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3 Comments

  1. I do not mind 4 years – plan, deliver on it and then be accountable. Some poor performing governments get two terms because of public inertia.

    Greater SC scrutiny fits better with a 4 year term.

  2. Stick to 3 years and do away with government pensions. Why on earth does John Key need a government pension for life and free air travel for he and his wife, when he’s worth over 60 million?

  3. Problem is that when in opposition no political party plans to be the next government, ready to have the feet under the treasury benches with well thought out policies, strategies and action plans. Hitting the first day in office ready to run.

    Instead we get, like Labour in 2017, having spent nine years in opposition, “waste” the first three years trying to sort out just what their policies should be, never mind where and how to implement those policies.

    If eliminating child poverty was an election promise surely during the preceding nine years, sitting on the chuff collecting massive salaries, strategies and workable action plans would have been written in a manual somewhere ready to roll before breakfast the first day after election victory?

    National has fallen into the same trap. No forward planning with sound and believable electable policies.

    Political parties do not need longer terms to implement their policies, they need to spent the time in opposition planning to be the next government.

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