The
Lusk Papers and National's post-Key leadership Cold War - could it
turn hot?
The
Beehive's Ninth Floor struck out against Judith Collins and the
National Party's Far Right faction over the weekend through the
release of what have become known as the 'Lusk Papers.'
Chris
Ford
Voxy,
3
May, 2013
The
papers, written by John Key's least favourite political strategist
Simon Lusk, were leaked to a series of media outlets. They were
mainly talked about on shows and in blogs read by political junkies
such as Martyn Bradbury's The Daily Blog, TV3's The Nation and within
the political pages of the New Zealand Herald.
Their
distribution to a limited number of political outlets has meant that
the papers have only excited the political commentariat rather than
the general populace so far.
And
that was probably John Key's intent in sanctioning the release of the
papers. The PM wants to protect the position of his favoured
successor, Economic Development Minister Steven Joyce when the time
comes for Key to step down. After all, it's been an open secret
within the National Party that Key will probably step down during any
possible third term for National. And given that Key has maintained a
so-called 'centrist' positioning for his government (with more than
occassional nods to the right with welfare reform,
partial-privatisations, public sector job cuts and tax cuts for the
wealthy), he would probably want his successor to maintain this
positioning.
Indeed,
National and John Key has placed great store on supposedly being
centrist. It's rather corporate and charitable-tinged school
breakfast policy announced last week resonated with large sections of
the public but probably not with sections of his own party. As the
Lusk papers illustrate, fiscal conservative and libertarian-inclined
Nats have been feeling rather sickened by Key's and English's less
than supposed emphasis on fiscal prudence. I didn't understand why,
for example, Lusk prefers a National-led Government which would be
more inclined towards supporting property development and mining
interests as I think the Nats are pretty much doing the bidding of
these sectors already!
All
of these reasons lead me to think that the Nat's internal differences
are not so much ideological but more personality based. Admittedly,
there may be a slight difference in the philosophical positionings of
Key and Joyce versus Collins in terms of, for example, the former
believe in pragmatic government interventionism in favour of
corporate interests whereas Collins and the fiscal conservatives
would take a more hands off/libertarian approach to economic and
social policy. In other words, if Collins had been PM last week and
not Key, for example, there would have been no school breakfast
policy at all whereas given the PM's state house upbringing, he has
most likely been sympathetic to some form of targeted intervention.
Also in personality terms, while the PM does have his abrasive side
(as Russel Norman outlined over the weeknd), Collins comes across as
a far more belligerent, less easy-going personality than Key does in
clear imitation of her late heroine, Margaret Thatcher. That
personality difference alone means that any leadership change from
Key to Collins would be noticed by the public but not in a way that
would favour the Nat's electoral interests. In short, Collins is
potential political poison for National and Key knows it.
These
slight differences aside, I believe that what transpired over this
long weekend was simply the Ninth Floor briefing against Lusk and the
likes of Cameron (Whale Oil) Slater in order to forestall a possible
palace coup in the not too distant future. Any such coup would have
damaged the prospects of both Steven Joyce and possible running mate
(and Bill English's favourite to succeed him as Deputy PM) Hekia
Parata.* And as Key and friends on the ninth floor have realised, the
Fiscal Conservatives had strong connections with Tea Party
Republicans whom effectively scuttled the Republican bid for the
White House in 2012. Essentially, the PM and his advisors didn't want
the same scenario developing for National post-2014 (or pre that if
they loose next year).
Given
these factors, I would say that the National Party's leadership Cold
War (as Bryce Edwards referred to it over the weekend) is not going
to turn hot, at least not in the near future. It could have done so
and soon if Lusk and Co had begun putting more of their lieutenants
into safe, winnable National seats and list positions for next year.
However, the Ninth Floor Brigade have spiked the guns of the
Collinite Fiscal Conservatives. But we will only know for sure if
they have done so if Joyce is ultimately victorious in taking the
National Party leadership when Key goes.
*
Hekia Parata for National Party deputy you ask? I say this following
her appearance on The Nation last weekend and her being asked about
her leadership ambitions (which have been backed by Bill English). On
this basis, I wouldn't rule out her standing as Joyce's 'running
mate' when Key goes despite her obvious pitfalls. After all, Cameron
Slater has been absolutely vicious in his condemnation of her at
times and, more often than not, he is Collins attack dog-in-chief.
Furthermore, English once referred in an email (published in Nicky
Hager's The Hollow Men) to Collins as a primadonna. I understand that
English's and Collins' mutual antipathy towards one another is a
pretty longstanding one and hasn't gone away despite their being in
Cabinet together. If Collins doesn't get the Nat leadership, I
predict she could be a starter for leading a new libertarian vehicle
to replace ACT, thus displacing the hapless and hopeless John Banks.
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