The great nineteenth British Prime Minister, William Gladstone, once observed that “the first essential for a Prime Minister is to be a good butcher.” When a later British Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan, sacked a third of his Cabinet in July 1962, in what became known as the Night of the Long Knives, Liberal MP Jeremy Thorpe wryly commented – in a clever paraphrasing of St John’s Gospel – that “greater love hath no man than he lay down his friends for his life.”
Both
Gladstone’s maxim and Thorpe’s quip go to the heart of the challenge a Prime
Minister faces in managing the Cabinet. The Prime Minister is “primus inter
pares” – first among equals – and is therefore responsible for the conduct of
the Cabinet’s business. This applies whether the Cabinet is chosen by the Prime
Minister (with the agreement of coalition partners) as is the case whenever
National leads a government, or selected by the government caucus (again, with
the agreement of coalition partners) whenever Labour leads the government.
When
Ministers fail to perform, or are seen to be struggling in their portfolios,
the expectation is that the Prime Minister will act. Moreover, while they will
seldom get kudos for doing so, Prime Ministers certainly attract public
criticism for hanging on to Ministers seen to be out of their depth. It is, of
course, a careful balancing act, and Prime Ministers, whose very survival
depends on the support of colleagues, cannot afford to be seen as either overly
protective of weak performing Ministers for too long, or too trigger-happy and
impetuous when it comes to getting rid of them.
The
ultimate judgement will reflect the Prime Minister’s assessment of the
detrimental impact a Minister’s performance may be having on the perception of
the government’s performance (and by extension, that of the Prime Minister),
and whether a compelling or credible public case can then be made for demotion
or dismissal. It is something successive Prime Ministers have been loath to act
on too precipitately, with most preferring instead to wait until the now normal
pre-election Cabinet reshuffle, or the post-election formation of the new
Cabinet, to sort things out.
This
week’s demotion of Ministers Melissa Lee and Penny Simmonds need to be seen in
that light. While both have been stripped of sensitive portfolios where they
were not seen to be performing effectively (Communications for Lee, and
Disabilities for Simmonds) both have retained their other portfolios and remain
Ministers, although Lee will now be a Minister outside Cabinet.
Three
features of Prime Minister Luxon’s downgrading of these two Ministers stand
out.
First,
the timing. The Prime Minister clearly considered that the problems Lee and
Simmonds were having in their respective Media and Disabilities portfolios were
unlikely to go away in the short term. They were therefore likely to be too
much of an unwelcome distraction in the lead-up to next month’s Budget, where
the government will be looking to glean the most positive publicity it can, in
what is likely to be a very grim environment. Getting rid of unnecessary,
negative distractions now, and passing the portfolios to more experienced
hands, was the expedient and prudent thing to do.
Second,
the scope. There is likely to be general agreement that Lee and Simmonds had
lost the respective plots in the Media and Disabilities portfolios and were
unlikely to be able to recover the loss of credibility associated with that, at
least in the short term. Few tears are likely to be shed at their removal, but
it may have been a different story had they been removed as Ministers
altogether. That could have aroused questions of overreaction which would have
reflected badly on the Prime Minister’s leadership style.
As
it is, he has sent two clear messages – one to both Ministers that they are on
their last warning, and that they will be unceremoniously shown the door if
anything else goes wrong. The second warning is to all other Ministers about
the Prime Minister’s limited tolerance for poor performance and the fate that
might await them in such circumstances. Neither will have done him any harm
with his Caucus colleagues, nor with the wider public.
However,
the third feature is more problematic. Both Lee and Simmonds are National Party
Ministers, making it somewhat easier for the Prime Minister to deal with them. It
will be a different situation though, should future circumstances involve New
Zealand First or ACT Ministers. While the ultimate authority about who serves
as Ministers lies with the Prime Minister, any decision to demote or dismiss
New Zealand First or ACT Ministers would have to be handled very deftly and
would be reliant on the ultimate agreement of the leaders of those parties.
The
Prime Minister’s credibility would be severely, perhaps irreparably, damaged if
he were to attempt or demote Ministers from New Zealand First or ACT without
agreement from those parties. In this context, it is interesting to compare the
treatment of National Ministers Lee and Simmonds, with that of New Zealand
First Minister Casey Costello who arguably caused the government just as much
embarrassment, yet suffered no sanction, over her appalling handling of the
smoke-free issue.
The
Prime Minister may have flashed his butcher’s knife and laid down Ministers Lee
and Simmonds for his life this week, but the wider context strongly suggests
that he, like other New Zealand Prime Ministers before him, still has some way
to go to live up to Gladstone’s maxim.