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17
June 2007
The
Blame Game
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A
year ago I reviewed a Labour Party communication strategy
paper: “This paper is about Labour taking greater charge of
the language of debate and discussion in New Zealand. It is
called re-framing and it means gaining (or regaining) the use of concepts
and phrases that spark public and media interest” (to read
the review click
here>>>)
The
paper provided an insight into Labour’s strategy to win the
2008 election: “The big risks and challenges for Labour are
the length of time it’s been on power; whether it can instil
new blood and demonstrate new ideas; its ability to clearly
articulate vision and ideas without being labelled arrogant
and PC; the status of the economy and how that is linked to
Labour’s governing.
“A
way to approach these risks is to reframe public discourse
about the things that matter to New Zealanders and to ensure
Labour is identified with those core values. Although a lot of
work has already been done on this, it clearly hasn’t been
effective enough because the majority of New Zealanders
don’t really ‘get it’. And until they do - until the
mere mention of an issue or a phrase by a Labour politician
can evoke instant understanding and support amongst a
substantial portion of the population - not only is the next
election in doubt, but the hearts and minds of many New
Zealanders could be beyond Labour’s grasp, possibly for many
years”.
The
paper suggested that Labour needed some big, bold, new ideas:
“a fresh approach showing leadership to the rest of the
world – that this little country at the end of the world can
be a role model”.
That
was clearly the catalyst for Labour’s leap onto the
environmental bandwagon. By out-greening the Greens and
embracing the global warming agenda, they pitched for New
Zealand to become a world leader in ‘sustainability’.
But
capturing the language is only one of Labour’s techniques.
Another is the use of the ‘blame’ game to justify
excessive over-regulation.
Labour
frequently blames ‘rip-off merchants’ for a raft of
problems which it then seeks to correct through regulation.
This was the strategy used to justify the wholesale regulation
charities: Labour’s claims that fly-by-night charity crooks
were ripping off the public and that the only way to control
them was to impose the heavy hand of regulation on the 30,000
strong charitable sector were grossly over-exaggerated.
This
was also the approach used to impose massive new regulations
on the building industry. Labour ensured that industry
‘cowboys’ copped the blame for leaky homes, instead of the
responsibility falling where it was due, on the government’s
own regulatory agency the Building Industry Association, which
had failed to set proper standards for the new building
materials that it had approved.
This
same strategy has just been used to impose new regulations on
the real estate industry, with the Minister recklessly
claiming that “land sharks” and “rouge agents” are
commonplace.
It
is an approach that can dramatically backfire on the
government if it is properly challenged. I recall when the
Minister of Housing highlighted a “bad” landlord case in
order to justify the tightening of the Residential Tenancies
Act a few years ago. While it appeared that the landlord had
rented out a sub-standard damp house that was covered in mould
to the hapless tenant, further investigation revealed that the
cause of the mould was the tenant’s hydroponic cannabis
operation!
The
government also appears to be involved in a variation of this
blame game strategy at the present time against private
pre-school education providers. The low payment rate that they
have offered for their 20 hours of “free” childcare, has
forced many providers to charge parents extra. It would not be
a surprise to find that Labour is planning to regulate the
industry to force compliance with government policy, since
they are unable to do it voluntarily, effectively
re-nationalising the sector.
A
second blame game strategy used by Labour is to blow an
accident out of all proportions and use it to justify
wholesale regulation.
A
tragic dog attack on a young girl a few years ago was used to
justify the microchipping of dogs even though everyone knew
that microchipping would do nothing to stop dog attacks! Just
this week, a private company contractor was blamed for the
death of a prisoner in a prison van even though an inquiry had
found the Department of Corrections itself was responsible.
Not only did the Department fail to pass on essential
information about the prisoner, but it also by ignored
warnings from the contractor that the vans were unsafe. As a
result of this blame game, prison transportation will be
re-nationalised.
Similarly,
the unfortunate death of Folole Muliaga is being used as an
excuse for regulating over 1.5 million domestic electricity
consumers. As a result all will be subjected to scrutiny by
government departments seeking to identify health and
socio-economic indicators which could categorise them as
“vulnerable”.
According
to the National Business Review: “a vast new bureaucracy is
needed to chart the progress of the new guidelines. Among
other things, these will need to include a running progress on
the health status of all occupants of every dwelling that has
power (or is temporarily disconnected). This will involve
getting communication, as the bureaucracy sees it, between the
plethora of district health boards and the power providers,
some of whom are in the private sector. Given the lack of such
communication among virtually every government department on
who is or isn’t paying fines, leaving or arriving in the
country, and their immigration status, this new Big Brother
phenomenon will be a world first” (For more information see
NBR’s Insight, “Death by Disconnection” view
>>>)
The
costs involved in this exercise, not only from this massive
intervention, but also from a predicted escalation in the
number of consumers who will seek to avoid having to pay for
power, will undoubtedly be passed onto consumers. That is in
spite of the fact that under their State Owned Enterprises
Act, companies like Mighty River Power, the parent company to
power retailer Mercury Energy, are at liberty to take a
compassionate approach to customers - just so long as the
government reimburses them for lost revenue: 7.
Non-commercial activities---Where the Crown wishes a State
enterprise to provide goods or services to any persons,
the Crown and the
State enterprise shall enter into an agreement under which the
State enterprise will provide the goods or services in return
for the payment by
the Crown of the whole or part of the price thereof.
(Click to view>>>)
Another blame game strategy
used by Labour to justify over-regulation is the use of
unbalanced research. Just last week they announced plans to
regulate school canteens, banning the sale of ‘unhealthy’
food and turning teachers into food police. The problem is
that the claims of a growing obesity epidemic, that are being
used to justify this sort of excessive state intervention in
schools, just don’t stack up. The evidence shows that not
only is the problem localised rather than widespread amongst
all children, but that the overall growth in the rate of
obesity in the population as a whole is slowing. (See
“Tracking the Obesity Epidemic”, click to view>>>)
According to the “2002
National Children’s Nutrition Survey”, Maori and
particularly Pacific Island children, are the ones most at
risk of being overweight, of not bringing lunch to school, and
of not having eaten breakfast. (Click to view>>>)
Surely rather than imposing heavy handed regulation on all
schools, a more sensible approach would be to target the small
number of families that need help in a proactive way since
changing the food available in the school tuck shop will have
a negligible effect on their overall health status. Further,
with one of the key factors contributing to childhood obesity
being a lack of exercise, surely the government should be
prioritising policing efforts since they know that one of the
main reasons parents are afraid to let their children walk to
school or play outside is the fear of crime.
All
in all, through their desire to impose heavy regulations,
Labour has shown that as true socialists they believe that
individuals cannot be responsible for their own lives, that
they cannot be trusted to make their own decisions, and that
the state knows best. They use the blame game to try to
convince the public that more and more regulation is good for
them. It is this over-bearing approach to governance that gave
rise to the expression “Nanny State”, a term that is now
commonly used to describe this Labour Government.
“I
can’t be sure, but it may well have been me who first
introduced the term “Nanny State” into the New Zealand
vernacular, on my Politically Incorrect Show on Radio
Pacific”, says Lindsay Perigo, this week’s NZCPR Guest
Commentator.
In his typically unrestrained fashion he goes on to say:
“Certainly I used it regularly there, and observed it creep
into common usage thereafter, as did the related term,
“Helengrad”. In any event, the expression is well and
truly out there now, and that’s as good a thing as its
referent is bad. Nanny State is vicious, anti-human… and, as
we speak, relentlessly advancing” (click
>>>).
The
poll this week asks:
Do you believe the regulation of school canteens is justified?
Take part in poll
>>>
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