All this has been happening while Labour has popped up every now and then to say, “we didn’t kill the economy”.
True, while Covid can be blamed for putting the economy on life support, it was Labour that kept the ventilator on.
Since the election, Labour’s loyal supporters have been waiting for the real opposition to the coalition wrecking-machine to please stand up.
Some of Labour’s old guard have left the red team. Some were forced out when losing their once-safe electorate seats like Mahuta (Hauraki-Waikato), Kelvin Davis (Te Tai Tokerau), Peeni Henare (Tāmaki Makaurau but still a list MP), Rino Tirikatene (Te Tai Tonga) and Michael Wood (Mt Roskill), to name a few big scalps as the 2020 red wave turned into a blue lagoon.
Now is the time for Labour to take a deep dive into itself and consider who and what it represents. Changes must happen.
If Labour is staying with Chris Hipkins, which appears likely, then the party needs to start building a credible team around him. Labour’s top 10 need to be better than its corresponding coalition Government MPs. Many are first-time Cabinet ministers and any good Opposition MP will be targeting that inexperience.
Labour needs an injection of sunshine and a big dose of reality to start to offer reasonable opposition to the National-NZ First-Act frontliners.
There’s talent in the Labour team, but those talented people must be given opportunities to shine and the old guard must step aside to let natural progression occur.
It’s the law of physics: “An object will remain at rest or in a uniform state of motion unless that state is changed by an external force.”
In other words, stand down and step aside.