For political tragics, Budget days are the most exciting outside election days. The uninterested 99 per cent will remain more passionate about Queen's Birthday traffic queues.
This offering is the "Pollsters Budget", smelling as if National pollster Curia conned a committee of confirmed Labour voters to meet for pizza and $50, then appointed a moderator and banged together Billy's Budget.
Election budgets should lob lollies to potential voters, not Opposition true believers. Again Bill English acted like the quintessential smug Kiwi farmer content with increasing wealth on unrealised tax-free capital gains. He bottled it.
English has morphed into a less witty Michael Cullen. That transformation is complete in accepting that Cullen's Super Fund was not such a bad idea after all. Oh, to go back to the day English was secretly taped mumbling he wanted to sell Kiwibank.
The most obvious focus group-driven language is that against tax avoidance. A common parliamentary intent test makes it impossible for big taxpayers to beat the IRD anyway. In the fine print, $132 million over five years to the IRD includes $84 million to write debt off. Oops.