Hard News: The Digital Natives
152 Responses
First ←Older Page 1 2 3 4 5 … 7 Newer→ Last
-
Rob Hosking, in reply to
If it’s not Laila Harre in the end, then the media have just done a Dewey Defeats Truman.
Believe me when I say there are those of us who have nightmares involving that very image.
-
Stephen Judd, in reply to
it can be a disgusting little fight pit at times.
I am doing quite a bit of phone canvassing at the moment. It stands out how many people who don't vote or don't support any party follow up with a complaint about how politicians behave, usually mentioning behaviour in the House.
-
Rich of Observationz, in reply to
Three of the top four potential IP/Mana candidates haven't been MPs for a while (or ever) and Hone prefers to campaign outside the house, so that would be a plus for them.
-
Ian Dalziel, in reply to
drop kick right in front...
Here’s a wild punt. Brendan Horan.
The Weather Underground reveals its hand...
<mwahahahaha...> -
Kumara Republic, in reply to
And a weird, petulant editorial from this morning’s Herald. The author doesn’t understand extradition law and can’t even spell Harre’s name correctly.
Another Roughan Special?
-
Russell Brown, in reply to
Another Roughan Special?
Possibly Fran. Although bizarre "I can see into the minds of non-voters" part near the end is Roughanesque.
-
Moz, in reply to
I am not convinced IP/Mana will fit neatly onto the old Left/Right spectrum.
Do you expect them to fit worse than The Greens or Maori do?
I think that's a complaint like "National doesn't fit neatly into the communist-fascist continuum" or "Labour doesn't fit neatly into the green-brown spectrum". Yup, it's sort of relevant but it's not a prime focus of the party so they're likely to make decisions that range over the spectrum.
That said, I agree with Mr Geddis that it would be hard for ManIP to side with National.
-
I wonder if this party might not wind up pulling in a few of the less hardcore libertarians?
It's definitely not a world-view that I share but I've always felt they were really underserved in terms of both ACT and national (and obviously the conservatives weren't going to help).
-
Heather W., in reply to
"Let’s be clear… anywhere else in the world, it would be called the Pirate Party… but Dotcom is already in a power of sh*t with the FBI, so that name was out of the question."
The name Pirate Party has already been used in NZ. Not actually a registered party at the moment though they say that they are working on it. They did have candidates in the 2011 General Election in a few electorates and also in the 2011 Botany by-election.
-
-
Coat-tails... Well, I can see a scenario where the campaign catches fire, for Mana as well as for Internet, and they get, say, four Maori seats, 4% of the list vote... and Laila doesn't even make it into parliament. That would still be an excellent result, but not really the one Dotcom's paying for. Another scenario : a couple of Maori seats, and Laila and John Minto off the list. Would they dissolve the grouping, as they claim, six weeks after the election, leaving Laila as sole Internet MP? I think not. Laila would function as an additional Mana MP (while still defending the Internet issues, no problem there). And when the coat-tails thing bites the dust, as it must, there is a strong enough Mana brand, to the left of Labour, to survive in the longer term.
-
I'd point out that Dunne and Banks aren't actually exploiting the "coat-tails rule" as neither of their vestigial parties gain enough votes for a second MP (and Dunne doesn't have enough for a first, I think).
What they are tending to do is exploit the "affiliated parties" loophole where a party in loose alliance with another can have candidates (Dunne & Banks) whose seats are not added in to National's total when calculating the latter's list seats. Thus National has two more seats than they would have if Dunne & Banks were National MPs.
If Mana really wanted to rort the system, Hone would keep his head down, never leave Northland and not campaign for the party vote at all. That would get him into Parliament and maximise the left-wing vote.
Running as a composite party, on the other hand, simply ensures that the votes of Mana and IP supporters are less likely to be wasted.
E&O E
-
Richard Aston, in reply to
Thanks Rich , I hadn't understood how that worked and what the advantage of two single independents was to National . So you are saying if Dunne and ACT were national electorate MPS , National would get less party seats as opposed to them being partnered independents.
-
David Hood, in reply to
Richard, yes.
-
BenWilson, in reply to
I’d point out that Dunne and Banks aren’t actually exploiting the “coat-tails rule” as neither of their vestigial parties gain enough votes for a second MP (and Dunne doesn’t have enough for a first, I think).
They aren't, but they would like to be, and they could, if they got more party vote. Same goes for Mana+IP. It's coat-tailing which is the sole reason for the IP to be a part of it. I'd say it's only money that gives Mana a reason to be a part of it. Well that and the fact that the IP candidate would have been a good pick for Mana in the first place.
the “affiliated parties” loophole
This is a loophole that has not really been exploited to anywhere near the degree it could. But I think the reason for that is because what I outline next would be considered a nuclear option:
The maximal exploitation would be for a major party to split into 2 parties, one of which only contests seats, and the other only contests party vote. The first one basically instructs its voters to give their party vote to the second party. The second one stands no candidates in electorates. So the first party, the electorate seats, is pretty much all overhang. The second party gets its proportional number of seats. But the two added together are a lot more than that proportion.
It's nuclear because if one major party did it, the other would have to. It would make a complete mockery of MMP. National flirts around the edges of it with Dunne and Banks, and Labour did with Anderton, and if they had tactical ruthlessness they'd do it with Harawira too.
There is also the danger of the split-off party going rogue. It would have to be formed from the old-guard of the original party, which it would be anyway because they're the only ones with enough kudos to win electorate seats.
