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  1. To be honest, I regard Ruth Richardson’s 1990/91 austerity packages as having more of a negative impact on the country.

    1. If one tries to split out individual parts of the decline of New Zealand, perhaps. But it’s neoliberalism as a whole that needs to be reversed and those responsible punished.

  2. Interestingly the word “democracy”, that quaint notion that “we the people” can influence the decisions made in our name, was absent from that piece. Instead it makes clear that the 1984 Labour Government was driven to sell us to the wolves by “the intellectual support of senior Treasury officials”. In other words, as much as we vilify Douglas and Richardson for the tragedy of our circumstances today, it was unelected, nameless bureaucrats, high as kites on the false promise of neo-liberal theory, who, on Bastille day, we should wish in that wagon headed for the guillotine.

  3. Many new gens would be barely aware of the beginnings of the toxic legacy of “Roger’n’Ruth” on the 40th anniversary of Rogernomics and the later Ruthanasia continuation.

    Rotten Rog’ and his mates indeed came from the Friedman/Rand/Chicago Boys/Pinochet/Thacher/Reagan school of dirty neo liberal economics where every aspect of human life is reduced to a transaction.

    The embedded Reserve Bank Act, State Sector Act etc. make it difficult to reverse the NZ neo liberal state because they all just roll over each election regardless of which MMP grouping holds power. So the challenge for 2026 is to run a campaign to sink neo liberalism as it applies to this country.

    1. Ironically the much hated Resource Management Act came out of that period as well. Everyone tends to forgot the aim of that law was clip the wings of the Ministry of Works and its SOE replacement(s).

    2. We will probably only sink ferries. Our heads are otherwise too tied up with passing judgment on women, perhaps with pink hair, who tell us to do something sensible for our own good but not personally convenient and costing us. How dare she replaces the ole chant of ‘What do we want? And we want it now.’ When someone gets round to taking on a task and sacriificing self-satisfaction then….

  4. If you have a look at that cesspit that is the MSN comment section, the conservatives there cannot seem to forgive the Labour government for spending – in their eyes overspending obviously – during the pandemic, despite the fact that it saved thousands of jobs and probably hundreds of businesses. And when someone points out that conservatives should be in favour of small business people, all you hear is crickets.

  5. In the 1980s people like myself believed they were voting for the traditional Labour Party that stood for an equal society.
    I had no idea that Labour Doctor Jeykll would turn into neo-liberal Mr Hyde. I did not vote for asset sales and scaling back essential public services and I believe this was true of most voters.
    I never made the mistake of leaping from Labour’s frying pan into National’s fire but obviously other people did. Did they know they were voting for cuts to welfare benefits and sports cars for property developers?
    Do people learn from their mistakes? Disillusioned by the Ardern government for not trying to reverse the neo-liberal current, would people blindly choose a National Party led by a business executive and financed by wealthy donors? Surely not again?
    Is it true that people get the government they deserve?

  6. Lange’s government was a reaction against Muldoon who sent farmers large tax payer funded cheques in the post (SMPs), ran a complicated tax system to benefit farmers, had a wage freeze and was about to default on a loan. It was undoubtedly the brightest government ever and a credit to Labour.

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