• Judy McGregor is a professor at AUT, a former Human Rights Commissioner and a former newspaper editor.
In the confetti of promises showered down on us in campaign 2017, National has tried to water down a mean streak about social issues.
The grudging addition of four more weeks to take paid parental leave (PPL) to 22 weeks is a classic. Last year when he was Finance Minister, Bill English used his financial veto to kill off Labour's bill to extend PPL to 26 weeks. He said then that the price was too high, even if he got his maths wrong and overinflated the costs of change by more than double.
His welcome conversion to the need for action on child poverty, after persistent denial by former Prime Minister John Key that we should even try to measure it, is another encouraging example of National's new compassion on significant social concerns.
But in important socio-economic areas such as fair pay and work, it's the same old National delivering the same old employment relations and hanging on to paltry minimum wage rates while promising income tax relief.