Some elements on the left of the political spectrum have long
cried wolf about National supposedly having a secret agenda,
especially when it comes to privatisation.
It might look like National has finally provided evidence to
justify all the bleating in the form of the confidence and
supply agreement it has hammered out with Act New Zealand.
But looks can deceive. The contents of the eight-page
document might suggest National has lurched to the right. But
those contents were more likely shaped by other factors such
as Act's surprising degree of negotiating leverage,
National's willingness to continue its confrontational
approach to what it sees as vested interests blocking reform
in the compulsory education sector, or, simply because
National had already been planning to do what Act wanted.
If nothing else, the agreement is providing rich pickings for
conspiracy theorists, especially the Act-driven intention to
trial so-called "charter schools".
These institutions' initial mission will be the lifting of
educational achievement in poor areas of south Auckland and
Christchurch.
A series of school charters will be allocated to those areas,
with the private sector, iwi and community groups competing
with "existing providers" (presumably the Ministry of
Education) for the public funds which come with those
charters not to run just new schools, but existing ones as
well.
The creation of these "independent state-funded schools" has
been given the same kind of welcome by the education
establishment as Dracula got on visiting the blood bank.
The teacher unions are highly suspicious of John Key's
dismissive statement "that's MMP for you, isn't it" when he
was questioned as to why National had agreed to something it
had never campaigned on.
The unions have valid reason to be suspicious. Go to YouTube
and you can watch a 10-minute clip of a senior official from
Britain's Department of Education extolling the virtues of
"free schools" - that country's equivalent of charter schools
- at a conference back in February.
That bureaucrat no longer works for the Department of
Education. Lesley Longstone took up a new position in New
Zealand last month. She is nothing less than the new chief
executive of the Ministry of Education.
The education sector will take some convincing that the
hiring of someone who is clearly a big fan of charter schools
was mere coincidence.
Ms Longstone' s talk on the video about free schools
operating in an environment of "freedom" and "flexibility"
will be interpreted by the teacher unions as an attack on
their pay and conditions.
Tacking to the right normally runs counter to Mr Key's
instinctive inclination to hug the centre. The exception is
education where - because of his own background - he is
determined to boost opportunity for the poor and
disadvantaged.
There have been similarly loud howls of outrage at other
contents of Act's support agreement. These items include the
imposition of a fiscal cap on government spending, the
introduction of private competition in ACC's work account
plus implementation of some of the privatisation-related
recommendations of the Paula Rebstock-chaired welfare working
group.
That Act was able to negotiate these gains has raised the
question of whether that party is being used by National as
cover to run a more radical agenda than it did in its first
term.
United Future's agreement with National is far more limited
in terms of concessions from National even though Peter Dunne
is in the exact same position as Act's John Banks in being
his party's sole MP.
It is something of a misnomer that being lone MPs weakened
their negotiating power. With National expected to lose one
MP as a result of how special votes fall, both Mr Banks' and
Mr Dunne's votes will be vital in giving National a majority
in the new Parliament.
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