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New Zealand election stalemate exposes deep social divisions
By John Braddock
20 September 2005
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Provisional results from Saturdays New Zealand elections
have put neither of the two major parties, Labour or National,
in a position to form a government. The incumbent Labour Party
leads by a narrow margin of 23,000 votes with 218,000 special
votes still to be counted. As it stands, the result gives Labour
40.7 percent of the vote (50 seats) and National 39.6 percent
(49 seats). Both would need to stitch together a shaky coalition
with more than one of the minor parties to guarantee the 62 seats
needed for a parliamentary majority.
The other parties that won seats on election night are the
anti-immigrant NZ First (5.8 percent, 7 seats), the Greens (5.1
percent, 6 seats), the newly-established Maori Party (2 percent,
4 Maori electorate seats), United Future (3 seats), ACT (2 seats)
and the Progressives (1 seat). As special votes cannot be counted
for another 10 days, there are at least two weeks of horse-trading
in store as negotiations take place behind the scenes. The Greens
remain vulnerable. With no constituency seats secured, the party
could be out of parliament if it falls below the 5 percent threshold.
If, on the other hand the Greens gain an extra seat, it will be
at Nationals expense.
Labour is in the best position to begin negotiations, with
the most likely outcome a minority coalition government forced
to rely on other parties on votes of confidence and supply. United
Future leader Peter Dunne promptly announced that he and NZ Firsts
Winston Peters would be the king-makers. Dunne and
Peters previously committed themselves to talk first to the party
with the most seats, meaning Prime Minister Helen Clark is able
to open talks in her bid to win a third term as prime minister.
As the New Zealand Herald has already predicted, the
next government could well be the frailest and most unwieldy
governing arrangement in living memory. National leader
Don Brash claimed that, on the current figures, any Labour government
is likely to fall apart within a year, forcing another election.
The same, however, could be said of a National-led coalition.
Labour went to the election with the Greens as its preferred
coalition partner, but both NZ First and United Future have declared
they will not support any coalition government with the Greens.
National and the minor right-wing partiesNZ First, ACT and
United Futuredo not have the numbers to form a government
without support from the Maori Party, which is opposed to Nationals
promise to abolish the Maori seats. The Maori Party has not ruled
out talking to National, saying it will see what is put
on the table.
Despite dropping only a small share of the overall percentage
vote and two parliamentary seats, the result is a setback for
Labour. According to prominent commentator Colin James, Clark
should have cantered home in the prevailing economic
conditions. Underscoring the poor showing, cabinet ministers Jim
Sutton, Rick Barker, Dover Samuels and Mita Ririnui lost their
seats, though they return to parliament via the party list. John
Tamihere, the former rising star of Labours Maori caucus,
was knocked out of parliament.
In the 2002 election, Labour was returned to government with
a 20-seat majority over National. Up to January this year, National
appeared to be a spent force, languishing at around 20 percent
in the polls and apparently destined to become one of the minor
parties. At that point, Labour appeared to have succeeded in positioning
itself as the natural party of government and the
favoured representative of the ruling elite.
The decline in Labours electoral position is a product
of its anti-working class policies over the past six years. It
came into office by appealing to widespread popular opposition
to the previous National governments pro-market offensive
on jobs and living standards throughout the 1990s. Once in power,
Labour adapted to the demands of big business. While the commercial
sector recorded record profits and share market gains, the living
standards of ordinary people continued to decline. Government
spending on essential public services and infrastructure was sacrificed
to business demands for prudent fiscal policies and
budget surpluses. Social inequality became more entrenched, with
child poverty persistently among the highest levels in the OECD.
Under these circumstances, the various right-wing parties were
able to capitalise on growing discontent with Labour by blaming
immigrants, Maoris or declining moral values for falling living
standards. This was seen in the anti-immigrant demagogy of NZ
First, appeals to family values by United Future and
open hostility to Labours social program from the increasingly
politicised religious right on such questions as homosexuality
and prostitution.
The National campaign was based on a similar orientation. Nationals
fortunes initially revived 18 months ago when Brash delivered
a right-wing speech on the race question, saying that policies
promoting affirmative action for Maori and Pacific Islanders were
producing a double standard of citizenship. Brash went on to raise
a populist call for equal treatment for all before the law.
In July this year, big business roundly criticised Labours
budget for failing to produce sufficient tax cuts. A media campaign
promoting National as a credible alternative government catapulted
it into contention, with tax cuts presented, falsely, as the means
for increasing the take-home pay of the majority. While it was
able to almost double its vote from 2001, National failed to win
overwhelming support for a program that would inevitably mean
deep inroads into public sector jobs and basic services such as
health, welfare and education.
A polarised electorate
Some commentators have concluded that the result shows the
electorate has swung to the right, but the outcome
points to a sharply polarised society. There is a growing alienation
of large sections of the population from the official political
structure. Despite confident predictions of a high voter turnout,
80 percent of registered voters cast votesonly slightly
up on the 77 percent who voted in 2002. The increase was partly
due to the efforts made by the new Maori party to enrol and activate
greater numbers of Maori voters concerned over the continuing
erosion of their social position.
