Dunne Speaks: Who is Really Pulling the Government's Strings
Dunne Speaks: Who is Really Pulling the Government's Strings
When a few months ago New Zealand First abruptly vetoed Labour’s plans to repeal the three strikes criminal justice law it was glibly explained away by Labour as just a breakdown in communication that would be resolved by the time a policy paper came anywhere near the Cabinet for consideration. With the Criminal Justice Summit then looming, and clearly more water yet to flow under the bridge, the explanation had a brief air of credibility about it, so was largely believed, and everyone moved on.
However, it will be a little more difficult to treat this week’s equally blunt dismissal by the Deputy Prime Minister of Labour’s long held plans to double the refugee quota in quite the same vein. All the more so, given the Deputy Prime Minister’s accompanying chilling observation that “Labour is not the government.” This would have been news to many people who thought we had a Labour-led coalition government with New Zealand First, and supported by the Greens.
Certainly the comments were intended
to play to New Zealand First’s racist constituency that
does not like either migrants or refugees and definitely
does not want to see any more of them. But they were also
sending a none too veiled reminder to Labour that this
government survives neither because of the gushing charm of
its leader, nor the self-imagined talent of its Ministers,
nor the will of the public, but simply and solely at the
pleasure of New Zealand First and its leader. Labour has
been placed on clear public notice that it needs to toe the
New Zealand First line to remain in office. The Prime
Minister’s muted response shows she understands her
predicament all too well, and will bow to it, because she
has no other option.
While this was always seen as
a potential risk for this coalition government, given its
make-up, Labour had earlier believed that during the period
of the Prime Minister’s maternity leave, their Ministers
would be able to straightjacket the Deputy Prime Minister,
to preserve the fiction this government was Labour-led, but
he was too wily for that to ever have been a possibility.
This was his opportunity to put his stamp clearly on the
government, and he was not going to be denied. He easily
outwitted his Labour colleagues and used his considerably
greater experience to perform better than most had expected
he would as Acting Prime Minister, and bring an air of
stability to a government that has looked somewhat chaotic
before and since. In so doing, he enhanced considerably his
stature within the government, as well as increasing New
Zealand First's dominance of it, leaving Labour between a
rock and a hard place.
By the time the Prime
Minister returned to duty, the die was firmly caste, and the
government had to all intents and purposes become a New
Zealand First/Labour coalition. Nothing has happened to
reverse that over the last few weeks, and the Prime
Minister’s travails with her own Ministers in the last
couple of weeks have reinforced the new
dynamic.
Against that backdrop, the refugee put
down this week is a ruthless assertion to the public of
where the power really lies in this government and who will
be calling the shots for the remainder of its term. The
Prime Minister's awkward balancing act from here on is to
continue to appear enthusiastic and aspirational, while at
the end of her Deputy's string, and only allowed to
implement the policies he mandates. How long the now
marginalised public tolerates that becomes an open
question.
ends