On Thursday, a broad coalition of business and community groups (including my union, Unite) launched a campaign against the Government's stated intention to pass a law allowing Chorus to be effectively subsidised by New Zealanders.
Internet users will be required to pay $12 a month more for copper wires than recommended by the Commerce Commission. This apparently means $600 million will be transferred by internet users to a private business.
It seems Chorus' profits of $171 million aren't enough, and we need to shovel even more largesse their way. If that wasn't enough of a gob-smacker, this week (in defiance of Treasury advice) Key authorised giving $30 million of taxpayers' money directly to Rio Tinto, the foreign owners of the smelter at Tiwai Point.
At the same time, Government-owned Meridian Energy slashed its power prices to the plant.
The Government claimed it did this to save jobs. Has it suddenly become a market interventionist to subsidise favoured corporations to help job creation? Or is it about Rio Tinto pocketing a windfall from politicians desperate to preserve the sale price of Meridian Energy?
The smart operators at Rio Tinto saw how Sir Peter Jackson and his United States backers got Key to cough up millions of dollars for nothing and thought, why not us?
After the SkyCity deal, where Key gave a monopoly a guaranteed mechanism to make money, his motivation has become clear: these deals help advance the Government's political agenda and a corporate is guaranteed a profit. The taxpayer foots the bill and the guy who put the deal together clips the ticket.
Something stinks of aluminium, copper and money. It's a smell that shouldn't be ignored.
Today, the Labour Party announces its new leader. The party and the three candidates have had a great campaign. Now that it's over, the victor should ensure his two contesters are kept on the front bench so they can focus on Key and his Government. The leadership has always been Cunliffe's to lose. But whether it's Robertson or Cunliffe, they are both capable of holding Key to account. I'm looking forward to it.