The New Zealand ruling elite is heading towards a crisis election on October 14, with the two major parties that have buttressed capitalism for almost a century, Labour and National, deeply unpopular.
Labour has crashed to its worst result in six years in a 1News-Verian poll released Monday, dropping four percentage points to 29 percent. Labour assumed office in 2017 with then Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and was returned in 2020 with an historic majority under the countryâs proportional voting system of 50 percent. National is on 37 percent and, allied with far-right ACT on 13 percent, could form government.
National and Labour, which together once commanded 80 percent of the vote are now, however, struggling in the mid-60s. Whichever takes office after the election will need to engage in horse-trading with one or more of the minor parties to form a coalition. For Labour, this means the Greens, currently at 12.0 percent and Te Pati MÄori (The MÄori Party, TPM) on 3 percent.
Labour, National and their allies have all engaged in stirring up a furore over âculturalâ and racial issues, largely in order to divert attention from the right-wing agenda that is shared by the whole political establishment. This has included manufactured outrage over bi-lingual MÄori -English road signs and tribal âco-governanceâ of water infrastructure.
TPM is aiming to play a role beyond its small numbers. It has two MPs in parliament, Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi, thanks to Waititiâs 2020 win in the Waiariki electorate, one of seven exclusive MÄori seats. A Labour cabinet minister, Meka Whaitiri recently defected to the party, declaring she will join the âunapologetic MÄori political movementâ at the election.
The collapse in Labourâs support is the product of its right-wing, pro-corporate record. Despite assuming office in 2017 promising a âtransformational governmentâ to attack child poverty and inequality, it has done the opposite. Labourâs win in 2020 was mainly due to its initial success in combating the COVID pandemic through public health measures, which it abandoned under pressure from big business in late 2021, resulting in over 3,200 deaths.
Labour enters the election as a party of war and austerity, highlighted by its ongoing support for the US/NATO proxy war in the Ukraine, confrontation with China and attacks on the working class at home. Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has ruled out any wealth or capital gains taxes despite escalating crises in health and education.
In a desperate attempt to rescue Labour, petty bourgeois commentators are promoting TPM as a new âleft wingâ prop. This involves a considerable amount of deception: TPM is a capitalist party which represents indigenous business interests and was part of the right-wing National Party-led government from 2008 to 2017.
The âliberalâ Daily Blog has been active publicising TPMâs tax policyâcalling it âas close to socialism as we are going to getââand its policy of military neutrality. In fact, the party proposes only a small tax hike for the rich: its top rate of 48 percent for people earning more than $300,000 is well below the top income tax rate of 66 percent in the early 1980s. TPM also proposes a modest tax on wealth (between 2 and 8 percent for net wealth over $2 million), as well as a tax-free threshold for people earning less than $30,000.
TPM knows that even these modest policiesâwhich would not resolve the social crisis or end widening social inequalityâwill never be implemented by a Labour Party-led government which it plans to join. Hipkins has ruled out a wealth tax or any other major tax changes.
On foreign policy, Waititi has said the party wants âneutrality policiesâ similar to Switzerland. TPM calls for withdrawing from the Five Eyes spy network led by the United States and includes Australia, Canada and Britain. âWe will no longer be a political football in the wars of imperial powers,â Waititi boasted in a statement in February, calling for âa MÄori-centric foreign policy and a MÄori-centric defence policy.â
TPM supports funding the military as a âsupport force for the Pacific, for our Polynesian world.â This dovetails completely with New Zealandâs role as a minor imperialist power in the Pacific; the Defence Force maintains close ties with countries such as Tonga and Samoa, a former NZ colony.
New Zealandâs bourgeoisie has maintained a close alliance with the United States since World War IIâsupporting the wars against Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan and now against Russia and the build-up to war against Chinaâ to guarantee US support for New Zealandâs colonial role in the Pacific.
Should it become part of the government, TPM will quickly discard its âneutralityâ, posturing in the same way that the Green Party has done. The Greensâ policy platform also calls for New Zealand to leave the Five Eyes, but this did not stop it from joining the Labour government and supporting its pro-war policies and increases to military and intelligence spending.
