JUNE 1 2019 LISTENER 11
LIFE
Ngaro-ing the gap
Many in Botany
are unhappy
at speculation
that they might
be sacrificed
to Ngaro’s
Christians.
ST
EV
E
BO
LT
O
N
BILL
RALSTON
I
t appears we may have the second
coming of a Christian party at the
next election. Well, actually, it is
at least the fifth coming of one.
Ex-National MP Graeme Lee formed
one, Graham Capill ran another,
Brian Tamaki is rumbling about start-
ing one (he’s been there before, from
2003-7), and Colin Craig founded the
Conservative Party.
Putting aside the fact that Capill
was convicted of child sex offences
after quitting Christian Heritage and
Craig had a peculiar public meltdown
with his press secretary 48 hours
before the 2014 election, faith-based
parties seem unable to
win more than 4% of
the vote, short of the
5% needed to enter
Parliament without an
electorate seat. How-
ever, the right leader
might just get them in
the door.
Hence the specula-
tion that National MP
Alfred Ngaro might
be given a safe seat, à
la Epsom and Act, to
start a new Christian
party. In Parliament,
the National Party is
Nigel No-mates and the
support of a Christian
party may push it over
the top and back into
power in 2020.
This is a little
Could Christian
soldiers march
no-mates National
into office?
“I thought I’d love living in the country but I’m getting
really tired of picking up after all these ponies.”
hopeful, but it is a better strategy than leader Simon
Bridges closing his eyes and wishing that NZ First
and the Greens would fall below 5% of the vote
and exit Parliament, letting National and Labour go
head to head.
Cook Islands-born Ngaro is a genial chap and a
pastor. Chances are he would pull a sizeable chunk
of the Auckland Polynesian vote from Labour and,
if other churchgoers followed, he may get the cru-
cial 5% for a new party.
Giving Ngaro a winnable seat could be a better
guarantee of a support party for National than its
“blue green” imaginary friends, who seem to have
vanished without trace. The problem is, which
seat? National voters in the East Auckland con-
stituency of Botany, left reeling when elected MP
Jami-Lee Ross turned independent, were hoping for
a real National candidate, and many are reacting
badly to media speculation that they might be
sacrificed to Ngaro’s Christians.
Of course, with Act moribund on about 1% sup-
port, the loyal centre-right voters of Epsom may be
persuaded to drop David Seymour for a potentially
more popular Ngaro. But that’s a big “maybe”.
N
garo would need a key issue
to ignite the Christian vote
and capture 5% of the vote.
Homosexual law reform and gay
marriage are now law and opposition
to them is an unlikely vote-catcher.
His best bet is probably opposing
cannabis law reform, which will
be put to a referendum during the
election.
Many voters implacably oppose
legalising marijuana. Some Christians
seem to believe there is an 11th com-
mandment that says “Thou shall not
smoke dope”. This could be a good
banner for Ngaro and his Christian
soldiers to march under, gathering
up other clean-living folk to push
the party over the 5% barrier into
Parliament without having to win an
electorate seat.
National’s biggest problem is that
Labour has gone solidly centrist,
chomping into former blue votes.
It is not making the
mistake of Labor’s Bill
Shorten in Australia,
who campaigned on
substantial tax hikes
for many, forgetting
the maxim regard-
ing turkeys and early
Christmases.
Here, Labour is
projecting a warm and
fuzzy brand, despite
such apparent set-
backs as the KiwiBuild
programme.
A looming danger for
Labour is the property
market going into full
free fall and eroding by
too much a property
owner’s sense of wealth.
Politics is a tricky tight-
rope to tread. l