Transtasman Political Letter – 29 Sept. Digest
Transtasman Political Letter – 29 Sept. Digest
Transtasman is a subscriber newsletter published weekly and read widely in New Zealand and abroad. The following is a summary of this week's edition. To subscribe and read the full newsletter see.. http://Transtasman.co.nz
Trans Tasman 29th September 2005
The big guns fell silent this
week, the Beehive was like a morgue, even the caretaker PM
was missing, though there some sightings on southern ski
slopes
...but it will be all action next week, stitching
together a new coalition
...What price will the smaller
parties demand for their support?
...Only now are the
potential coalition partners beginning to realise they might
have to drink from a poisoned chalice handed to them by
voters
...2006 could be a good time not to be in
Govt.
Choice Of Speaker Could Be First Battleground
Almost certainly the first chance for the minor parties and National to try to gain some leverage over Labour will be over the choice of Speaker for the next Parliament. If National negotiated the support of NZ First, United Future, Act, and/or the Maori Party, it could restore the authority of Parliament as a real check on the Executive.
Labour’s Problem: How To Rejuvenate Itself
Even though caretaker PM Helen Clark has talked of Labour winning a fourth term, she and others in Labour’s hierarchy must have spent many hours in this interregnum thinking about the chances of maintaining some sort of momentum in Govt, and avoiding the paralysis which could spell doom at the next election.
Divisions Emerge As Cabinet Hopefuls Jockey For Position
Jockeying within Labour for Cabinet positions has already reopened old left and centrist wounds. Former Police Minister George Hawkins is upset at constant uncomplimentary Beehive and party leaks saying he’s for the chop.
Can Small Parties Work Together?
Labour’s task of forming a Govt and pushing ahead with its own agenda will hinge on its ability to work with the Greens, United Future and NZ First, but, perhaps more importantly, on whether those three can work together.
CAPITAL TALK
The good, the bad and the ugly showed up in speculation surrounding formation of the new Govt. Snippets included ACT’s Rodney Hide prospectively being challengeable on his spending levels in the Epsom race ...
PLAY OF THE WEEK
Urban - Provincial Split? Yeah
Right
Labour’s loss of a swag of provincial seats has caused some rather overexcited talk about an urban/provincial divide. This has led to speculation voters outside the main centres are in revolt over Labour’s “political correctness.
Transtasman is a
subscriber newsletter published weekly and read widely in
New Zealand and abroad. The above is a summary of this
week's edition. To subscribe and read the full newsletter
see..
http://Transtasman.co.nz