5 years of Jacinda, 1 policy achievement and the last two reasons left to vote for her in 2023

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This week marks 5 years of Jacinda as Prime Minister and in half a decade we have so little transformative change to celebrate.

There are only so many Wellington Union and NGO press releases proclaiming a ‘great first step’ by Jacinda before you suddenly realise that you are just jogging on the spot.

And that’s been Labour for 5 years, jogging on the spot.

27 000 are on emergency housing wait lists, more children living in cars than when Labour entered power in 2017 and a million a day spent kettling beneficiaries in dangerous motels.

A total lack of transformative change on welfare, poverty, inequality, climate change and housing is all due to Jacinda’s refusal to intimidate the Wellington Bureaucrats and Labour’s middle class addiction to the Professional Managerial Class (who are all petty property speculators now) has led to failures in forcing the self serving public service to actually do something for the people who voted Jacinda in hope.

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Labour oversaw the largest transfer of wealth to the wealthy in NZs entire history and they spend a billion a year on consultants so that Neale Jones, Clint Smith and Davey Cormack can pay the mortgage.

Woke public relations consultant for the Cormack Draper Group and Wellington political commentator, David Cormack, the Ruminator speaks.

We believe you Dave.

Isn’t there a cheaper way top keep Neale, Clint and Dave off welfare?

Labour has been a failure due to a lack of true leadership to genuinely challenge the neoliberal interests be they in the Ministry or in the economy.

I’m not looking for socialism any more Labour, just basic regulated capitalism, and you can’t even do that properly.

The great policy success of this Government has been the Fair Pay Agreements which will finally put into place procedures where NZ workers can finally use collective bargaining to force bosses to pay them better and give safer work conditions, obviously the Right are screaming about it because the Right are addicted to the low wage economy which they exploit mercilessly.

Let’s be very honest about the only two reasons you should vote for Labour next year.

The first was the masterclass in leadership Jacinda performed in defying the feral QAnon antivax lunatics and death cult capitalists by protecting us from 32 000 Covid deaths!

Was the personal sacrifice steep?

Yes.

Was the economic cost steep?

Yes.

Do the recent revelations by Pfizer that the vaccine didn’t stop transmission suddenly prove all the anti-vaxxers right?

Not at all…

Fact Check-Preventing transmission never required for COVID vaccines’ initial approval; Pfizer vax did reduce transmission of early variants

Social media users are circulating video clips of testimony by a Pfizer executive, who is said to “admit” that the company and its partner BioNTech did not test whether their mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine reduced virus transmission prior to rolling it out – which is something the companies were not required to do for initial regulatory approval, nor did they claim to have done.

To get emergency approval, companies needed to show that the vaccines were safe and prevented vaccinated people from getting ill. They did not have to show that the vaccine would also prevent people from spreading the virus to others. Once the vaccines were on the market, independent researchers in multiple countries studied people who received the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and did show that vaccination reduced transmission of variants circulating at the time.

As these results on transmission were emerging in early 2021, national health authorities in many countries implemented or proposed vaccine-passport-style regulations that prompted ongoing debate (here) over the ethical and legal basis of the rules.

The misleading posts imply that national restrictions such as vaccine passports were based on a promise of vaccines blocking virus spread that neither the companies nor EU regulators made before the vaccines were marketed.

…Jacinda’s courage to go hard and go early caused deep societal anger and dislocation, but so would have 32 000 dead!

We all sacrificed, some more than others, but we all paid a pound of flesh to get through this horror and while the response wasn’t perfect, the truth is we were running blind through a once in a century pandemic and Jacinda saw us through that better than most.

Labour deserve a gratitude vote dammit!

The second reason to vote Labour in 2023 is the reality that while Labour have failed us on almost every promise of transformation, their failed promises will still be a far better outcome than what National and ACT will do if they gain power!

Taking a chainsaw to the face of an Underfunded State that barely has the capacity to do the things we require from it is not a solution, it’s ideological vandalism!

Sacking 14 000 public servants, tax cuts for the rich and amputating the political Māori, youth, women, Pacifica and ethnic voices while cutting off the Human Rights Commission is a recipe for conflict politics the likes we haven’t seen before.

You honestly think Māori will have all the gains of the last 182 years simply stripped from them do you?

Can everyone remind everyone else that Liz Truss is a libertarian and her crazy free market bullshit is the same neoliberal mythology that ACT and National want to implement if elected in 2023?

I know that a resented gratitude vote alongside a lesser of two evils vote aren’t reasons to get excited, but that’s why democracy is the worst form of government – except for all the others that have been tried.

Labour gives socialism a bad name, but National and ACT will be so much vastly worse.

Don’t even start me on the bloody Greens!

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59 COMMENTS

  1. Labour got the gratitude vote in 2020. They won’t get in 2023. They would have to be seen to earn it by what they have done in the last 2 years.
    A lot of voters will be concerned about the way the government has focussed on issues that don’t directly affect them, but have apparently ignored the issues that really bite in day to day living.

    • Well said Wayne you summed up the feeling of many .Labour was heading for a one term stint then covid saved them from the hard questions and the fact that National were in disarray. This election there are no excuses and National are all on the same song sheet.

  2. I can see how they may not have been able to implement this legislation with Winston in tow but why has it taken another two years, leaving only one year to bed in the policy. If the policy had been running for three years then the next Nact govt would have more difficulty slashing and gutting it. If they didnt arrive with a 100 day plan 5 years ago they should have been ready for action 2 years ago. Surely the whole party wasn’t busy with covid.

  3. But at the same time a vote for ACT will really hurt the Greens and Labour and at this point that’s all I’m fucking interested in.
    I hope it’s really painful you smug bastards.

    • J S Bark. I’ll die worrying about my grandchildren. That’s really painful. It’s a burden inflicted by Roger Douglas and implemented by all the politicians ever since, but the current bunch are the biggest hypocrites, and worse.

      • Douglas is still alive. We can still have a Nuremberg style trial for him (and any decent party would make that an election promise).

        • Mohammed K. Lack of accountability is a current weakness of the democratic process; there’s nothing the punters can do apart from biffing bad politicians out at the next elections.

  4. They saved William Shakespeare from being wrongly trashed as an imperialist by the colonialist- haters on the Arts Council. That has to count for something.

  5. I voted not national back in 2017 because they did nothing bar selling our assets and telling us how good they were, Has anything changed?

  6. You missed out the minimum wage increase and extending the bright line test. Not so much policy achievements but things that should have been done (well actually a CGT should be in place)

    What makes me laugh about three waters is all this screaming about democracy over looks the fact that there is almost unanimous agreement that water management has to change but the councils don’t seem to have a practical alternative. The council staff have such a vested interest in the status quo, that is proven to be heading literally up shit street. Typical dumb arse ZB type kiwis.

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