Google AI
The Times Australia
The Times World News

.

Judith Collins may be gone but New Zealand’s search for a credible and viable opposition is far from over

  • Written by: Richard Shaw, Professor of Politics, Massey University
Judith Collins may be gone but New Zealand’s search for a credible and viable opposition is far from over

When Shane Reti replaced Judith Collins at the helm of New Zealand’s National Party today, he became the fifth National leader Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has faced. When Reti, who is in the top spot on a caretaker basis, steps aside next week, that number will tick over to six. In four years.

For New Zealand’s most electorally successful party in the post-war era this is an unprecedented period of turmoil.

Collins’ departure comes as a surprise to roughly no one. Discontent with her leadership has been bubbling away within the National Party family for some time. When it came to a head over lasts night’s demotion of Simon Bridges[1] there was a sense the end was near.

The former leader’s continuing association[2] with right-wing blogger Cameron Slater, her criticism[3] of prominent microbiologist Siouxsie Wiles, her role in forcing the resignations of former party leader Todd Muller and veteran MP Nick Smith – these and other tactical choices had long since undermined her authority in sections of the caucus and wider party organisation.

When the family squabble broke out into the public domain some weeks ago things were ratcheted up several notches. The moment party insiders such as former attorney general Chris Finlayson[4] and Collins’ own former press secretary[5] began questioning her fitness for office, you got the sense the tide was running out on Collins.

Simon Bridges watching Judith Collins speak to media
Simon Bridges watches Judith Collins speak to media after the National Party’s heavy defeat at the 2020 election. GettyImages

Leadership cuts all ways

In the end, however, it was the polls that did it. Bill English led National to 44.4% of the vote in 2017. Three years and a couple of leaders later, Collins took the party to 25.6%, its worst electoral performance since 2002.

Things have never really picked up, the pressure mounting as one anaemic poll[6] followed another. The steady growth in support for the ACT Party has compounded matters. In National’s world, David Seymour’s party is supposed to be the support act, but ACT is now putting pressure[7] on National for top billing.

Read more: New Zealand's new parliament turns red: final 2020 election results at a glance[8]

And so Collins went. But there is more to this than her own performance. In an age of hyper-personalised politics, the obsession with parties’ leaders obscures other critical aspects of a successful political party. There is much more to politics than having a skilled leader – lieutenants matter, as do foot soldiers. Policy matters, the unfashionable “cake stall” parts of political parties matter.

In other words, the boss of the parliamentary wing of the party is not the only one who has to show up. Leadership must also come from those who control the wider party organisation, and the public criticism from party insiders suggests the issues within National go well beyond leadership of the caucus.

For instance, the National Party’s board plays the critical role in candidate selection, and it hasn’t covered itself in glory lately. There has been a string of poor (generally young, male and Pākehā) candidates[9], and following the 2020 election the party somehow managed to wind up with a caucus that looked more like the New Zealand of the 1950s[10] than the 2020s.

Dr Shane Reti, former deputy and now interim leader of the National Party. GettyImages

A party divided

Collins’ departure won’t address those systemic flaws. Neither will it tackle the single most pressing issue facing National – deciding what kind of political party it wants to be.

Historically, National has been a broad political church, accommodating a heterodox mix of economic liberals and social conservatives, urban dwellers and denizens of the rural heartland. And it has been very good at gaining and holding onto power, governing in 47 of the 76 years since the end of WWII.

Read more: Labour makes it easier to change leaders, but Jacinda Ardern has no reason to go – yet[11]

But the party looks distracted at the moment, the split between[12] its socially liberal and religiously conservative wings obvious to all. The party (at least under Collins) has been seemingly more interested in culture war skirmishes[13] than in addressing material issues, particularly the growing rental and housing crises[14].

Beyond that, if National is to retake power in 2023 it needs to bring back into the fold those voters who decamped[15] to Jacinda Ardern’s Labour Party in 2020. The shine has begun to come off both Ardern and her government as the pandemic drags on and people start to flag, offering National any number of lines of attack which would appeal to those looking for a reason to return. But Collins’ focus was too often elsewhere.

The democratic deficit

In a sense, Judith Collins lost her job because she was not John Key. National has been on a mission to find The Next John Key since the original resigned as leader in 2016 (although, and this is unlikely to be entirely coincidental, he has recently started popping up here and there[16] like some sort of political legacy act).

Five leadership changes later (and with another looming next week), the search continues. But installing the fifth new leader (six if you count Nikki Kaye’s hours-long stint at the helm following Todd Muller’s departure) since Key’s time won’t be the panacea to the party’s problems. National’s problems run far deeper than that.

