Post by Kiwi Frontline on Jan 13, 2023 15:44:17 GMT 12
B S P writes > THE RAISE AND FALL OF JACINDA ARDERN.
When she became leader of the Labour Party many commentators underestimated her potential. But she connected with the public in a surprising way. She was a fresh face to a old and dysfunctional Party(Labour).
She had so much to offer, so where has it all gone wrong? Why the train wreck that is Labour today?
The short answer is her Maori colleagues. The Maori caucus within Labour wants real change in favour of Maori and the price for that is plummeting voter support.
The separation of New Zealanders into racial groups is at the core of Labours problems.
A small group of citizens, want power over the majority. In a democracy the will of the people is supreme and any government that turns their backs on the majority in favour of a minority, has not long to live. It is clear that our Prime Minister is a passenger in this process.
Others are in control of the Labour Party and the country.
They are push hard and fast to fundamentally change the political structure of the nation, from a democracy to something more like an Iwi lead autocratic rule. A system of rule from the top down.
They justify this by the Treaty, even though no where in the Treaty is there the smallest suggestion of special rights for Maori.
Labour has no one to blame, but themselves.
They could have concentrated their efforts on improving the lives of all New Zealanders and make real change for the better, but they chose to promote Woke idea’s around co-governance and political privilege for Maori.
Jacinda’s time as PM has been a waste of opportunity, a failure of real leadership. This is what happens when you elect a nobody.
While Labour was in partnership with NZFirst , things were much improved, but once given a majority, it all fell apart.
The question is “ is National any better “ time will tell.
One thing is sure, giving any Party unlimited power, like Labour holds now. Is not a good idea. The people are supreme and our political leaders should remember that.
When she became leader of the Labour Party many commentators underestimated her potential. But she connected with the public in a surprising way. She was a fresh face to a old and dysfunctional Party(Labour).
She had so much to offer, so where has it all gone wrong? Why the train wreck that is Labour today?
The short answer is her Maori colleagues. The Maori caucus within Labour wants real change in favour of Maori and the price for that is plummeting voter support.
The separation of New Zealanders into racial groups is at the core of Labours problems.
A small group of citizens, want power over the majority. In a democracy the will of the people is supreme and any government that turns their backs on the majority in favour of a minority, has not long to live. It is clear that our Prime Minister is a passenger in this process.
Others are in control of the Labour Party and the country.
They are push hard and fast to fundamentally change the political structure of the nation, from a democracy to something more like an Iwi lead autocratic rule. A system of rule from the top down.
They justify this by the Treaty, even though no where in the Treaty is there the smallest suggestion of special rights for Maori.
Labour has no one to blame, but themselves.
They could have concentrated their efforts on improving the lives of all New Zealanders and make real change for the better, but they chose to promote Woke idea’s around co-governance and political privilege for Maori.
Jacinda’s time as PM has been a waste of opportunity, a failure of real leadership. This is what happens when you elect a nobody.
While Labour was in partnership with NZFirst , things were much improved, but once given a majority, it all fell apart.
The question is “ is National any better “ time will tell.
One thing is sure, giving any Party unlimited power, like Labour holds now. Is not a good idea. The people are supreme and our political leaders should remember that.