Lisa Owen interviews Labour MP Andrew Little
Lisa Owen interviews Labour MP Andrew
Little
Headlines:
Andrew Little says voters wanted “greater
clarity” about Labour’s potential coalition partners and
the party should have clearly spurned Internet-Mana
He says Labour shares “a lot of things“ with the Green Party, as well as New Zealand First.
“We shouldn't have had anything to do with Internet Mana. We didn't make that clear, and I think people were then a little bit suspicious of us…”
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Lisa
Owen: You're with The Nation, and lawyer and former union
boss Andrew Little reckons he has the creds to unify the
fractured caucus and says he'd dump some of the party's
flagship policies to woo back voters. So could the
twice-beaten New Plymouth candidate be the dark horse in the
leadership race? Well, Mr Little is with me
now.
Andrew Little: Good
morning.
You would've heard David Shearer
saying there that if David Cunliffe were to be re-elected as
the leader of the party, it would be divisive, highly
divisive, for the caucus. Do you agree with
him?
Well, I think it would be difficult,
but this is a democratic process involving the party, the
caucus, the affiliates, and in the end, the principle we
live by is we live with the democratic outcome, and I think
people would find a way to work. We all know what the task
is ahead of us, which is about rebuilding Labour,
reconnecting, and we would all just have to muck in and find
a way to do that in the most constructive way
possible.
Do you think everyone could do
that?
We don't have a choice. We've lost
three elections in a row. Our vote has been going down.
We're down to 32 MPs. We are scraping the bottom of the
barrel. So I think we've just gotta keep focused on the task
ahead. We have to be honest with ourselves about what lies
behind the situation that we're in, and we've gotta muck in
and make it better.
So, you've thrown your hat
into the ring. What's wrong with the other two candidates
that makes you think Labour needs you
instead?
I'm standing because I think I have
something to contribute. I've got a proven track record of
leading an organisation, of change, of engaging with people
and turning organisational performance around. Listen, the
feedback I've had this week has been absolutely phenomenal,
and a lot of people who didn't vote Labour or who have
previously voted Labour and haven't this time, the message
is pretty clear — it is a combination of the policies that
we had; they just didn't like some of the things, and the
superannuation age is one of the key things. And they wanted
a clearer understanding about what Labour stood for, stands
for, and greater clarity, for example, about who our
coalition partners might have been.
OK, we're
going to come to that, but I just want to ask you, you're
pitching yourself as stable and steady. Does a prime
minister, though, need to have pizazz as well? Do you need
pizazz to be a prime minister?
You need to
have a good sense of judgement, and you need to have a sense
about what sort of New Zealand that we want. We don't have
at the moment.
Are you the anti-personality
candidate, if you like, in the sense, say, that Shane Jones
was all about the personality when he ran for the
leadership? Are you the counter to
that?
People are looking for a style of
leadership that is about setting out a very clear direction
for the country. Listen, there are real concerns that a lot
of New Zealanders have about things like growing inequality,
the fact that people who work really hard can't get ahead,
young couples who save and save year after year and still
cannot get into their first home — those are real issues.
And people want to hear about what the New Zealand that we
all want to live in and to have is going to look like, not
just next year, not just focus group by focus group, but
actually in 15, 20 years’ time. People are thinking about
the success of their kids and what that looks like and what
a successful New Zealand would look like.
You
mentioned clarity around coalition partners. That might not
have worked for you in the election. So under your
leadership, would you get closer to the Greens or further
away from them, as Shane Jones was
pushing?
The critical lesson I think we need
to learn from this election is that voters want to have at
least some certainty, some clearer direction about who our
coalition partners might be, and I think we were too unclear
about it. How that might work and who that might be, that's
a discussion that we need to have over the next two or
three—
But your personal view, should you
have made it clear that the Greens were— as they
offered— a deal before the election to campaign
together?
We share a lot of things with the
Greens, stuff on social policy we share, some of the
environmental policy we share. We share a lot of stuff with
New Zealand First in terms of economic policy. Manufacturing
was a classic one. We share something with each of those
parties. There are other parties there too that we kind of
talked about I think we probably have less in common with.
We shouldn't have had anything to do with Internet-Mana. We
didn't make that clear, and I think people were then a
little bit suspicious of us, and that, I think, bounced back
on us.
So were they, as Dotcom said, 'poison',
Internet?
Well, he said
that.
Yes. For your brand
too.
New Zealanders looked at that whole
thing. They didn't like the idea of a very wealthy
individual writing out a massive cheque, funding a campaign
that was really about his self-interest and a bunch of other
people signing up to it. People were really uncomfortable
with that. And I think our failure to be a little bit
clearer about that — we actually rejected that too —
didn't help us.
All right, thanks for joining
this morning, Andrew Little.
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