A chance for you to read, review and comment on the following post:
"Saying "No" To Labour's Right-Turn: A Reply To Matt McCarten"
Not Again: Labour politicians have 
turned right on their Reds before - most recently in 1984. What left-wing trade 
unionist and commentator, Matt McCarten, seems to have forgotten is that in a 
political environment dominated by the Right, the "centre" keeps shifting - and 
not to the Left!
IT’S NOT OFTEN 
that I find myself in disagreement with Matt McCarten. For the best part of a 
quarter-century our “take” on the political scene has been distinguished more by 
the views we shared than the opinions which caused our analyses to diverge. On 
the question of Labour’s shift to the right, however, I find myself at 
loggerheads with Matt’s 
position.
Essentially, Matt’s line is 
that Labour long ago ceased to be a real left-wing party, and so it is both more 
honest, ideologically, and much more effective, politically, for Labour to seek 
the votes of those in the centre of the New Zealand political spectrum, leaving 
those on the Left to those genuinely left-wing parties, Mana and the 
Greens.
Under our MMP electoral system, 
Matt argues, Labour is most unlikely ever to find itself in a position to govern 
alone. Like John Key’s National Party, it will be forced to seek the support of 
parties located at a much greater distance from the centre than itself. 
Providing these parties keep their nerve at the point of negotiating confidence 
and supply agreements, says Matt, the overall programme of any new Labour-led 
coalition government will be considerably more left-wing than the manifesto 
Labour, on its own, presented to the electorate.
But, is Matt justified in 
assuming that Labour’s coalition partners will be either inclined, or permitted, 
to keep their nerve and negotiate an agreement at significant odds with that of 
the dominant coalition partner?
If, as Matt concedes, Labour’s 
political trajectory is now firmly set; from Goff’s hesitant (and personally 
discordant) leftism, to Shearer’s eager embrace of the policies associated with 
the conservative Finnish prime minister, Esko Aho; then a 2014 “win” by Labour 
will be attributed (both by itself and the right-wing news media) to the 
electorate’s endorsement of the very same policies. In this context, the ability 
of the smaller left-wing parties to “force” Labour to embrace radical policy 
initiatives – policies already “rejected” by a clear majority of voters – will 
be extremely limited.
The other problem with Matt’s 
analysis is that it makes no allowance for the impact a right-wing Labour Party 
is bound to have on the national (with a small “n”) political environment. By 
reinforcing the Right’s overall ideological dominance, Labour will make it that 
much harder for all political parties to evince radical left-wing ideas.
This is likely to be especially 
true of the Greens, who, having broken through the 10 percent threshold in 2011, 
will be especially reluctant to revert, at least in the public’s imagination, to 
once again being a radical party of the political fringe. In other words, if 
Labour shifts to the Right, the Greens are much more likely to shadow them than 
they are to increase the ideological distance between them. New Zealand leftists 
should not forget that the Green’s dramatically improved their electoral 
position in 2011 by tacking to the Right – not the Left.
Matt’s thesis would be much 
stronger if the Mana Party could be relied upon to motivate and mobilise a 
significant proportion of the 2011 “Non-Vote” of close to 
three-quarters-of-a-million New Zealanders. But building a truly mass-party of 
the Left is almost certainly beyond the intellectual, organisational and 
financial resources of Mana. And even if, by some political miracle, Hone 
Harawira proved equal to the task of creating a massive new block of radicalised 
voters from harassed and impoverished workers and beneficiaries, the change his 
success would bring to the national political environment would, almost 
certainly, see Labour tacking back towards the Left. In the circumstances of an 
electoral uprising of beneficiaries and the working poor, the political centre 
would no longer be a safe place for Labour to be found.
Read more: http://bowalleyroad.blogspot.co.nz/2012/03/saying-no-to-labours-right-turn-reply.html?m=1
Read more: http://bowalleyroad.blogspot.co.nz/2012/03/saying-no-to-labours-right-turn-reply.html?m=1


 
 
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