I don't know David Cunliffe but his parliamentary colleagues and the Press Gallery do and virtually to a man and a woman can't stand him. By contrast Grant Robertson is enormously liked by everyone. That alone should decide Labour's leadership, for as John Key demonstrates, likeability is a considerable electoral
Bob Jones: On likeability alone, Robertson's your man
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Grant Robertson. Photo / Natalie Slade
Facing a rout in the coming election, Labour MPs recently held their noses and reinstalled Rudd in the hope he could save his party, if not the Government. But the cat was now out of the bag about his character as journalists like Marr revealed. Rudd's final death knell probably came from no less than the innocuous make-up girl after the first leaders' television debate. She had no political agenda but went public with how appallingly rude Rudd had been to her whereas Abbott had been charming.
As we witnessed here with the nondescript backbencher Aaron Gilmore, voters will tolerate politicians' misdemeanours but bullying towards menials is unforgivable. Still, we should be grateful our politicians are mostly a decent lot when compared with their terrible Australian counterparts. That said, despite his shortcomings Rudd is far superior to the awful Abbott in competence but his destructive personality over-rules any plusses. Pity Australia.
So, returning to Labour's leadership contest, I believe Robertson is the standout choice for, as he attracts such warmth and respect from his caucus colleagues, inevitably he will from the wider electorate in the high-profile leader's position, and will better achieve a united caucus than Cunliffe.
As always when appealing to the party faithful, the candidates, Jones excepted, claim extreme positions, in this case the ritual attack on Rogernomics. Ignore that dishonesty. Helen Clark trotted out that guff to the faithful but on achieving office, sensibly left well alone, as indeed the preceding Bolger Government did despite in Opposition hypocritically attacking Douglas' necessary reforms when they were instigated in the mid-1980s.
The candidates should knock this knee-jerk 1960s backward-looking nonsense on the head and advance positive policies. Rogernomics, in alignment with the rest of the world, was simply the institution of economic democracy, otherwise known as the market economy, whereby individuals made their personal decisions rather than the state. That it's an immensely more productive system is indisputable.
Cunliffe claims he can attract the 30 per cent or so who failed to vote at the last elections which he believes to mainly be an underclass comprising probable Labour votes. Some hope! Everyone gets an equal chance with free education.
Most seize that opportunity regardless of their home circumstances but others opt to live out materially bleak, taxpayer-subsidised lives, driven by instant gratification.
If anyone can stir this apathetic lot it would more likely be the affable, rugby-playing Robertson.
All of this points up the foolishness of Labour's candidate and leader selection mechanism. It stands in stark contrast to National's democratic model in which the electorates choose their candidates and caucus their leader.
That said, it sometimes fails, as Aaron Gilmore demonstrated and the Maori Party discovered when opting for the National model on the valid grounds that it was democratic, only to find to their dismay that it delivered up Hone Harawira, whose destructive nature has done them so much harm. But that's a consequence of MMP, neither being electable had voters any say.