Chris Hipkins demonstrated enthusiasm borne of desperation in the second leaders' debate this week. After his lack
lustre performance in the first debate and on the campaign trail generally, he needed to. But it is still unlikely to be
enough to reverse Labour's declining fortunes.
What was notable about Hipkins' performance was his focus on National's policies and record when last in office, rather
than his government's achievements or plans for a further term in office. It looked an implicit recognition that a
change of government is likely, a quite remarkable concession from an incumbent Prime Minister.
Christopher Luxon, on the other hand, was the same figure he was in the earlier debate – on-message to an almost
semi-robotic extent, largely unflustered by Hipkins’ barbs, and solid without being spectacular. While he had his
moments, he did not land any telling hits on Hipkins. But he did not need to. Given National’s position in the polls,
all he had to do was look and sound like a Prime Minister-in waiting, which he did.
He still had some weak moments – his unconvincing comments about working with New Zealand First stand out especially –
but overall, his performance was a satisfactory one. Unlike Hipkins who is fighting frantically to recover lost
territory, Luxon’s task now is to consolidate the ground he has already gained, meaning he does not need to be as
frenetic as Hipkins is now becoming.
In fairness to Hipkins, though, Labour’s decline in public support is not all his fault. Eight months ago, he inherited
a government that had already lost the confidence of a sizeable chunk of the population.
Analysis of all the opinion polls shows that Labour’s support has been in freefall for the last two years. In October
2021 Labour was averaging almost 43% in the polls – today it is averaging just under 27%. When Hipkins took over in
January this year Labour’s rolling average support was just under 30%, about three percentage points higher than today.
The important point to note is that the big plunge in Labour’s support occurred between October 2021 and the end of 2022
when Dame Jacinda Ardern was still Prime Minister.
There was a brief honeymoon resurgence of support for Labour in Hipkins’ first few weeks as Prime Minister while the
policy bonfire was underway, although that was nowhere near back to October 2021 levels. It began to peter out from late
April this year and as the election nears, now seems to be plummeting.
There are three possible explanations for this trend.
First, it is clear the main damage to Labour’s re-election prospects was done from the middle of 2021, almost eighteen
months before Hipkins became Prime Minister. In hindsight, the government’s perceived slowness in winding back pandemic
restrictions, alongside the mounting cost-of-living crisis brought about rising levels of public discontent. Compounding
that was the second Auckland lockdown, which Ardern promised would be “short and sharp”, but which went on for over four
months. Then Covid19 Minister Hipkins’ comments at the time that Aucklanders might to have book times to leave the city
for their summer holidays was a final straw. Labour’s average poll support fell over 6% between then and the end of the
Parliament occupation in February 2022, while National’s support rose nearly 10% over the same time.
Second, Labour’s rise in support during Hipkins’ first few weeks as Prime Minister when the policy bonfire was burning
suggested people might have been prepared to give him a chance. However, when it became clear that the bonfire was
simply about getting unpopular policies off the table, without replacing them with more popular alternatives, the
freefall in Labour’s support resumed. The various policy announcements Hipkins has made during the election campaign
have simply raised the retort that why is Labour only promoting these policies now, when it has had the best part of six
years in office to have implemented them.
The third reason for the long-term decline in Labour’s support has been the rise of National since Luxon took over as
party leader at the end of November 2021. At that time, National was averaging just under 27% in the polls, about twelve
points lower than Labour, and still well short of the numbers need to form a government. Since then, the positions have
almost reversed – National’s average support has risen 10%, while Labour has fallen by around 13%.
The inexorability of Labour’s long-term decline is what is fuelling the belated aggression in Hipkins’ approach as seen
in the second leaders’ debate. But the long-term trend of declining Labour support, means that realistically he will not
be able to overturn that trend in the little over two weeks until the election. With current polls suggesting half
Labour’s current MPs will lose their seats, Hipkins’ new aggression is far more likely to be about saving as many of
them as possible, to give Labour a reasonable chance of being a viable Opposition.
Consistent with that, and as last night’s debate showed, Hipkins’ strategy now is to tear as many holes as he can in
Nationals’ policies rather than to promote his government’s own plans, let alone its achievements.
The toughest thing for Hipkins though, as the polls show, is that Labour was doomed long before he became Prime
Minister. Nevertheless, as is the way with politics, he is the one who will have to shoulder the blame for its looming
defeat.
In case you missed it, read my latest Newsroom column on www.newsroom.co.nz