The $3 million upgrade, as we reported on Wednesday, will mainly provide and maintain better security equipment as well as repair some normal deterioration. The minister now responsible for its condition, Chris Hipkins, said, "It's in a pretty run down state and I think at some point we're going to have to look at some reasonably significant maintenance at Premier House."
He is right, so why not now? Its current resident is a Prime Minister with a baby. Jacinda Ardern's partner and child can not stay at their home in Auckland during the week as families of previous occupants did. There would seem no better time to turn the house into a real home, a residence such as other countries provide for those they elect to their highest office.
Politically, it might be easier for a Labour-led government to do this. A National government is more vulnerable to the sort of criticism Hipkins himself levelled at the previous Government in 2011 when it dared spend about $275,000 on some fresh paint, carpets and blinds. "Every Kiwi family struggling to pay the bills knows if you can't afford to pay for dinner, new carpet and curtains for the lounge get pushed a long way down the list," he said.
Cheap criticism has made governments afraid to improve Premier House for too long. They should ignore it and give us a place of pride.