Meanwhile, whoever becomes the next leader can look forward to leading a caucus that is riven, around the margins of which prowl three former leaders – one who is clearly biding his time and another who, one suspects, will not be taking this (or anything else) lying down.

Read more: Why Jacinda Ardern’s ‘clumsy’ leadership response to Delta could still be the right approach[17]

ACT is circling on the right, while on the left Ardern has led the country to high vaccination rates and is about to open the country up. To say National’s next leader has their work cut out would be an extreme political understatement.

For New Zealand’s most electorally successful party in the post-war era, the chaotic events of the last 24 hours are just the latest episode in an unprecedented period of turmoil. So there’s that. But beyond the implications of the current bloodletting for individuals and parties there is another, more important dimension to the ongoing shambles within National.

Representative democracies require functional governments but they also need strong oppositions. At the moment, New Zealand has one of these things but not the other. This can’t go on – and yet it does.

References

  1. ^ demotion of Simon Bridges (www.nzherald.co.nz)
  2. ^ continuing association (www.nzherald.co.nz)
  3. ^ criticism (www.odt.co.nz)
  4. ^ Chris Finlayson (www.stuff.co.nz)
  5. ^ former press secretary (www.nzherald.co.nz)
  6. ^ one anaemic poll (www.rnz.co.nz)
  7. ^ putting pressure (www.stuff.co.nz)
  8. ^ New Zealand's new parliament turns red: final 2020 election results at a glance (theconversation.com)
  9. ^ poor (generally young, male and Pākehā) candidates (thespinoff.co.nz)
  10. ^ New Zealand of the 1950s (www.rnz.co.nz)
  11. ^ Labour makes it easier to change leaders, but Jacinda Ardern has no reason to go – yet (theconversation.com)
  12. ^ split between (www.metromag.co.nz)
  13. ^ culture war skirmishes (www.stuff.co.nz)
  14. ^ growing rental and housing crises (www.theguardian.com)
  15. ^ voters who decamped (www.newsroom.co.nz)
  16. ^ popping up here and there (www.rnz.co.nz)
  17. ^ Why Jacinda Ardern’s ‘clumsy’ leadership response to Delta could still be the right approach (theconversation.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/judith-collins-may-be-gone-but-new-zealands-search-for-a-credible-and-viable-opposition-is-far-from-over-172590

Times Magazine

A Report From France: The Mood of a Nation

France occupies a unique place in the global imagination. To many outsiders, it remains the land ...

“More Choice” Or Fewer Choices? Australia’s New Vehicle Emission Rules

The Changing Face Of Motoring When the Federal Government announced Australia’s new fuel efficien...

Female founders to benefit from new funding to turn their ideas into viable ventures

The University of Newcastle Integrated Innovation Network (I2N) has been selected by the NSW Governm...

GLOBAL SPORTS MARKETING HEAVYWEIGHTS CONVERGE IN BRISBANE FOR INAUGURAL VICTORY LAP

Australia’s premier sports marketing and creative summit, Victory Lap, has revealed its lineup of in...

The 2026 Met Gala: Fashion, Power and the Theatre of Exclusivity

Each year, on the first Monday in May, the global fashion industry converges on the steps of Metro...

Australian Wine Guide

A Quick but Informed Guide to the Varieties and Popular Brands of Australian WinesDon’t let a wine...

The Times Features

Politics Has Become a Leadership Contest. Americans Cho…

Modern politics may be undergoing a profound transformation. For generations, elections were ofte...

One Nation Policies Are Resonating. Rather Than Mock Th…

Australian conservative politics is entering a period of strategic uncertainty. For years, the Li...

2026 Broken Hill Mundi Mundi Bash festival

AUSTRALIA’S BIGGEST OUTBACK MUSIC FESTIVAL Set for another record year, 95% of tickets are sold t...

Day Care Centres and the Spread of Illness: Why Childre…

Few parents need to be told that day care centres can become breeding grounds for illness. Across ...

The Overlooked Link Between Flat Tennis Balls and Tenni…

Tennis elbow is the sport's most common injury. Up to 50% of recreational players will experience it...

The Australian Government will hand down the 2026/27 Federal Budget on Tuesday 12 May, and with co...

64% of Aussie kids are influencing family holiday plans…

Forget coats and heaters- think t-shirts, thongs, sunscreen and swimming. Whales aren’t the only one...

Health Insurance Recent Government Changes — And What T…

Part of the confusion surrounding private health insurance is that governments regularly adjust th...

A Report From France: The Mood of a Nation

France occupies a unique place in the global imagination. To many outsiders, it remains the land ...