The thing about hypocrisy is that its unmistakable odour
offends the most disparate of sensibilities, political and
otherwise. Only the blindly devoted supporters of David
Garrett and Rodney Hide cannot see how they have hoisted
themselves with their own petard.
If you make a career out of condemning in the most splenetic
fashion those who accept "perks", then it is almost a law of
nature that universal condemnation will come your way when
you avail yourself of those selfsame perks. Thus it came to
pass with Mr Hide, taking his girlfriend on a jaunt overseas
at the taxpayer's expense.
In fact he was only doing what he was arguably entitled to,
but that fact is consigned to irrelevance by his prior
self-righteous position on the matter.
So it is too with Mr Garrett, who has made his brief public
career to date on the back of vociferous get-tough-on-crime
campaigns, first as a lawyer for the Sensible Sentencing
Trust, then as a Johnny-come-lately Act New Zealand MP.
When people heard Mr Hide making his pleading on behalf of Mr
Garrett along the well-travelled path of redemption, many
will have found it stomach-churningly disingenuous.
Mr Garrett, backed by Mr Hide, led the charge on the
three-strikes legislation - a piece of populist law that does
not give a fig about redemption. In fact it positively seems
to abhor it.
The legislation also flies in the face of voluminous
evidence, not to mention certain well-rehearsed economic
realities - $90,000 per annum to house a prisoner,
second-highest imprisonment rate in the developed world, the
vast cost of building more and more prisons - that point to
its wrong-headedness and ineffectiveness.
The pair were intimately associated with calls for ending
name suppression while taking advantage of the very same with
respect to Mr Garrett's colourful past. Arguably, the latter
owes his parliamentary career to the rules of suppression.
We have not seen such rank hypocrisy in our elected officials
for a good long while and the disdain now being heaped upon
those at the centre of this fiasco has been well-earned. But
we should not get too carried away over what is essentially a
sideshow. There are bigger fish to fry.
To wit: the inevitable, casually rehearsed but probably
carefully scripted, suggestion by Prime Minister John Key
that the debacle could sway voters against MMP and into
thinking that the system "fundamentally isn't working so
well".
"I think it will increase the likelihood that people will
vote MMP out," he said this week. He added the rider,
naturally, that he wasn't saying "they should or shouldn't
take that view", but for many the voice of reason, Mr Middle
New Zealand, has spoken.
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