After
Christchurch: National Party Hides Its Playing At Islamophobia,
Xenophobia
By
Curwen Ares Rolinson
19 March, 2019
December 2018: National Party comes out swinging against UN Migration Pact it probably would have signed up to anyway, had it been in Government; sets up petition to oppose it
March
15th – Friday Night: National Party, perhaps feeling
sensitive to the day’s events, removes said petition from its
website
March
17th – Sunday: Somebody asks National what’s happened with
its petition; Bridges
claims it was taken down weeks ago – “well before any of the
recent tragic events in Christchurch” – as part of “normal web
maintenance” .
March
18th – Monday: It’s
pointed out that the page was still up on Friday afternoon …
so no, no that wasn’t what happened.
March
19th – Tuesday: National
shifts to claiming that the petition was removed on Friday night by
an “emotional junior staffer”. Insists it wasn’t lying about
its previous stance.
Now,
in terms of my own thoughts about the above … whatever one thinks
about immigration, and from wherever slash of whomever – the
National Party’s claimed opposition to the UN Migration Pact has
always rung so hollow, you could creatively refer to it as having
achieved Nirvana [ok, well .. Sunyata; but there’s definitely no
lights on inside, I’ll put it that way].
This
is a party which, after all, presided over back-to-back-to-back
record high immigration figures, while consciously tamping down
proposals even from within its own membership to lower them [c.f.
Bill English announcing such a policy .. and then walking it back a
short while afterwards due to opposition from some farmers and
employers] … and which had such a lackadaisical approach to the
“protection of national sovereignty” and lawmaking ability which
it *claimed* were core parts of its reasoning for opposing the UN
Migration Pact – that it thought the ISDS provisions in the
*original* #TPPA were a *good idea*. [They’re *still* not a good
idea in the revised CPTPP agreement, but that is another story for
another time, as best told by Professor Jane Kelsey].
Or,
in other words, the Nats do not and have never really cared about the
issues they purported to raise by pushing that petition.
They
were doing it for mere “populist points”. Because apparently, the
party which militantly blocked its own ears against the Voice of the
People on, say, asset sales in the course of *that* referendum
campaign … was all of a sudden going to be the People’s
Microphone on a rather obscure piece of intergovernmental
values-statement of little actual legal effect.
Or,
to phrase it another way – this wasn’t really about “listening
to New Zealanders”. It was about putting out a “YOU SHOULD BE
REALLY CONCERNED ABOUT THIS” line into the polis, and then using
that to try and make the Government of the day look scary,
unrepresentative, and even more incredibly Globalist than the Nats
themselves were for the previous nine years.
However,
the risk with putting out emotive political content into the
electorate … is that occasionally it comes back to bite you in the
hand and/or posterior.
And
that’s pretty much exactly what’s happened here.
Now
I’m NOT saying that National’s stance on the Migration Pact had
much, if anything, to do with Friday’s atrocity. Because it
probably didn’t. The terrorist in question claimed he had a
thousand years or more of history to Wikipedia his way through and/or
visit in person during his European jaunt to (mis)inform his views –
with the obvious implication that no help from any New Zealand
politician was required.
Had
National *not* attempted to oppose the Migration Pact, I cannot see
how anything would have really changed.
Yet
someone in National was plainly aware that the ‘optics’ of the
matter … were not going to look particularly good, in the
blood-tinged aftermath of our worst-ever terrorist attack. And so –
whether motivated by a sense of compassion (or, as Bridges put it
today, the result of being both “emotional” and possibly also
“junior”), or simply a desire to limit the potential
finger-pointing post-facto from a PR perspective … somebody chose
to remove the petition from public view.
Now,
I’m not sure quite what to make of National’s changing story on
the matter. It is at least possible that the conflicting statements
are simply the result of an ‘evolving informational picture’.
That is to say, somebody at National HQ not understanding that
“unlisted” and “not viewable to the public” are not actually
the same thing. It happens.
Yet
it was Bridges’ response to a question asked earlier today, as to
whether actually removing the petition was the right thing to do (you
know, making reality finally accord with what National thought had
been the case for a few weeks now, apparently – per their earlier
statement, anyway… ) – “I think the reality is we’re not
going to be critical of it because, as I say it’s a junior staff
member, [who was] very emotional” – that caused me to wonder if
this were really the case.
