NZ First Is A Party Of The Glorious Future – Not Just The Past

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I woke up yesterday morning to yet another NZ Herald piece castigating NZ First as a warmed-over party of the past with nothing new nor worthwile to say.

This is, to my mind, considerably ironic – as that’s pretty much *exactly* how you’d have to describe a print-media publication running tired attack lines from ten years ago on repeat like anyone cares.

Although I’m not sure I’d *quite* stoop to calling anyone who takes Armstrong’s latest column seriously “the politically dazed and confused“. Even if Armstrong himself demonstrably fits that category.

As far as I can make out. Armstrong’s “critiques” boil down to three key points:

– that NZ First doesn’t have a Post-Winston succession plan, and therefore will struggle to attract new members;
– that NZ First’s core narrative that life was BETTER under something other than Neoliberalism is somehow flawed;
– and flowing on from this, that NZ First’s policy-development is rooted in the past, with a “back to the future” feel to it.

All together, he’s basically trying to say that much like New Zealand’s economic sovereignty under National … we ain’t got a future.

Well bollocks to that!

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First up, NZ First quite clearly and demonstrably has a completely capable, competent and even charismatic future Leader in Ron Mark. I know I haven’t gotten around to the much-awaited Part III of my Life After Winston series yet, but just check out my commentary on him from this weekend in the interim.

What’s needed to turn NZ First into that genuine “mass-movement” Party that Winston was talking about on Saturday is a focused combination of inspiring motivation and guidance from on high, coupled with ability and know-how from the rank-and-file membership to bring in more people.

And from everything I saw over the weekend, New Zealand First is a Party that’s undeniably got both in spades!

It’s not my place to run around the country anointing MPs with future leadership positions, or predicting the timetable by which any succession plan may unfold. But to return to Armstrong’s prognostications … we aren’t publicly indicating how we’re going to sort the leadership-succession plan yet, because there is not yet any great need. As even some of our harshest critics in the media have been forced to concede, “Winston Peters is in the form of his life!”

So when it comes to the big question for the near future about how we boost up Party membership numbers by the thousands in order to counter Armstrong’s supposition that our support base is “pass[ing] away”, contrary to what Armstrong might think the answer is not rooted in who’ll take over at some as-yet unspecified point in the future.

Instead, we need to work out how we can properly support Winston to the absolute BEST OF OUR ABILITY in continuing to attract new members, activists and voters.

Because quite frankly, ever since the last Election, the average age of our potential members and present-or-future supporters has been dropping rapidly. If John Armstrong had bothered to attend our Convention personally, he’d have seen that for himself with his own eyes.

We’ll always be a Party that’s resolutely and justifiably proud of backing our Gold Card holders and elderly New Zealanders – but more and more young people and 30-50 year olds are ALSO making the decision to Come Over To The Dark Side and support our politics.

Why, I think I’ve signed up at least half a dozen youth members myself in the last week alone.

More to the point, where Armstrong sees a “diminishing fanbase”, I instead see a flourishing popular appeal – just look at our recent polling and the fact we managed the ‘impossible’ feat of capturing a theoretically safe National seat up in Northland!

The lesson from this is simple. Winston and Winston’s politics continue to draw in the members – and average, ordinary New Zealanders (as well as the occasional eccentric mad genius type such as myself) are flocking to our banner in record numbers unseen and unheard of within our Party for at least a decade. Possibly two.

This is reflected in polling, wherein we’re on pretty much double what we were ten years ago – while Winston enjoys more success in Preferred Prime Ministership rankings than the Labour Party’s own somewhat lackluster leader.

So when it comes to Armstrong’s tired attempt at caricaturing us as a Party exclusively of, by and for the can-remember-the-1950s brigade … I find myself wondering whether it isn’t him that’s ‘out of touch’ with modern political reality. However you slice it, what he’s said in his Herald column has very little relationship to either our Party’s burgeoning membership, or its appeal to newer converts.

Instead of worrying about the pontifications of politically confused (and more than a little dazed) print-media publications, our efforts are focused on building up the requisite Party infrastructure to equip our members with the tools THEY need to match the Boss’s efforts and bring more rank-and-file personnel into the fold. That’s how we’ll ensure our longevity as a Party – by maximizing our advantage right now and building productively and progressively towards the future.

Over the last few months, I’ve PERSONALLY witnessed this, with new electorates being set up, committees empowered – and yes, even campus presences across the country being (re)-established.

And let me tell you. All us mass of firebrand 18-30 year olds in the Party – particularly the recent surge of new members in this demographic – CERTAINLY aren’t here because we can remember the 1950s!

Instead, we’re here because we know that THIS party offers the best genuine alternative to another three decades of Neoliberalism.

