The Choices For NZ Flag Referendum |
From the New Zealand Herald
The reason most big decisions are not left to referendums has become blindingly clear with New Zealand's flag debate.
And we are about to be shown another classic lesson in Britain over the next four months.
Politicians
cannot be trusted not to stick to the issue. They cannot be trusted not
to hijack whatever question is on the block for their own purpose, be
it Andrew Little on the flag, Jenny Shipley on superannuation or Boris
Johnson on Europe.
That has been the case with New Zealand's own flag referendum, voting on which starts next Thursday.
Bear
in mind that two years ago, when John Key first announced there would
be a flag referendum, the reaction of the Labour and Green Party leaders
was to welcome it and say that they too would hold a referendum if they
won the 2014 election.
Between then and now the leaders of the left have persuaded their
supporters to oppose the process, criticise the cost, condemn the
timing, question the motives, mock the alternative, and to vote "no
change" in order to embarrass a political rival.
They went into
the last election promising a referendum on the flag and then cheapened
the exercise because they wanted to portray it as John Key's and not the
people's.
If the Labour and Greens leadership had risen above
the political point-scoring and given its blessing to truly free debate
on the left, David Shearer would not be the only Labour MP willing to
say he is voting for the alternative among the 21 who were willing to
say at all, and Kennedy Graham would not be the only Green MP voting for
the alternative of the nine who were willing to say.
Hijacking
the issue and potential sabotage will almost certainly occur in
Britain's decision over whether to leave the European Union, or stay, as
Prime Minister David Cameron wants.
It is virtually inevitable
that the June 23 vote will become, for many, a referendum on Cameron's
leadership - which is why he has been forced to state that he would not
resign in the event of an Out vote, even though he probably would.
Labour says it will campaign to stay in Europe.
But they won't be able to help themselves. They will inevitably make it about the Conservatives, not about Europe.
The bigger threat to Cameron's leadership is from within.
Popular and populist Tory politician Boris Johnson is using the referendum to bolster his own chances of succeeding Cameron.
In a close vote, he could be a game-changer.
Johnson's announcement on Sunday that he would be joining the Outers
apparently surprised some of his closest friends, who had never realised
that Johnson - the son of an ex-member of the European Parliament and a
former Brussels resident - was such a Eurosceptic.
One person
not surprised by Johnson's position was Sonia Purnell, a former workmate
at the Daily Telegraph when he worked in Brussels.
She has also
written a biography recording Johnson's "blond ambition" and fierce
rivalry with Cameron back to their Eton schooldays.
In the
Independent this week, she said, "Johnson has always believed that
Cameron's job in Downing St was rightly his: that he is cleverer, more
original, more popular, more entitled to occupy the pinnacle of power in
this country," and in relation to his conversion to the leave-Europe
camp: "Anyone with residual doubts about Johnson's desire to expel
Cameron from the premiership could hardly fail to have read the
signals."
That said, a referendum to change the New Zealand flag is not in the same league as Britain leaving the EU.
Changing
the flag in New Zealand is not going to have an impact on immigration
numbers, the justice system, eligibility for benefits, trade deals or
force the resignation of the Prime Minister.
New Zealand First MP
Ron Mark has vowed never to cross the threshold of a business flying
the alternative flag, but that doesn't quite equate to an impact.
New
Zealand First has played a straight bat throughout the flag debate. It
never wanted a referendum, it did not take part in the parliamentary
committee, and does not support a change.
But New Zealand First does have experience of what it's like to have pure politics hijack a referendum.
The
1997 referendum on a compulsory retirement savings scheme was
negotiated by leader Winston Peters in the 1996 coalition talks with
both National and Labour.
But it was a particularly toxic
post-election environment, both within the National Party and across the
aisles with Labour which had been spurned by Peters.
(Labour would have won the Treasury benches if it had agreed to give Peters a turn at Prime Minister but it refused.)
Labour
bagged the savings scheme ("Poodle releases turkey," said Michael
Cullen) only to introduce something remarkably similar, KiwiSaver,
during its second term in Government.
National MPs were given a
free vote on the Peters super scheme. Jenny Shipley, who was secretly
plotting for Jim Bolger's job, led the anti-savings scheme camp.
It
was a prime chance for her to parade her leadership qualities to her
colleagues and to deliver Peters the come-uppance they thought he richly
deserved.
Her large support base had not adjusted to the
realities of MMP and resented the intrusion of New Zealand First on a
Government full of "born-to-rule pricks" as Cullen once described it.
But
in the toxic political environment, the referendum became as much a
vote on Tuku Morgan's underpants and the Tight Five as it was a vote on a
compulsory savings scheme.
Not surprisingly, it was roundly rejected and Shipley rolled Bolger the following month.
The superannuation issue had had a tortured path before it was finally put to a referendum in 1997.
John Key's flag issue hadn't been a burning issue, more a slow burner.
In
a speech on March 11, 2014, at Victoria University - sixth months out
from the election - he announced it would be put to a referendum after
the election.
At least one thing Key can't be accused of is rushing the process.
He wanted it separated from the election.
Officials
worked on various options for how it could work and rated each one's
level of neutrality. The most neutral process was chosen.
A committee of citizens ran the process. It was a clean process.
Some of their choices were ghastly. None was fabulous. Some were okay. The public chose the final alternative.
If you like it, vote for it. If you like the present flag better, vote for it.
Don't let anything else get in the way. Trust yourself.
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