mana, those parties trying
to distance themselves from you, is to blame for your
downfall. You're blaming
Labour—
No,
I'm not blaming them for our downfall. What I'm saying is
that I think they just played into the Right's narrative
about it. So they fed it. They made it more of a problem.
And I think the key to politics is knowing and accepting the
environment you're operating in. They didn't like us. They
didn't want us, but we were there and they needed to accept
that reality.
Let's talk about Kim Dotcom
now. Are you still on his
payroll?
No!
Goodness, no.
Are you still in contact
with him?
Yes.
I'm periodically in contact with him.
How?
Mainly by text message. Kim is focussing on
his legal issues, obviously. That's the critical point.
Did you ever seek assurances from him that he
was not involved in the hacking, that he was not connected
to Rawshark?
I
didn't need to because he was absolutely upfront and direct
about that, and I completely accept those assurances, and I
also believe that John Key knew, and John Key said now that
he knows who the hacker is. I think he knew who the hacker
was, and he that he knew it wasn't Kim Dotcom, and he kept
feeding you guys. Look, we had this conversation during the
campaign where he had convinced you that he believed Kim
Dotcom was the hacker. I think we now know that he knew
right from the start that Kim Dotcom was not the hacker.
That was just a complete red herring.
As
for the moment of truth when Kim Dotcom failed to deliver.
You know, the proof was apparently that email from Kevin
Tsujihara. Warner Brothers says that that was a forgery. I
mean, do you believe it was
real?
I believe
that Kim, given the opportunity to share everything about
that email, would be able to defend his belief that it's
real. Look, I can't answer that. I wasn't directly involved
in obtaining it or being involved in the process of—
Either Kim Dotcom's forged it or Warner
Brothers has made it up.
I absolutely don't believe Kim Dotcom has
forged it. I absolutely believe that Kim believes it's real
based on the evidence he has about its origins.
The $3.5 million. What happened to that?
Who's got control of it?
Well, that money's been spent. I mean,
let's remember that that money was spent from pre the launch
of the Internet Party in March and committed. I think we
could have done a whole lot—
Was this
it for you? The dream of a well-funded campaign — the
chance of a lifetime. Is that what was there for you, and
now maybe you regret it?
What was there for me and for the kind of
politics I represent, was the chance to change the
government and to get a platform in parliament for some very
new progressive ideas. Look, I've walked off platforms in
this election campaign where I was the only candidate—
And speaking of walking, where do you go from
here?
...the
only candidate promoting free tertiary education. You know,
you had Labour and Green candidates saying user-pay tertiary
education was a necessary evil. I reject that. Where to from
here? Well, for me, being outside parliament as a political
party is not a game that I think is worth the candle. What I
want to do, though, is continue to promote and connect with
the kind of more radical, I guess, policies that we began to
introduce into the election. And when I say radical, I don't
mean marginal. I mean radical in the sense of fundamentals.
So I'm going on a journey in February with my sister. It's
called 'Rethink the System'. We've got a website.
Rethinkthesystem.org. We're going on a sort of pilgrimage
meets activism to connect with people over fundamental
social change issues.
Sounds like fun.
Really sorry. We're out of time.
Thank you.
Thank you.