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  1. What’s causing the Maori Party surge is that many of us have realised that TPM is the only thing we have in NZ which has any skerrick of claim at all to be left-wing.

    1. Not many Maori in Ilam so no wonder their vote was not high . I think they are more a threat to Labour than National.

  2. The National candidate came over well.He is an educated businessman and we are going to need people like this in parliament together the country back on track .2 ticks Hamish .
    It was a good night and well run .

    1. he came across like a donkey mate. Still, will be interesting to see him follow through on his pet project, whatever it was.

    2. Why vote for a backbencher who’s 63 on the party list when a minor party leader with a unique policy vision that has done a ton of work for Christchurch as a former city counciler is literally right TF there…

  3. Raf came across well, he provided plenty of policy detail which was lacking in the other candidates. Hamish was a complete wash out, poor performance. That probably won’t matter as I agree it looks like national will win anyway based off that poll. It’s hard not to feel deflated at the seemingly inevitable political outcomes in NZ

  4. TOP isn’t dead, they just won’t be in Parliament. Don’t waste your vote.

  5. If you could distill the PMC (tribal Labour and green voters) down to just a small elite of pointy heads with phds who are awfully nice people to share a fine dining experience with and who have some fabulous pointy headed ideas which would instantly fail as soon as they left their own rarified atmosphere, you would have TOP.

      1. Never party voted Nat in my life thanks. Might one day if they look like a decent option. Have much more often voted left than right.
        Sure ain’t tribal.

        Tribal left and right voters lack neural plasticity.
        They tend to be ignorant or a bit thick or both.

        Look at you for example.
        The left is destroying race relations and democracy and all you can do is point fingers at the opposition.

  6. Labour has lost the plot (and the left that used to support them), with their die hard woke obsession.

    Good summary from Chris Trotter,

    Chris Trotter gives his assessment of PM & Labour leader Chris Hipkins’ weekend speech on which political parties he will & won’t work with
    https://www.interest.co.nz/public-policy/123980/chris-trotter-gives-his-assessment-pm-labour-leader-chris-hipkins-weekend

    Another sad problem is how the NZ woke MSM media seem incapable of any political investigation away from woke. MSM get given taxpayer millions to tag along with Labour’s woke agenda, why have real journalism, and pay real journos proper wages and conditions?

    NZ media now get $$$$ from government and print government friendly propaganda, while taking trite free content from any source, to plug in the rest of their NZ media content.

    1. That was a useful link to Chris Trotter; thank you.
      Somewhat apposite is this quote from Hadley Freeman, in the article about her in this week’s Listener:
      “If you’re more interested in performing your own purity than understanding [other] people’s plurality, you’re not looking at progress, you’re looking into a mirror”

  7. ‘National – They are well on their way to winning despite a very weak candidate, which sums National up well this election.’

    Indeed, what goes Ilam goes for the nation.

  8. Thank you for coming down to the South Island, Martyn. That’s a start.
    But your next sessions are, I gather, to be in Auckland.
    Might I remind you of the existence of the southern South? South of the Waitaki? Way down here? (A fact that some/most/all political parties also need reminding about).
    Openly declaring my interest, if you will allow, I’m standing as an Independent in the Taieri (former South Dunedin) electorate, on a 3-part platform: (1) Reverse the cuts to the new Dunedin hospital; (2) Reinstate the Mosgiel-Dunedin suburban rail service, electrified; and (3) Extend assisted dying to include advanced dementia, per an advance directive. I’m not a young chap (Joe Biden’s age), but one must do what one must do.
    If you were to conduct a similar session down here, in Taieri, I would be grateful to be included on the platform. You could perhaps invite Andrew Geddis, local law guru and frequent commentator, as your side-kick.
    You could see, in more detail, what I’m on about at my website: votemacgardner.net Do have a peep.
    Mac (actually not Tom!) Gardner

  9. Sucks that Raf and TOP have got a mountain to climb to convince people to give them a chance, but what a disappointing audience and National candidate. Literally the platitude of “I’m for good things and not for bad things (that benefit me!)” all while banking on having an easy time governing after the disappointments of Labour. The Greens candidate spoke the truth. If we keep dodging long-term problems with short term platitudes and going back to the ‘good old days’… then expect to be bewildered at every election when everything isn’t fixed, papered over enough, or when the younger generation turns increasingly feral with little hope in anything good. What happened to being considerate and thoughtful, especially to the least of these – even when they don’t ‘deserve’ it?

  10. Sarah did a great job highlighting what’s at stake if NACT get in during her speech in parliament today, her and Mike should do a deal with Raf

  11. The National candidate had a poor showing. He barely answered the questions and when asked on his vision for ilam and Christchurch he just talked about his family!

    Raf appeared to be the only one not just with vision, but power within his party to make a genuine difference. I will now be voting for him. I just dont see how others look past such a clearly obvious great camdidate to vote for a poor National candidate with no real plan for the electorate.

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