Sunday 20 August 2017

Dunne Gone a look back to 2002



With Peter Dunne out of the picture: http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/political/337660/live-united-future-s-peter-dunne-to-resign-at-election  will the 2017 election become a copycat of the election held in 2002, who knows but National has the very same leader Bill English. The report below is from Audrey Young NZ HERALD reporter at that time.

My view is that she may have to do so again… maybe she could just change a few names and call it square!

  AUDREY YOUNG political reporter
 Infighting continues to rage in the National Party as leader Bill English signals upheavals ahead following a devastating election result - "the worst day of my political life".
National's fortunes dived from 39 MPs to just 27. Of those, 21 are electorate MPs and six list MPs. And in 16 of the 21 electorates it won, Labour polled higher than National in the party vote.
When the caucus convenes at Parliament tomorrow, a bulk-order of 16 silver trays will be presented to outgoing MPs: six retiring and 10 defeated: Gavan Herlihy (Otago), Tony Steel (Hamilton East), and list MPs Bob Simcock, Alec Neill, Belinda Vernon, Anne Tolley, Eric Roy, Arthur Anae, Marie Hasler and Annabel Young.

Warfare between party president Michelle Boag and her detractors is still festering with her claiming that their disunity contributed to the result and that they are happy with it.
"I think it might be called very, very, very sour grapes," she said.
"These are very small numbers of people who don't like a democratic decision that went against them and have undermined the party's prospects consistently."
She said former president John Slater [the father of rightwing bogger Cameron Slater] wished Labour president Mike Williams luck on Saturday.
Mr Slater's greatest caucus supporter, Pakuranga MP Maurice Williamson, called for Michelle Boag's head.
"A resignation from her would lance a very big boil and let us get on with the job of what we've got to do," he said.
"There were other factors involved with National's performance but they are trivial compared with Michelle Boag."
The main problem was that she wanted to be the "big issue", but she "never should be. People should not even really know who [the president] is."
But southern regional chairwoman Ailsa Smail told the Herald: "Williamson's the boil that needs lancing, not Michelle.
"It's unfair to blame Michelle Boag. Michelle has worked particularly hard. She's a great leader. She leads by example."
Michelle Boag would not rule resignation in - or out…
No one person was in charge of the campaign, which in itself has been a source of dissatisfaction. It was the work of a committee: Mr English, Michelle Boag, director-general Allan Johnston, deputy leader Roger Sowry, MPs Murray McCully and Simon Power, as well as Mr English's advisers Tim Grafton and Sue Foley.

Following caucus rules after an election defeat, Mr English's leadership will be put to the test tomorrow, but he is expected to be overwhelmingly confirmed. [Will this be the case in 2017?]
Annabel Young expressed concerns that many in the party are voicing.
"I don't think we had a campaign. I don't think we had a strategy.
"The only person with any campaign experience on the campaign committee was Murray McCully."
Mr English was in a brighter mood yesterday to begin what he called "the permanent campaign" than the despair he succumbed to on Saturday night.
After a series of media interviews following his concession speech, he broke down in tears and was taken by staff to a more private room to be consoled by his wife, Mary…

The test will be how bold he is with his front bench and how his old friends and fellow members of the so-called brat pack fare: Mr Sowry, Tony Ryall and Nick Smith.
* Two Auckland political scientists agreed National failed to distinguish its policies from that of Labour - but they were still surprised by the size of National's thumping…

Dr Miller said Labour had purged itself of Rogernomics, [Really] but National had struggled to distance itself from its own perceived failings.
"You have to decide what you stand for, and I feel Bill English was looking to policies they had tried in the 1990s. It was as though they hadn't repositioned themselves," Dr Miller said.
Having Don Brash in the party did not help that - voters may have seen him as being a throwback to radical economics.
The Auckland University deputy head of politics, Dr Joe Atkinson, said the party's advertising was "appalling" and its opening moves "amateurish". Dr Atkinson said Mr English improved during the campaign, but was yet to match Helen Clark.
"Bill English is a bit of a waffler, a sloganeer - up against Helen Clark with her magisterial grasp of policy detail."
Both political scientists said Michelle Boag would cop much of the blame for the defeat - whether justified or not.

Summary of the 27 July 2002 New Zealand House of Representatives election results

party
votes
% of votes
seats

%
change
electorate
list
total
change


838,219
41.26
+2.52
45
7
52
+3


425,310
20.93
-9.57
21
6
27
-12


210,912
10.38
+6.12
1
12
13
+8


145,078
7.14
+0.10
0
9
9
0


142,250
7.00
+1.84
0
9
9
+2


135,918
6.69
+5.04a
1
7
8
+7


34,542
1.70
+1.70
1
1
2
+2


other parties
99,388
4.89
-7.76
0
0
0
-10b


total
2,031,617
100.00

69
51
120
0






informal votes
8,631



disallowed special votes
15,156



total votes cast
2,055,404



turnout
76.98%


All of the above makes for interesting reading…right now Audrey Young must be sharpening her pencil…and we must wait and see just what eventuates on the 23rd of September 2017.

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