Phil Goff may be justified in feeling a bit unlucky. As James Henderson points out, Labour relentlessly campaigned on asset sales and economic sovereignty during the election, and now it seems to be having real impact on National and John Key's popularity - three months too late - see: Crowd-sourcin': asset sales question. While National should have expected to have to defend the asset sales policy, it has been blindsided by the Crafar Farms controversy. John Hartevelt, in his article More complex questions on Crafar, outlines the choices the Government faces, and none of them look particularly appealing. He says 'Politics, the law and economics have collided spectacularly and with each passing day the Key Government is suffering'. With the rival bidders openly attacking each others' credibility in the media (see: TVNZ's Pengxin slams Fay's 'phantom' Crafar bid http://bit.ly/wPoiWI and Adam Bennett's Fay consortium challenges rival Crafar bidder's know-how) and the Michael Fay consortium already pursuing further legal action, Fran O'Sullivan says that the Crafar farms saga set to run and run.
The must-read item today about foreign investment is Brian Rudman's Foreign buyers a modern reality, in which he bemoans the 'Xenophobia poisoning debate over overseas ownership', and says that both National and Labour are pandering to such irrationalism despite their support for the free trade treaty with China. Clearly, Rudman hints, many New Zealanders suffer from a dispiriting racism on this issue.
Although technically a separate matter, the asset sales are linked with foreign investment in the public mind, even more so when the issue of potential overseas purchase of the partially privatised companies has to be faced. TV3's Reid Research Poll clearly shows the Government is not winning the argument. 62% disagree with the policy - slightly higher than a poll on the same topic a year ago - see: Duncan Garner's Poll shows asset sales unpopular. It doesn't seem as if more debate will rescue the Government. Only 4 out of 200 people supported the policy at a public debate in Dunedin last night (down from 6 at the beginning of the meeting, and one of them was a National MP) - see: David Loughrey's NZ asset sales prove debatable. State Owned Enterprises Minister Tony Ryall says it will take a couple more years for people to be convinced of the benefits. That's cutting it fine for the next election and may be based more on wishful thinking than on any realistic assessment of the politics.
Opponents of the policy are taking a targeted approach to stop the sales. The policy only has a one-seat margin in the House, and they are picking Peter Dunne as the weak link. The Standard has details of a 'citizens select committee' in Ohariu, designed to put pressure on Dunne, with rallies, public meetings, oral submissions and a final report to be presented to Parliament - see: Asset sales: No Dunne deal.
Even if Dunne retires at the next election, he may be wary of his final political legacy being the MP who allowed prime public assets to be privatised against overwhelming public opinion. Dunne did campaign on supporting the policy and signed up to it in his coalition agreement, but with the ground constantly shifting under the policy, National will have to be careful they don't give him cause to do an about-face. That will be particularly true if so-called 'Mum and Dad investors' look likely to end up at the back of the queue behind institutional and overseas investors.