CEOs call on Goff to shake off 'old Labour' mentality and move away from the unions
Chief executives want Phil Goff to act in the best interests of New Zealand rather than factional union interests if he ends up as prime minister of a coalition government.
The Herald asked business chiefs to say how they would like Goff to run New Zealand. Sixty-two bosses responded, several facetiously by saying "from far away".
But the overwhelming message was that Goff should be less influenced by unionists, academics and teachers and align with business and balance the books; strike the "right balance" between welfare and taxation; be "less doctrinaire and embrace economic pragmatism", keep his eye on growth, pay less attention to beneficiaries and support rewarding excellence; maintain a degree of policy stability; develop people around him who could be trusted and rely on his instincts which are "better than Labour's backers".
Reverting to being in the thrall of the unions is a losing strategy - New Zealand has moved on and it's time the Labour Party did as well, was a frequent refrain.