In other words, contra to Armstrong’s assertions it’s the blatantly unfair economic system WE grew up with that motivates us to join, campaign for, and ultimately to vote for New Zealand First. Not the halcyon memories of our parents’ generation about how much better things were in their youth.

And yes, yes there are some obvious and important commonalities between New Zealand’s previous economic system – and the one which I, and my younger comrades desperately yearn to see upheld across the land. That’s just the nature of #Nationalist and anti-neoliberal politics. We’d be foolish indeed if we didn’t take salient lessons from the past when it comes to our policy-making for the future.

I’m genuinely at a loss as to why Armstrong seems almost personally annoyed about the fact we have learned from history, and are absolutely determined to bring the best elements of the past into the present in order to avoid and undo the mistakes of previous governments.

Where I come from, that’s just called sensible politics.

In any case, the clear and compelling vibe I got from reading Armstrong’s piece was simple: this is a man who wasn’t at our Convention, and is second-hand reporting from reading the media output of others who WERE there and were there with an agenda. (It’s well-known and patently obvious that neither of Andrea Vance nor Brook Sabin particularly like us, for various reasons)

To add insult to injury, Armstrong appears to have decided to buy into the vested meta-narrative of some pundits which seems content to ENDLESSLY PREDICT the impending demise of New Zealand First.

As you may have noticed, my Party’s about as good at Dying When Ordered as I am – and half the reason these pundits often seem to hate us to the point of willing us unto oblivion … is quite simply because we keep showing up them and their predictions at every turn.

I’ve detailed my thoughts on the New Kiwi Deal elsewhere in another blog that should hopefully be up today; but suffice to say on that score, too, Armstrong’s analysis fails dismally.

National’s approach to job-creation and unemployment, much like the people it nominally purports to help, simply isn’t working. And I genuinely can’t work out why Armstrong seems so fundamentally wedded to defending it in the face of bold ideas from the likes of New Zealand First.

It’s almost like he so doesn’t want his delicate narrative of “tired old NZF doing the same old thing over and over” to be disrupted by a potentially game-changing economic policy suite that he’s rejecting out of hand even the hint that we might bring about change.

That’s unfortunate. But I guess he’s just doing what he has to in order to maintain his *own* “diminishing fanbase”.

Anyway.

When I was writing this piece, a quote from President Obama slipped into the forefront of my mind.

Our challenges may be new. The instruments with which we meet them may be new. But those values upon which our success depends […] these things are old, these things are true. They have been a quiet force of progress throughout our history. What is demanded, then, is a return to these truths. A willingness to find meaning in something greater than ourselves.”

To me, that sums up one of the core elements of New Zealand First’s appeal – particularly to a younger generation of members, such as myself.

We know, respect and appreciate the fact that this Party of ours is, in many ways, founded on principles and personalities *far* older than ourselves. Indeed, that’s what we signed up for.

But we also believe that these values and philosophical inclinations – about the role of the state and the importance of a “fair go” for all Kiwis – are so intrinsically worthwhile that it shouldn’t matter they were first conceived in a different age.

What matters is that they’re still relevant today – in fact, increasingly so given that we’ve lost our way as a society thanks to three decades of neoliberalism.

And what matters even more than that is that here stands a political party – fresh and vibrant in some areas (particularly our 2014 intake of MPs), yet veteran and battle-hardened in others – that coils poised and ready to fight to implement them once again.

Mark my words. With Winston Peters continuing to outright flummox the critics left, right and center – and Ron Mark ably backing him up and supporting him while “riding shotgun” … John Armstrong’s career as a journalist will be well and truly over LONG before either Winston’s story or New Zealand First’s is.

The vibe I got from this year’s Convention was not that of a Party slipping into a slow decline, as Armstrong appears to believe.

But instead, quite the contrary.

As The Other Winston famously said:

“This is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.”

Look forward to accompanying you every step of the way 😉

10 COMMENTS

  1. Youthful exuberance has its place, even if I only half-skim read your awfully long diatribes which demonstrate an almost North Korean devotion to The Party.

    But you’re on a soapbox in an anechoic chamber. TDB readers are by and large part of the activist/environmentalist left operating outside the locus of NZ First. If it is party policy to gain office as an alternative to what we have at the moment, the focus must be on winning votes from disaffected National voters (as happened in a somewhat lop-sided race in Northland).

    What are your strategies here? If we contend that Labour is not quite finished yet then any rise of NZF must not come at the expense of them, as happened in the past two elections. NZF, like the Greens, is so good at being an opposition party that voters can’t really comprehend what they would be like in government. Which in my opinion will preclude any rise in poll numbers.