That
implies that otherwise, they *would* be critical of it. But also
states that they *aren’t* critical of it. It is, so to speak, a bob
each way – with an emphasis upon “Emotionally affected Kiwis”
getting a bit of slack given recent events.
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And
that, I think, is very, very deliberate play from National.
They’re
as-yet uncertain which way both a) public opinion in general, but
also b) the rather more specific sectors of opinion in various parts
of the electorate which they either claim to represent or really want
to win off at least one party in particular (you know, the one you
would have *thought* would perhaps be opposing said UN Migration Pact
were *it* not in Government) … which way those are going to go over
the coming weeks and months as we head towards the next Election
Year.
They
*don’t* want to make it suddenly seem like they’re bowing to
“PC”, or that they’ve suddenly stopped faux-caring about
national sovereignty or immigration policy settings. That’d lose
them the Talkback Brigade, and suchlike.
But
they’re *also* acutely conscious that, for a pretty appreciably
broad swathe of “Middle New Zealand” [often, but not always,
where elections are actually won and lost – in those instances
wherein they aren’t won by tactically nuking NZ First and/or other
support parties] – Friday’s events represent something of a
watershed in which the previously not-entirely-un-acceptable approach
to speaking with perhaps outright concern about “Islam” , may now
wind up being looked at with very different eyes, indeed.
About
the only thing that *everybody* can agree upon, is that Friday’s
literally atrocious events, have represented a considerable shock and
emotive impact to both the collective and individual psyches of New
Zealanders.
So
any ‘inconsistency’ on National’s part .. well, “we’ll just
chalk it up to that, then.”
In
a curious bit of irony, that’s probably the closest thing we’re
likely to see to empathy from Simon Bridges in a press conference,
during the entirety of his (remaining) run as National Party Leader.
But
I digress.
The
point, I suppose, is that we have known for a long time now that
National (and, to be fair, other parties too, especially when
consigned to the relative discomforting boredom of Opposition), have
long ago ceased in believing in acting as a genuine conveyor of polis
opinion unto the corridors of power. Instead, they’ve “outsourced”
that, to PR companies, lobbyists, and focus-groups. Which is rather
like presuming that an elevator-muzak or cellphone ringtone version
of a great opera is much the same thing, at best.
And
often, instead, seems to be exactly the other way around to
“representing public opinion”; rather becoming far more actively
interested in “representing [often pre-formed] elite opinion to the
public”.
Hence
why you need the PR companies involved. And the lobbyists, to make
sure you know just *which* ‘elites’ you should be listening to
the loudest.
Now,
there’s no “script” for what’s going on at the moment in New
Zealand politics. Not really. I mean, there’s general platitudes,
and there’s an array of foreign case-studies that are being cited
about the place [the Howard Government in Australia pushing through
firearms controls being Exhibit A upon everybody’s lips, it would
seem] …. but just four days after the Atrocity in question, it’s
*far* too soon to tell how things are likely to unfold.
Hell,
there hasn’t even been time to start focus-grouping or whatever it
is that the Nats do when they’re trying to figure out which way to
arc a long-term policy/political trajectory on something potentially
divisive. Or what colour ties Simon Bridges should wear. Or how long
Judith Collins should spend outside of Cabinet following a
corruption-tinged teacup-milk-scandal. Or the precise differential
value of an Indian MP versus a Chinese MP for the sake of donation
soliciting purposes. Etc. ETc. Etc.
So
in the absence of anything hard or reliable [inasmuch as political
opinion about anything ever actually is] to go upon, they’ve
instead adopted a creative non-stance that *might look like*
something else, in at least two directions. And which endeavours to
hit the mid-point of the intersecting Venn Diagram with an ’emotive’
impact, regardless.
Very
clever, in its own way. I wonder who wrote that for ’em.
As
applies National actually deciding which way it’s going to go upon
this, and quite a number of other somewhat related issues … I
suspect we’re going to be left wondering for awhile yet. The dust
takes time to clear on these things, which is what is required in
order to perceive the best “optics” for the situation.
The
National party are not, by instinct, these days “leaders” –
they are “managers”.
Which
is, one could argue, exactly the wrong set of priorities and
proclivities, for an emergent and paradigm-reshaping [at least here
in NZ politics] event such as this.
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