Being in political opposition isn't where anyone wants to be. It has often been said that being the opposition leader in New Zealand politics is the toughest job on the block.
Certainly that was the view of Helen Clark, who on a trip back from the Big Apple a couple of years back, lamented she was on the outside looking in for six years before the Beehive's ninth floor door opened to her.
By contrast, John Key had just two years banging his head against a brick wall before assuming the top political job. Andrew Little's hoping to pull it off after three years of tyre kicking.
And that's what being in opposition is, kicking tyres, hoping they're attached to a vehicle that the public feels comfortable going along for the ride in. But if Little thinks there'll be a warrant of fitness for the current housing woes in this Thursday's Budget - which he believes there should be otherwise it's a failure - then he's on a road to nowhere.
While the salesmen for this year's Budget, Key and Bill English, speak to swanky luncheons full of suits, Labour has to make do with breweries and polo fleeces on a bleak Sunday afternoon and Monday breakfasts in accountancy offices with a few dozen people who'd probably prefer to be elsewhere.