The turnout was significantly lower than the 90 percent common
in elections before the imposition of pro-market restructuring
programs under Labour and National over the past two decades.
A key feature of the campaign was the volatile polls, which swung
from one day to the next. Even 24 hours before the election some
20 percent of voters were still registering as undecided, indicating
the breakup of firm party loyalties. The two major parties, which
dominated New Zealand politics for most of the past century, now
rest on a narrowing base of less than one third each of the voting
age population.
In the end, Labour clung on by standing on its record as a
stable government and the party of unity. Its main slogan Dont
put it all at risk sought to play on widespread fears and
uncertainties over Brashs policies. Labours support
came from the urban working class areas and the central Wellington
electorates that are home for the majority of public servants.
It was buttressed by deep hostility to Brash, with many people
voting for Labour, not out of conviction but because it was seen
as the lesser evil.
For their part, the Greens have progressively lost support
the more they have been identified with Labour. In this election
the Greens, who supported the Labour government from outside the
cabinet for six years, dropped from 9 parliamentary seats to 6.
This process mirrors the fate of the Alliance, a former left
coalition partner with Labour, which split apart after supporting
the invasion of Afghanistan and now attracts only a handful of
votes.
National consolidated the right-wing vote by attracting support
from the minor partiesACT, NZ First and United Futuretaking
20 seats from them. Nationals biggest gains came in the
rural areas and provincial centres, as well as in the better-heeled
electorates in the largest city of Auckland. National also successfully
appealed to the emerging religious right. The Christian-based
United Future lost votes and 5 MPs to National, while the Destiny
Church won less than 1 percent of the vote.
In the wealthy Auckland seat of Epsom, the ACT (Association
of Consumers and Taxpayers) leader Rodney Hide upset Nationals
Richard Worth by appealing to voters to keep his party in parliament,
after its support plummetted to 1.5 percent in the polls. Under
the proportional system, electors get two votes, one for the electorate
MP and one for their party preference. Hide appealed to National
supporters to give their electorate vote to him, as Worth was
already guaranteed a seat through the National Party list. ACT
retains two seats in parliament, ensuring its survival as a mouthpiece
for the most extreme anti-tax and anti-welfare program.
The highly polarised electoral map in New Zealand has parallels
with that which emerged in the US after the last elections. Labour
is for now politically dominant in the major urban centres and
across the middle of the North Island which is the centre of the
forestry, pulp and paper and tourism industries. The major city
of Auckland is sharply divided on class lines, with the working
class electorates in South and West Auckland returning Labour
and the eastern suburbs and North Shore siding with National.
Outside this, National controls all the South Island, the rural
East Coast and the main farming areas of the lower North Island.
Labour loses Maori seats
Labours longstanding hold on the Maori seats appears
to have been broken by the Maori Party. The party was set up 15
months ago by cabinet minister Tariana Turia, who quit Labour
in protest at the governments decision to accommodate to
Brash by annulling a court ruling that would have recognised traditional
Maori rights in the seabed and foreshore. The party won four of
the seven Maori seats. Labour has lost Maori seats only once beforein
1996 when a protest vote delivered them briefly to NZ First.
The Maori Party campaigned on the platform of giving Maori
an independent voice in parliament. The party advocates
the further entrenchment of the Treaty of Waitangi, signed in
1840, as the countrys founding document, and
the recognition of the special status of Maori as
the countrys original inhabitants. It was able to capitalise
on the hostility generated by the impact of Labours economic
policies on Maoris, who form one of the most oppressed sections
of the working class.
Labour and the Maori Party fought a bitter campaign, with Clark
saying that in terms of possible coalition partners, the Maori
Party would be the last cab off the rank. The results,
however, not only give the Maori Party leverage in the formation
of a government, they also show a majority of Maori voters, while
voting for Maori Party electorate MPs, gave their party preference
to Labour. This forced Clark to moderate her tone and angle for
Maori Party support.
Despite its radical pretensions, the Maori Party represents
a layer of the Maori elite that has been the real beneficiaries
of polices of ethnic empowerment. It advocates the establishment
of more Maori businesses and self-help schemes, and the further
inroads of privatisation into health and education under the control
of Maori entrepreneurs. Co-leader Pita Sharples is on record as
calling for more private prisons. During the 12 months Turia spent
as the partys sole MP, she voted more often with National
than with Labour.
The ruling elite is making it clear what Labour will be expected
to do if it retains office. Colin James used his New Zealand
Herald column to advise Clark that it was time for her to
rethink important policiesincluding personal
tax, moral issues, Maori policiesand turn to promoting nationhood
and managerial politics. Business spokesmen have warned
that the result is not a mandate for things to stay as they
are and have called on Clark to press ahead with market
reforms. The head of Business New Zealand demanded that in the
absence of major tax cuts, the government should step up its workplace
productivity program-in other words deepen attacks on the working
class in the interests of profit.
See Also:
Big business agenda dominates New Zealand
election campaign
[16 September 2005]
New Zealand: election date
set as Labour government's support slumps
[27 July 2005]
New Zealand: Labour's election
year budget under fire
[16 June 2005]
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