Just another one of those possible system hacks that sits there unexploited, hopefully forever. I always think of it when left wing voters complain of the Left's powerlessness against the Banks/Dunne situation. That powerlessness is self-enforced.
-
BenWilson, in reply to
I don’t think anyone would claim that Harre was chosen to drive IP policy development in the IT/tech freedom area.
Presumably, however, she will push for whatever is developed?
So stepping back and looking at this in terms of pure power dynamics, MANA actually held more cards in this liaison than did the IP. So if the price of a deal was choosing a leader that the MANA Movement could recognise as “one of us”, then the IP pretty much had to pay it.
Yes, and the price was that basically everything they originally appeared to stand for that had any distinction from Mana has been swept aside. Also, money.
Does this make the exercise a “sham”?
Pretty much.
Well, political reality is...
...full of shams. Finished that for you. I'm not especially bitter on this particular sham, just seeing it for what it is. Mana gets money, KDC gets a high profile vanity party that stands for nothing more than what Mana did in the first place (by the time the deal is finished), and hopes that this party might stand at the balance of power and keep him out of jail. The internet gets a website where they can dream about what might happen if politics were dictated by bloggers, and we can sit back and wonder after the election why none of this grew Mana's party vote at all.
The only political point I could see in any of it was that IP might actually offer something different, and thus appeal to a different segment of voters. Harre standing up and locking ranks with the rest of Mana is something that people who might have been considering voting for the IP will now be scratching their heads over.
Sample thought:
"WTF? I thought this was the IP. When did it become that Harawira Party? What's he ever done for the internet? What's Harre ever done? Fuck that, I think I won't vote (again)." -
BenWilson, in reply to
The internet party movement is like flower power.
Heh. So it's a sweet smelling sham then. "Sham of Roses", available at all leading retailers. To me, it smells nothing like napalm in the morning.
I don’t know about that. You can’t actually buy votes with money.
You can, however, buy advertising. You can get the Mana message out far, far harder than without money.
-
What's he ever done for the internet?
Hone Harawira voted against:
the Copyright "Infringing Filesharing" Bill aka three strikes.
the Telecommunications (Interception Capability and Security) Bill
and the
GCSB bill.What do you expect him to do, write a compiler?
Hey, we could have had that Richard Stallman as Internet party leader, if it wasn't for the pesky citizenship requirement. Oh, and the fact he makes Bomber seem unpolarizing.
-
Richard Aston, in reply to
What do you expect him to do, write a compiler?
Made me laugh , thanks .
-
BenWilson, in reply to
It's definitely righteous to have taken steps to avoid having the internet fucked up.
What do you expect him to do, write a compiler?
As the leader of the Mana party I don't really expect him to have any more tech savvy than your average MP. But the leader of the Internet Party? I'd like it if they could tell me what a compiler was without having to ask the geek standing beside them. Well, if I was going to vote for them, which I sure as shit am not going to now.
-
The old tension between the techy lower-stack geeks and the layer 7 'what is it used for' folk continues.
Most young people don't care about the pumbing. They just want a future that connects - and flushes - when needed. Guess which sort the Internet Party knows there are more of?
-
Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
You can, however, buy advertising. You can get the Mana message out far, far harder than without money.
And ? This National Govt has shown complete manipulation of the Electoral system totally within MMP and the public have voted that that's ok.
Hey. Dotcom, Hone. I truly believe they, with Harre are far more pleasing to my stomach than Key Co. It totally feels like this InternetMana have the interests of the people. Just because Hone's brown doesn't mean he cant understand Dotcom. The guy is blatant about his position which doesnt even get a mention in negotiations with Mana and what a fucked spot to be in . I admire his attempt to protest and Hone's to see the bigger picture. . If I had lots of money ,I'd share it around, Hypocrisy of democracy. Hell, I think John Key is the joke.I think his company is my nightmare. Hone, Laila, I can get jiggy with that. See how they floats ya boat. I'd love to see a shake up. Or are people scared of lil'old brown not meant to be wealthy Hone and big rich Kim Dotcom finding a unified cause when both feel shat on. Warner Bros have been a significant influence in NZ since ages (Herc?) To change our laws made me feel like we lost our identity... I like Kim announcing what his money is doing . I like that he is trying to defend himself, I'm rambling, I'll go away now... -
Moz, in reply to
But the leader of the Internet Party? I'd like it if they could tell me ...
...more about the internet than, say, the leader of ACT can about consumer rights? More than the leader of The Conservative Party can tell us about conservation? Than the leader of National can about anything outside our major cities? Than the Minister for Conservation can about our conservation estate?
Our politicians have pushed that particular bar very low indeed.
I'd be happy with a party leader who can talk about the major policies in the major area of concern for their party. And honestly, I'd be shocked if Lalia Harre couldn't do that. Assuming she can't just because she's ... what? Not yet done so?
-
Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
Well, if I was going to vote for them, which I sure as shit am not going to now.
Fussy ;)
So you expect an expert geek? To lead a political Party? I think it's "youth" that's the direction they are heading . That's the connect. Youth use the internet . Some of the older generation do. They dont want the old vote. They want the future vote.
-
Sofie Bribiesca, in reply to
? Not yet done so?
Thanks Moz. This shit is fresh! I wanna see it play out. Plus no Party gets to judge.
Post your response…
This topic is closed.