John MacDonald: Nats, ACT, NZ First: Did it really have to be this way?
Election 20236 Nov 2023

John MacDonald: Nats, ACT, NZ First: Did it really have to be this way?

If you get a text message today from David Seymour - just reply. Just in case it is him.

Which is what Winston Peters should have done. Instead of thinking that the text message he got after the election from “David Seymour” wasn’t from Seymour himself, but was from someone pretending to be David Seymour.

But I suppose that’s what happens when you’ve been Foreign Minister before. You get all “5 Eyes” on it and you don’t trust anyone or anything.

So, with the final election results in, Christopher Luxon now has the job of cobbling together a government with ACT and NZ First. And he’s putting on a brave face but did it really have to be this way?

I don’t think it did. And I’ll tell you why.

National has 48 seats. The Green Party 15 seats. Add them together. What do you get? You get enough to form a government. That’s what you get.

Now think about how, before the election, Christopher Luxon used to bang on about how little time he spends in Wellington.

Remember that? Every opportunity, he’d say that if he didn’t need to be in Parliament he’d be out of Wellington, on the road, meeting people up and down the country.

Well, he might be regretting that. Because I think he would be a much happier man today if he’d actually spent a lot more time in Wellington over the last three years.

If he had, he could’ve come up with a much more exciting, forward-thinking, innovative government than the one he’s been lumbered with now that the special votes have all been counted and we have a final result.

His strategy over the past three years shouldn’t have been getting in the faces of as many people outside Wellington. His strategy should’ve been to get in the faces of key people in Wellington as much as possible. Selling them the idea of creating a truly transformational government.

Yes, he’s Prime Minister and National is going to be in government again. And, if he pulls off the “strong and stable” bit, then he will have done well, given the personalities he now has to work with. But, overall, his strategy has failed.

It’s failed because he hasn’t convinced enough people that two coalition partners are better than three and the best we can hope for during the next three years is a steady ship with no mutinies.

But if Luxon had done things differently, imagine how things could have looked today.

Imagine if Luxon had spent the last three years working the Green Party around to the idea of a National/Greens government?

Look at the number of seats now the final result is in. National has 48 seats. The Greens have 15. Put those together - 63 seats. A majority in the House.

Now I said before the election that I thought, for the first time since we’ve had MMP, people were going to be voting to have their values represented in Parliament - as much as voting for a government.

And I think we’ve seen that. Especially when you consider how the minor parties really are the winners.

But of those minor parties, and based on the results, it’s the Greens who have come out best. A record 15 seats. Compared to ACT’s 11 and NZ First’s 8 seats.

Now you might think that Christopher Luxon would have just as much of a handful keeping James Shaw and Marama Davidson in check, as he will with David Seymour and Winston Peters. And you may very well be right.

But imagine the possibilities.

LISTEN ABOVE

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Episoder(596)

Andrew Geddis: Otago University law professor on the impact of changing rules on enrolling to vote

Andrew Geddis: Otago University law professor on the impact of changing rules on enrolling to vote

A constitutional law expert suggests changing rules on enrolling to vote could benefit the current Government. A report by the Auditor-General's found pressures on systems led to mistakes in the vote ...

8 Mai 20243min

Karl Le Quesne: Chief Electoral Officer on the Auditor-General report revealing issues within 2023 election vote count

Karl Le Quesne: Chief Electoral Officer on the Auditor-General report revealing issues within 2023 election vote count

Big numbers of special votes and enrolments took a toll on vote counters in last year's election. A report on the count by the Auditor-General has found the final check of the official result was done...

7 Mai 20243min

Politics Central: Recapping 2023 in politics

Politics Central: Recapping 2023 in politics

It’s been a big week in politics, as a host of Labour's policies have been tipped on the scrap heap as the new coalition Government starts passing laws at pace. Finance Minister Nicola Willis joins th...

17 Des 202340min

The Sunday Panel: What are our hopes for 2024?

The Sunday Panel: What are our hopes for 2024?

This week on the Sunday Panel, Coast day host and Victoria University Senior Law Lecturer and columnist Morgan Godfery joined in on a discussion about the following issues of the day- and more!  We st...

17 Des 20237min

Francesca Rudkin: New revelations set up a sombre political tone for 2024

Francesca Rudkin: New revelations set up a sombre political tone for 2024

On our first Sunday back at the beginning of this year, the Labour Government confirmed who our new Prime Minister would be.   So much has happened since then.   When Chris Hipkins took on the role, i...

16 Des 20232min

Francesca Rudkin: I enjoyed this action-packed week in politics

Francesca Rudkin: I enjoyed this action-packed week in politics

About now most of us are on the countdown. The countdown to Santa Claus’ brief visit and the end of the year. The countdown to some time off, a chance to stop and reset. Or perhaps it’s the countdown ...

9 Des 20232min

Chris Hipkins: Labour leader criticises National's proposed 100-day plan

Chris Hipkins: Labour leader criticises National's proposed 100-day plan

The Labour Party leader says National's throwing away years of work for ideological reasons. Chris Hipkins has unveiled his shadow cabinet, and vows they're ready to hold the Government to account. Pr...

30 Nov 20234min

Grant Duncan: political commentator responds to Luxon's 100-day plan

Grant Duncan: political commentator responds to Luxon's 100-day plan

Despite some setbacks, Luxon has unveiled his Government's 100-day plan. The plan features 49 action points, including repealing the Auckland Regional Fuel Tax, the Clean Car Discount scheme, and Fair...

29 Nov 20232min

Populært innen Politikk og nyheter

giver-og-gjengen-vg
aftenpodden
aftenpodden-usa
forklart
popradet
stopp-verden
fotballpodden-2
rss-gukild-johaug
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
nokon-ma-ga
det-store-bildet
hanna-de-heldige
dine-penger-pengeradet
rss-ness
rss-espen-lee-usensurert
aftenbla-bla
e24-podden
rss-dannet-uten-piano
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
frokostshowet-pa-p5