The most precious thing New Zealand possesses, believe it or not, is two sound political parties. Precious in the economic sense, like gold, oil or green grass. More precious than them. Good government is generally recognised now to be more important to a country's wealth than any mineral or natural advantage it might possess. That is why the Labour Party matters.
Ideally, it would not be in the news at the moment. It would be quietly licking its election wounds and discreetly looking forward to finding a new leader in the right way at the right time. The right way is for someone in the caucus to attract support among MPs and the right time is when he or she has got the numbers.
Instead, a conference of Labour's active members has saddled the party with a public contest at the worst possible time. The party has barely licked a wound, the caucus has no obvious leader and four entries for the contest only proves the old Mike Moore adage that the three most powerful words in politics are: "Why not me?"
Some time after that fateful conference the party's former president, Mike Williams, told the Listener it had been attended by quite a number of people he hadn't seen around the party for a while. "A lot of bloody lunatics who had gone off into the Alliance are now back," he said. "A lot of the kamikaze wing of the Labour Party has returned."
He wasn't to know when he made those comments that a few weeks later David Shearer would step down, bringing about the first election under the new franchise that enabled the members and affiliated unions to force David Cunliffe on the caucus. Williams' observation looked all too true a few months later when Cunliffe made former Alliance organiser Matt McCarten his chief of staff.