It took a testy
Morning Report interview this week to remind me that Simon Bridges was still
the Leader of the Opposition. Until then, he had been largely invisible as the
events of recent weeks unfolded.
Of course, this
could have been a deliberate strategy on his part. He may well have decided
that as the Prime Minister squirmed on the hook of her credibility over the
ongoing Labour sex scandals issue, and the wider #metoo ramifications, it was
best that his Deputy, Paula Bennett, was left to front that issue, especially
since the disgruntled and dissatisfied Labour complainants had approached her
directly some while ago. Perhaps he may have felt that his becoming involved
would raise afresh the spectre of the Jamie-Lee Ross affair, and put National
on the back foot over its internal handling of that matter, so best that he
stay right out of things. Or, that the
Prime Minister would doing such a good job all by herself of skewering her
credibility through her vague and inconsistent answers, that there was no need
for him to get involved. Whatever the reason, the upshot was that he was left
looking very much missing in action.
Now, being Leader of
the Opposition is both the most difficult and the worst of jobs in New Zealand
politics, even at the best of times. A Leader of the Opposition who is too
sharp and critical is often dismissed as too negative and carping a critic,
forever chasing every parked car they come across, no matter its size or
significance. If, on the other hand, the Leader of the Opposition is more
balanced and prone to constructive criticism and promoting positive
alternatives, they are seen as not up to the job of holding the government to
account. It is the ultimate “no-win” job, and Mr Bridges is by no means its
first occupant to have struggled with this dichotomy.
However, there are
times when the Leader of the Opposition can make a positive impact and present
themselves as more than just the perennial critic, and become a Prime Minister
in waiting. Usually, these are times of some national crisis or disquiet, where
people are seeking reassurance and certainty, or just a return to common-sense.
At its heart,
politics is about trust. When trust goes, governments soon go too. Labour’s
woeful mishandling of recent events will have shaken many people’s trust in the
party and its leadership. Consequently, there was probably a moment in time –
now most likely to have passed – where the Leader of the Opposition could have
stepped into the fray and seized the high ground. But he did not do so.
Mr Bridges and
National could have grabbed the moment to position National as the party that
would deal with the increasing incidence of sexual abuse in large
organisations. He could have backed this up by demonstrating good faith, and
releasing for public scrutiny, with all the personal details withheld, the full
record of National’s recent inquiry into its own internal culture to show that
his party is serious about dealing with this issue. And he could have committed
National to pushing Speaker Trevor Mallard to implement fully the
recommendations of the recent Francis report on bullying within the
Parliamentary Service and the Parliamentary complex generally. But he stayed
silent. In any case, that moment has passed now, so picking up these issues at
this point would seem clumsy and contrived. Instead, National is left
flat-footed once more.
In the meantime, the
Prime Minister has jetted off overseas again to the comfort of the
international stage, no doubt seeking more of the international fawning and
adulation she has come to enjoy. While she is away, the country has been left
in the hands of her grumpy, irascible do-nothing Deputy. And the Speaker
continues to seem more interested in protecting the interests of the Labour
Party than making the Parliamentary complex a safe place for people to work in.
Meanwhile, business
and consumer confidence levels continue to fall and the prospect of recession
increases; suicide rates are climbing to abnormally high levels; housing
waiting lists and shortages are at all-time highs; the numbers of students
achieving NCEA credits are declining; overall dependency levels are rising; and,
the government’s self-proclaimed “Year of Delivery” looks more and like likely
to join Kiwibuild on the policy scrapheap. With just on a year until the next
election, all of these are presenting a further round of opportunities for the
Leader of the Opposition to assert himself and for National to step into the
increasing leadership vacuum.
Bare dare we hold
our breath waiting for him to do so?
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