Here, in a nutshell, is an example of why Labour is struggling to get going in office.
You can start to list the stuff that was promised but isn't happening. From trees, to mines, to tax collection from corporate. But housing, in a single example, sums them up.
They're a party, now Government, of yak not action.
Phil Twyford was one of the party's best operators in opposition. He had housing and he milked it for all it was worth. He had Nick Smith, the minister, against the ropes. He built up a case against the government's handling of the so-called housing crisis with headline after headline of woe, misery and disaster.
Now a lot of it was your typical opposition grandstanding, but that's what oppositions do. They look for noise, trouble, and damage.
Phil, from Labour's point of view, was about as good an operator as they had. So by the time he rocked up to government, the day one disappointment was he bailed on building the 10,000 houses a year he had promised in the first year. So that's pushed back the first term's numbers to 15,000 a year, which of course they stand no chance of achieving.