As anyone who's followed my account for any length of time must know, I'm no fan of Chris Hipkins. I don't see how a policy vacuum in a man suit makes a good leader of a political party. Hipkins ought to have been gone by lunchtime after single-handedly losing the 2023 election.

IMHO this is why Labour aren't making hay off the rising public antipathy to NatACT First, and the sooner they replace Hipkins, the better it will be for the fortunes of the party, and the country.

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If Hipkins is going to be ditched as Labour leader, it ought to because of chronic professional failure as a political operator. For milquetoast, centre-right fence-sitting, and dopey Captain's Calls.

Not to mention being totally unsuitable to lead any party of the left. All those headscratchers suddenly made sense when I learned about Hipkins's background as a reputation launderer for the Industry Training Federation, and training manager for fossil fuel extraction barons Todd Energy.

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*But* ... the one thing Hipkins ought *not* to lose his leadership role over is stories about his personal life. His private business.

None of us are saints, especially in the eyes of puritan ultra-conservatives and crypto-conservative identi-Moonies. Every one of us has skeletons in the closet that scurrilous muckrakers could dig up as a basis to exclude us from political office.

https://www.rnz.co.nz/podcast/mediawatch?share=358d4088-5010-4c4c-91ba-ecd7538a2ebd

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#podcasts #RNZ #MediaWatch #privacy #MuckRaking #NZPolitics #ChrisHipkins

Mediawatch podcast

A critical look at the New Zealand media.

RNZ

The rumormongering around Hipkins reminds me of the early stages of that around Bill Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky. Which was nobody's business but theirs and Hilary's;

https://www.ted.com/talks/monica_lewinsky_the_price_of_shame

I tore strips off Clinton's hide even more viciously than I do Hipkins, and in hindsight, not enough. But at the time I said the same thing I'm saying about Hipkins. The same thing I said about Benjamin Doyle. A politician's personal life - like anyone's - is their own private business.

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Monica Lewinsky: The price of shame

TED

At least unless and until there is an overwhelming public interest in exposing aspects of a politician's personal life for public scrutiny. As there was for example when Graham Capill, leader of the NZ Christian Heritage party (the Brian Tamaki of the 1990s), was convicted of sexually assaulting a child. Or when Darleen Tana was exposed as being complicit in a modern slavery operation while serving as a Green MP.

If Hipkins has done anything that serious, news media will report it.

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Unless that happens the rumour mill is a distraction. If we feed it, we risk giving energy to a 'back the underdog' sympathy that could help the useless bag of wind hold onto the Labour leadership even longer. So not only is it unprincipled and scummy to do that, just because you're not a fan of Hipkins, it's not even strategic.

Again, let's keep our eyes on the ball; Hipkins' manyfold failings as a leader of a major, supposedly left-wing party. For those alone, gone by lunchtime please.

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As a perfect coda to my rant about Chris Hipkins, @norightturnnz just dropped another of their incisive blog posts, on the utter failure of Hipkins as the nominal leader of the Opposition. In the face of the worst energy crisis this country has faced since the 1970s Oil Shocks, which promoted the Think Big projects;

https://mastodon.social/@norightturnnz/116281382828272851

Hipkins is a tool of employers and fossil fuel barons, and perhaps the most unsuitable leader Labour has *ever* had, right up there with Moore and Goff.

@jackyan
It is however getting the bosses and fossil fuel barons a *very* effective obstacle to an effective Parliamentary Opposition. Fortunately, thanks to proportional representation, we have the Greens and TPM to represent the left in the house, and collaboratively lead the *actual* Parliamentary Opposition.
@strypey I am ready for Prime Minister Swarbrick who will decide whether Hipkins is inside or outside Cabinet.

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@jackyan
> I am ready for Prime Minister Swarbrick

Whoever wears the PM hat, we need to communicate to the majority of left-leaning voters that they have better options than Hipkins' Tory Labour to represent their views, and dislodge NatACT First from the government benches.

The legacy news media don't help with that. They seen perpetually stuck in a horse race style of politics coverage, inherited from the FPP era. As with did in the late 90s/ early 2000s, we need to hack around them.

@strypey God knows I have been victim to their two-horse-race coverage, which is total BS. And of course it fools a lot of older voters. I could only get the young on side as a bloc, people who weren’t brainwashed by The Dominion Post who campaigned against me. The Greens are finding a similar treatment. But the legacy media’s strangehold is waning, e.g. Tory Whanau having broken through in Wellington in 2022 and the Greens raising more money than Labour in 2023. I hope this trend continues.

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@jackyan
> I could only get the young on side as a bloc

When did you run and who for, if that's not privileged information?

@strypey All public. Mayor of Wellington, 2010 and 2013. Could not even get into polls for the first one till the last few weeks, predicted to get 2 per cent (got 12 after the preference count). Predicted to get 4 per cent the second time, front-page disinformation by the Dom saying my accent was a problem (fake news), got 16. Could not get into any RNZ mayoral debates either time, as they were whites only. Independent, but I was an Alliance member and that was well known.

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@jackyan
> front-page disinformation by the Dom saying my accent was a problem (fake news)

Typical of the ComPost of the time. In 2010 they'd just finished stitching up some of my Indymedia and Oblong colleagues, by publishing juicy and totally decontextual titbits from Operation 8 surveillance transcripts.

So not surprised to read that they treated you so poorly. Pricks. You deserved much better.

@strypey Back then, too, the newsroom looked like a Klan meeting. The only Asians worked in accounts. That run also killed any coverage I would have in the Dom—between 1999 and 2010 I was a pretty regular fixture on the social pages. It ended when I ran. The white establishment scares easily—especially when the next 15-plus years kept proving me right, and their preferred candidates dead wrong. Iʼve done some decent mahi, but other than Scoop, you can count my NZ coverage post-2013 on one hand.

@jackyan
> Iʼve done some decent mahi, but other than Scoop, you can count my NZ coverage post-2013 on one hand

I hear ya. I've always been shadowbanned by the corporate media. Despite being really active in public affairs of all kinds from the mid-1990s, I almost never get mentioned in news media.

Other than that article about a smoke-in at Parliament Grounds. With the photo that pops up again any time a Stuff property runs a story about drug law reform. Talk about asset recycling ... ; )

@strypey It’s the corporate media here that are chickenshit. I actually did quite well in UK and US media, had a mag column in Oz, got into a bunch of Australian media as well. They were never threatened. Eventually some NZ media covered me but only because I got press abroad. But a Chink in politics was too much even though I was following Gee, Foon and Chin.
Not surprised at what you faced as well. They hate people who think for themselves. Do they also pick the worst pics?