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  1. Seymour gets incredibly light treatment generally from NZ’s media. He pops up in articles or on TV as a friendly, harmless dweeby politician and I have never heard him face a hard question on any of his incredibly extreme and divisive policies. I don’t know why that is – maybe these questions are too uncomfortable for general consumption and no-one wants to hear the answers.

  2. So is David Seymour saying that there is not much difference in direction between the Labour and National parties?
    In effect tweedledum and tweedledee are just a pair of teases so give your vote to someone who will seriously fuck you!

    1. But he’s correct: other than some minor tinkering around the edges, National and Labour agree on everything of substance (particularly social issues), which is why, no matter who is in government, things always keep going in the same downward trajectory. They all operate within the confines of the neo-liberal Western orthodoxy (aka the “rules-based international order). The reason for this uniformity is that anyone who would come along with a genuinely heterodox approach would be set upon by the Establishment, which gatekeeps itself. It amazes me how either party’s tribal core gets bent out of shape at the prospect of the other gaining power.

  3. The Greens are happy with crumbs and thus achieve little. They blindly support Labour and go along with anything they decide. They are worse than useless because a lot of voters (you & me for example) think they might actually make a difference, but they never do. ACT is really going to shake up the New Zealand political environment. Buckle up.

    1. Oh Helen and the Maori party and the United future party and the ACT party were no different under Key’s National government? Jesus wept!

      1. Neither party (especially ACT with one MP) had any real power to wield. That will be different this time.

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