Is the surge in support for the Greens the result of the
party doing most things right? Or is it simply down to almost
everything going wrong for Labour?
The latter is probably the dominant factor in the rise and
rise of the Greens. The party is now nudging the
psychologically important 10% mark - and in one poll this
week actually bettered it.
But there are no obvious signs the Greens are getting this
additional support from a fresh source of votes. The
centre-left's share of the overall vote is not really
growing. It seems likely the Greens are simply the
beneficiaries of Labour's journey into political hell.
Voters switching back and forth between Labour and the Greens
would seem to explain the sometimes wild fluctuations in
support for the latter party from poll to poll compared to
the other smaller parties whose ratings are almost static.
This raises questions of whether those decamping from Labour
will stick around until election day. This where the Greens
doing things right comes into play.
Those voters have to be given good reasons for sticking
around once their protest at Labour's increasingly
dishevelled state starts to fade.
The major Opposition party is now almost welcoming the
respite offered by wall-to-wall Rugby World Cup. During the
past week there has been more talk of the two "Camp Davids" -
a play on the American president's country retreat near
Washington DC.
The term has become shorthand for describing the two cliques
in the Labour caucus seen to be vying for the party
leadership after the election. - the backers of David
Cunliffe and the supporters of another front-bencher, David
Parker.
However, following the damage inflicted on Phil Goff by the
leaking of a suggestion that he offered to resign the
leadership at meeting of the party's front-bench MPs, word
has gone out from the leadership that if there is any more
monkey-business before the election, then Mr Goff and Annette
King will make life very uncomfortable when the wannabe
leaders lock horns over who succeeds Mr Goff.
The warning was aimed squarely at the Cunliffe camp - the
suspected source of the leak. The muscle-flexing has brought
a truce which, along with the cup-enforced hiatus, will allow
Mr Goff to come out all guns blazing when the official
election campaign begins a week after the final game.
The Greens, however, are resigned to some voters drifting
back to Labour in the latter stages of the campaign. There is
also worry that their support may peak too early.
The best insurance against that happening is to ensure the
party remains relevant during the campaign by being relevant
to the question of who governs afterwards.
A positioning statement hammered out by the Greens in June
states that it is "highly unlikely" they will strike a
post-election deal with National.
Keeping the door ajar, however, means the party remains a
player during the campaign, rather than being sidelined had
it declared it could only ever work with Labour.
It is likely John Key will want to talk to the Greens after
the election - and may have some new ideas on how they and
National might work together.
Given the weakened state of the Maori Party, Mr Key may well
be looking for another party to his left to balance the
influence of Act New Zealand to his right. That will be the
case even if National secures an absolute majority in the
next Parliament.
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