  2. Perhaps Winston’s been whistling “Sing a Song of Sixpence” and sees one of Wikipedia’s highlighted entries already in place for jonkey and his Mrs:

    “One of the modern children’s readers (small chapter books) uses the basic premise, but the plot then diversifies, as the King spends the whole day personally paying his employees for their work (in the meantime becoming introduced to farm life), while the Queen spends her day in workout (to use up the calories) and helping others by donating her ball, skipping rope and riding horse to those in need. They are both depicted as nice persons who care about others. At the end the King bought a double bike with the leftover money and they both cycle away together.”

    Go Winston!

    • By the way, Curwen part Apache, the Apache Nation has a petition against mining Sacred Land. Perhaps the robbers are looking for a part of the hidden gold of Nesara!!! Truth is stranger than fiction I’ve heard.

  3. Good response to John Armstrong’s pathetic attempt to paint Winston and NZ First in a bad light, to put off potential supporters. Armstrong must be somewhat agitated about NZ First’s gradual progression, knowing this time, it has a solid cutting edge team of MPs behind it!

    Let’s not forget either, Armstrong works for the NZH, an ever ready player in FJK’s sordid little game of gutter politics!

    So I guess now msm is unable to find any sleaze to spread on Andrew Little or James Shaw, NZ First and its leadership is the next logical target to discredit!

    I agree re Ron Mark. He has huge potential to lead NZ First, having proven leadership skills through his past military career. Watching him in Parliament, Mark is as sharp as a knife, picking up quickly on issues being raised at the time. And like Winston, he has the ability to be a painful thorn in biased Speaker Carter’s side 🙂

    Now what I’d like to see is NZ First and NZ Greens get over their differences and make some attempt to work together. I see these two parties, (perhaps with Labour, if it pulls it’s finger out that is), becoming the political force for the people, to progressively take NZ ahead into a future where every Kiwi is valued and gets a fair slice of the pie once again.

  4. Would be nice if we could actually trust NZF not to get in bed with National again, but really how could we?

  5. Those values that NZ First rests on are no mirage.

    The economic base was foundered on the Keynesian economic plan that pulled the worlds economy out of the Great Depression and ushered in an era of of unprecedented prosperity.

    The economic theory that created the Great Depression was American laissez faire – which was an ancestor of today’s neo liberalism. The very neo liberalism that created the conditions of the global credit crunch in 2008.

    Both are foundered in the Austrian Hyek school of economics. Under such think tanks as the Mont Pelerin society..and later Milton Freidmans Chicago school of economics , which ,- was the main driver for Margeret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan’s discredited ‘ trickle down ‘ theory. Even England has now rejected it.

    Winston Peters and NZ First have always supported the former…Keynesian economics….foundered by John Maynard Keynes during the 1930’s.

    And , – like the two economic schools of thought which are diametrically opposed and create enmity between proponents of both camps – so therefore is NZ First and modern neo liberals.

    Armstrong is a neo liberal supporter. That’s his true motive. He cannot help but expose himself every time he offers an opinion piece simply because he is predictable in railing against its alternative.

    Social Democratic Keynesianism.

    He is a paid journalist in the league of his financial masters and always will simply tout what he is told to. Because of this bias…his views become unreliable. But him , like his neo liberal sponsors…are now fighting a rear guard action as neo liberalism has proven itself not only unworkable – but because it is not – lends itself to those proponents fighting an ever increasing dirty war to defend it.

    This is partly the origins and motives of American style ‘ dirty politics’ , – to which the people of this country have now witnessed first hand in all its destructiveness.

    And it is here that NZ First will continue to shine against the backdrop of economic failure and increasingly underhanded and anti democratic neo liberal dogma.

    And its this slow realization and groundswell of public discontent that eventually will see the demise of both neo liberal sycophantic journalist’s such as Armstrong and the increasing need to distort , lie and twist the public narrative by neo liberal think tanks and their agents the politicians such as John Key.

    It is this fact that causes neo liberals like Armstrong to rail ever more stridently against what they perceive now as the death throws of their neo liberalism that has benefited them for so long.

    And they realize Party’s such as NZ First are the vanguard’s of that demise.

    This is why Armstrong writes as he does.

    Because its over for neo liberalism.

    And he knows it.

  6. 100% Wild katipo,

    NZ First is the only force to put National in its box again and Armstrong knows that.

    Winston is the most resilient and experienced politician in parliament best believe.

    Key even has sent his most aggressive attack dog against Winston, David Carter, the speaker of the house to try and quell Winston but even though he has thrown Winston out of the chamber several times Winston is not affected. He is one cool cat.

    National cannot rest until he is gone, so they have now sent their attack dogs to try but they will fail, as our Winston is a born leader and survivor of many attempts by the media and natZ attack dogs.

    We are seeing a National Party now showing panic, and with Winston breathing down their back it can only get better for us and worse for Neo – cons and Planet key.

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