Significantly, despite Waititi declaring that NZ should not âstick its noseâ into the Ukraine war, this did not prevent him and Ngarewa-Packer from joining the government in hailing Ukraineâs president Volodymr Zelensky after he addressed the New Zealand parliament in December. Zelenskyâs regime is a stooge of Washington, which is using hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians as cannon fodder in a war aimed at defeating and dividing up Russia.
TPMâs âleftâ posturing is aimed at channelling oppositional sentiment among impoverished and alienated MÄoriâabout 15 percent of the population and among the most oppressed members of the working classâback into the dead end of capitalist parliamentary politics. TPM aims to take more of the MÄori seats off Labour, whose MÄori MPs are severely compromised by the governmentâs failure to resolve the extreme social crisis.
TPM represents a privileged layer of indigenous capitalists who have benefited from multi-million dollar Treaty of Waitangi pay-outs, purportedly for the historical crimes of colonisation. After more than 30 years of reparations, most MÄori still live in poverty while tribal business interests control $NZ70 billion in assets.
TPM, however, is demanding greater control over land, resources and finances, advocating, for example, tribal âownershipâ of the countryâs water to be recognised and for tribes to be compensated accordingly. This means further elevating the indigenous elite amid the worst cost-of-living and social crisis facing the entire working class, including MÄori, in decades.
The oppression of the MÄori people has not been alleviated by having four MÄori seats, later increased to seven, in parliament since 1867. Occupants of these seats have always been nationalist and pro-imperialist. Apirana Ngata, the best-known MÄori politician of the early twentieth century encouraged thousands of young MÄori to enlist to fight in the First and Second World Wars.
TPMâs class orientation is exemplified by its president, John Tamihere, a former Labour cabinet minister. Tamihere has gained considerable prominence and wealth as CEO of the Waipareira Trust, a nominal âcharityâ which receives millions in government funds for providing social services in West Auckland. In the year to June 2022, the trust had revenues of $69,544,616, and held cash or term deposits of $50,379,806. Fifteen senior staff members earn an average of $288,000 each.
The fraud of TPMâs purported leftism is exposed by its history. The party was founded in 2004 as a breakaway from the then governing Labour Party after the Foreshore and Seabed Act removed the right of tribes to establish traditional ownership rights over the intertidal zone, thus eliminating lucrative business opportunities in areas such as aquaculture.
As part of the National-led government from 2008, TPM supported Nationalâs attacks on welfare beneficiaries and youth, thousands of public sector job cuts, and its increase to regressive Goods and Services Tax. The government gave tax cuts to the rich and made drastic inroads into living standards.
TPMâs main initiative, the Whanau Ora program, privatised the delivery of welfare services to benefit organisations like the Waipareira Trust. While the party became deeply discredited for collaborating with Nationalâs brutal austerity measures, the National-TPM coalition passed 46 Treaty settlements into law, worth $1.23 billion to Maori tribal corporates.
In 2011, prominent TPM MP Hone Harawira quit, declaring the party had âbetrayedâ its constituents and set up the ManaParty, designed as another fake âleftâ trap. Like TPM today, Mana postured as representing poor and oppressed MÄori but its policies were steeped in nationalism and were profoundly anti-working class. It proposed abolishing the dole for the unemployed and advocated discrimination against immigrants by âprioritising the employment of New Zealand residents.â None of this prevented New Zealandâs pseudo-left groups and a number of union bureaucrats from flocking to promote Mana as a âradicalâ alternative.
Mana collapsed after Harawira lost his seat in 2017. It did not contest the 2020 election and returned to its roots, endorsing the MÄori Party. Deeply unpopular due to its collaboration with National, TPM won no seats in 2017. Although the partyâs share of the country-wide vote declined from 1.18 percent in 2017 to 1.17 percent in 2020, winning Waiariki gave it the right to full proportional representation with two MPs.
There is nothing remotely progressive or âleft-wingâ about TPM. The race-based identity politics on which it rests is promoted to divide the working class as it comes into struggle against the assault on living standards at home and war abroad. In particular, it is used to undermine the striving of the working class for unity and the fight for the socialist alternative to the predations of capitalism, carried forward by the Socialist Equality Group (NZ).
Source: Wsws.org