Lisa Owen interviews Labour MP David Shearer
Lisa Owen interviews Labour MP David
Shearer
Headlines:
David Shearer still mulling whether to stand
for Labour leadership but says his family doesn’t think
it’s a good idea
Declares that it will be “incredibly divisive” for the Labour caucus if David Cunliffe returns to the role of leader.
Shearer describes Labour’s drop in the polls under David Cunliffe’s leadership as “catastrophic”
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Lisa
Owen: While that's just one interesting contest to watch
over the next few days, the other is Labour's leadership
race, which Andrew Little entered this past week. We'll talk
to him shortly, but another MP widely tipped to throw his
hat in the ring before nominations close on Tuesday is David
Shearer, who is with me in the studio this morning. Good
morning, Mr Shearer.
David Shearer: Morning,
Lisa.
Just very quickly, Jeffrey Laurenti
there is saying that Spain's a slam dunk for the Security
Council and then it will come down to a race between Turkey
and New Zealand. You've been over to the UN recently. What's
your take? What are our chances?
I went over
as part of a bipartisan approach to the UN. I don't think
it's quite as he portrays, but what I do think is New
Zealand has done a very good job. We've done as best as we
possibly could have in terms of getting our name out there
and having a good chance.
Are we in or out, do
you think?
I bet we're in. I'm not sure who
it is. I suspect it might be Turkey rather than Spain that
that'll be in with us. I don't want to call it too much,
because you kind of get those wobbles that we might not do
it, but I'm happy.
You're betting we are, so
speaking of races, the leadership race — are you in, or
are you out?
Well, I'll make an announcement
in my own time, and it won't be today, but certainly I will
make an announcement one way or the
other.
What's delaying your
decision?
Oh, I just want to think about it.
I want to consult. Look, the most well-known saying in
politics is 'why not me?' Three words, and for me it's not
just about 'why not me'; it's about 'what can I do if I did
actually stand?' And you think about winning, but the second
thing, and the most important thing, is 'what can I do in
order to change Labour and to make sure that it goes in the
right direction?' And if I can't do that, then I don't
believe I should be in the race.
Do the family
think it's a good idea?
Overall, no, because
they saw me in the two years, or less than two years, that I
was the leader before. It's incredibly stressful. It takes
an enormous amount of time. Ask any opposition leader what
it's like. It is the worst job in politics, possibly the
worst job I've had in my life. It's satisfying on the one
side, but it's also incredibly, incredibly
difficult.
You said, then, that if you can't
change Labour, then don't bother taking on the leadership,
as such, so can you? And how?
Well, there's
two questions that we need to be asking ourselves — who
didn't vote for us, and why didn't they? And if we can't
answer that, or refuse to answer that, then we actually
shouldn't be going down this track. And if you look at that
and you look at the progression of what has happened over
time, over the last three or four elections — we haven't
seen the results of this one, but almost for sure as well
— it's that the middle of New Zealand has left us. And if
you look at, for example, one group, white blokes, they have
not stayed with Labour. They have gone somewhere else, and
it's great that we've got the loyalty of Pasifika and Maori
and many of those others, but if we don't have that big
group...
Andrew Little said you scared people
off with capital gains tax, with the Super age and
electricity reforms. Do you agree with that,
then?
I think some of those policies were
not understood properly, but the real problem was that
people weren't listening, and if people are not listening,
you can have as many policies as you like; it's simply not
going to work. So there's an issue around policies and how
we package it, but there's also an issue around the way that
brand Labour is being portrayed, and it's not being
portrayed as the fair, aspirational party that it has been
in the past. It's seen negatively by
people.
If people weren't listening to Labour,
was that because they weren't listening to David
Cunliffe?
In part, it's the leadership, for
sure. When I stood down, we were polling at 34, and we ended
up on 25 in the election. That was in the space of 12
months. That is a catastrophic drop, and David's got to ask
himself whether he can turn that around and take us back up
to 40%. That's what he's gotta ask himself.
He
is in the running, and he wants it, so what happens inside
caucus if he does get it, the leadership, again? What do you
think is gonna happen?
I think it will be
incredibly divisive. Certainly for myself, you work for a
party and you stand for a party and the value that underpins
it, and then you have a leader that you don't necessarily
have confidence in, and for me, it was an enormous tear
inside myself — 'how do I march through the day?' And I
think that was the same for many other
people.
So would it lead to a revolt within
caucus?
I think if that comes up, we've got
a real problem. We've set up the rules to give the party a
real say and obviously the affiliated unions a real say in
who becomes the leader, but at the same time, that leader
has to have the confidence of the people that work
immediately to them, which are the other MPs, and if those
MPs, and particularly some of the senior ones like Grant
Robertson and David Parker, don't have confidence in, say,
David Cunliffe, then you've got a serious issue on your
hands.
All right, thank you for joining me
this morning. That's David
Shearer.
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