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Richard Santillan's avatar

On The Left's postmortem...a counter-argument to more clichés by our media's lazy "left."

1. There was a left party that proposed to "rock the establishment". There was a left party that had a "class focus" on the "needs of working people"—the Greens. The Greens' Wealth tax is one of the most radical changes to NZ taxation and redistribution of wealth from the top to lower incomes. But this structural tax reform was ridiculed (especially by the likes of Trotter) or ignored by the media. They also proposed rental caps and a windfall tax on bank/supermarket profits.

Additionally, climate action is a working-class priority. The squeezed middle and especially people with low incomes have been and will be affected first. They will be hit the hardest.

2. In a balanced media that educated the public on the advantages of this tax system, the Greens would have received 38%, not National, if economic justice was the whole picture. But of course, it is not – xenophobia, nationalism, and racism are significant factors fuelled by a misinformation apocalypse that negates positive attributes of our media.

3. Labour, in fact, had quite significant redistributive tax increases on the upper incomes, particularly with their short-term Capital Gains Tax (extended bright line) and removal of Landlord tax deductions, to be removed under the Nats/ACT. Labour's removal of the regressive tax of GST from fruits and veggies was not taken seriously in the media or by our hack economists. No matter that, every other developed nation employs similar measures to some degree, and the Lancet praised it for its health benefits. ...And Labour pledged free dental for under 30s if elected...etc.

Note... these measures were more radical than measures used in 3 winning elections by labour from 1999-2008. So, playing the safe incrementalism of the centrist left is not a significant factor.

4. "Co-governance" was used as a propaganda dog whistle and a smoke screen for racism by the right wing. It only referred to Three Waters, a reasonable method of cleaning our worsening water infrastructure, which the media failed to let Labour explain. Meanwhile, all kinds of ridiculous conspiracy theories arose in the void. Here, co-governance only meant the ability to advise, not veto power over water-related policy.

Dual language signs are not co-governance, as some have suggested. Signs don't take part in legislation. They were an effort to treat our native population with respect and practised in many parts of the world, from Spain to Wales.

5. Bernard Hickey is correct, "Labour lost the 2023 election in 2017 when it committed to the Budget Responsibility Rules"...in part, yes. When Robertson exceeded these rules, he was attacked relentlessly. Nobody mentions that we spend less per GDP than almost all developed nations (25th in the OECD) and have had among the lowest debt and lowest tax burden.

6. There is little mention of the enormous amount of resources employed by National from 7 and ½ the donations that Labour had. ….Not to mention the many likely illegal hoardings by the National Party around the nation 5-6 months before the election.

7. The media could have conveyed how well the Labour government did with Covid. In hindsight, they could have stopped the Auckland lockdown a few weeks earlier. But if lives matter more than coffee bars, then Labour did the best in the developed world with the least deaths per capita, according to Johns Hopkins' Covid Mortality statistics.

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