The
Guardian's view of New Zealand politics.
Without Kim Dotcom and his millions very little light would have been shone on rampant corruption and the government's cosy relationship with the NSA and US imperialism
Without Kim Dotcom and his millions very little light would have been shone on rampant corruption and the government's cosy relationship with the NSA and US imperialism
The
Guardian view on the New Zealand elections: dirty politics cannot be
allowed to triumph
The
National party’s smear tactics and Kim Dotcom’s millions both
threaten democracy
19
September, 2014
The
New Zealand general election this weekend is the culmination of a
campaign that has profoundly shaken this mature, stable and
successful country in ways that raise questions about democratic
resilience everywhere.
There
have been moments in the last six weeks when events appear to have
been scripted by the team who write House of Cards. At others, it has
seemed that the billionaire internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom, who is
fighting extradition to the US over Megaupload, the file-sharing site
on which his fortune is based, is trying to buy the country, or at
least the election. His motive, his critics speculate, is to turn NZ
into an offshore haven, a place of safety for Julian Assange, Edward
Snowden and anyone forced into exile by exposing the inner workings
of governments.
Labour
and the Greens are demanding a full investigation, yet it still looks
likely that the National party incumbent John Key will win a third
term, but he will survive with his reputation much diminished. Having
started the campaign a clear favourite, a series of scandals has
eroded both his own and his party’s standing. The worst, yet to be
successfully refuted, were published last month in Dirty Politics,
exposing a senior figure on the Key team’s close links with a
rightwing blogger that he used to channel smears about rivals into
the mainstream press. A fortnight ago, the justice minister, Judith
Collins, was forced to step down in the wake of the book’s
allegations that she was connected with an attempt to defame the head
of the Serious Fraud Office.
The
book came shortly after a former mayor of Auckland close to Mr Key,
John Banks, was forced to resign following his conviction for a
breach of rules on political donations involving Mr Dotcom.
But
Mr Dotcom, who is not a New Zealand citizen and cannot become an MP,
has a much more direct influence than that. In March he set up the
Internet party with more than a £1m of his personal fortune – more
than all the other parties have spent on the campaign put together.
Earlier this week, he hosted an encrypted video press conference
linking Mr Snowden, Glenn Greenwald and Mr Assange in what he dubbed
the Moment of Truth, embarrassing Mr Key further with claims
(strongly disputed by Mr Key) of his authorisation of mass
surveillance by the NSA which Mr Dotcom says he would outlaw. The
party’s other pledges on free higher education and fast internet
for all look likely to win it a seat or even two in parliament.
Now
it is for New Zealand’s voters to decide: they can reject the
practitioners of dirty politics. They can resist the disproportionate
spending of Mr Dotcom. Their choice ought to define the limits of
what is democratic.
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