Much of John Key's political charm arises from his 'state house kid made good' back story. While the self-made wheeler-dealer image plays well during campaigns it may not be what voters expect of a Prime Minister. It seems, however, that making trade-offs is in his blood, with confirmation today that it was Key who approached SkyCity casino about the pokies for convention centre deal see: SkyCity deal was PM's own offer. In line with this approach, Satirist Scott Yorke puts forward some further innovative ideas that John Key might like to take to the private sector for deal making see: Smoking Studies For Schools?. Also in terms of such 'deal making', see Fran O'Sullivan's Key turns on the charm in Jakarta talks, which paints a picture of John Key 'in schmooze mode' in Indonesia, 'with all the panache of his investment banking days'.
The big advantage Key has now is the ability to change laws and regulations to suit companies the government is negotiating with, as has previously been the case with Warner Brothers and MediaWorks. It seems the SkyCity deal is an even clearer example, as David Fisher reports that the casino's tactics have dramatically changed since National came to power. Before 2009 the casino repeatedly and unsuccessfully challenged the Gambling Commission in court over restrictions. The Commission went so far as to warn the then Internal Affairs Minister Amy Adams that she could face direct lobbying from the casino. Since 2009 there have been no further legal challenges why bother when you can just get the troublesome law changed? see: SkyCity wooed new Govt after failures in court.
SkyCity just has to make sure the numbers stack up, but John Key has to weigh up the political risk as well, and that seems to be increasing daily. The Herald editorial (SkyCity pokie defence fails to ring true) thinks that SkyCity CEO Nigel Morrison's recent attempts to justify the proposal are 'unconvincing' and show the casino is 'becoming worried'. David Shearer has, uncharacteristically, gone on the attack a sure sign that he feels National is vulnerable on the issue, accusing them of 'effectively selling the law which controls pokies' see: More Pokies in Sky City key's idea.
Christchurch now has a new bureaucratic title to add to CERA the latest acronym is CCDU, which stands for the Christchurch Central Development Unit within CERA, and is headed by CERA's current general manger of operations Warwick Issacs see: 100-day action plan for Christchurch rebuild.
It seems that the final plan for Christchurch's CBD build is still 100 days away, with the CCDU's 'Blueprint for Action' being the vehicle to identify key projects and push them through using CERA's wide-ranging powers. Mayor Bob Parker is welcoming the unit and says the government has 'essentially accepted' the Council's original plan, although traffic and light rail proposals have not been included. The question will be: will the Council end up merely acting as a rubberstamp for decisions made by the CCDU?