New Greens co-leader wants MoU with National
The so-called "right wing" Green co-leader says its his job to change the party.
The so-called "right wing" Green co-leader says its his job to change the party.
See also: Comment: Why calling James Shaw ‘right wing’ misses the point
Newly elected Green Party male co-leader James Shaw says his job is to "change the party" to prepare it for government rather than opposition, "massively grow" party membership to reflect a broader cross-section of New Zealand society and articulate economic policy that goes beyond both capitalism and socialism.
His comments struck a different tone from female co-leader Metiria Turei, who yesterday said there would be "no radical shift in direction."
Buttonholed by opponents as a right-wing candidate because of his background as an international business consultant, Mr Shaw got a rousing cheer from the 250 delegates at the party's annual congress when he told them he was "not a hero of free market capitalism, because free market capitalism is dead" and had been since governments bailed out private sector banks in the 2008 global financial crisis.
"The reality of politics in the wake of the global financial crisis is that there is no longer a struggle between capitalism and socialism. What we have now is a hybrid model that takes some of the good but most of the bad elements of both systems.
"There's no name for this system that we now live under," Mr Shaw said. "It's not capitalism or neo-liberalism. And it's not conservatism. Nobody speaks for it. Nobody voted for it."
It was a product of lobbying, deals behind closed doors and driven by polling.
"My opposition to our current, deliberately broken economic system is not ideological. It is moral," he said, to applause.
Common cause with National
Mr Shaw said while he opposed going into formal coalition with the National Party, he urged the creation of "common cause" with National on an ambitious national target for greenhouse gas emissions reduction ahead of this December's global climate change conference in Paris.
The new male co-leader of the Greens, James Shaw, has told Corin Dann on this morning’s Q+A that he is the man to boost the party’s economic credibility in the minds of both voters and business.
“I want to use my business background in particular to show that the greens have got the skill to enter government,” he said.
Mr Shaw didn’t want to get into specific policies but said he supported a “mixed economy”, and that “fragile” New Zealand economy should move away from a reliance on simple commodities and toward “smart green economics”.
Mr Shaw wants the Greens to revive the Memorandum of Understanding with National on climate change, which he says is the most pressing issue of the moment and requires a cross-party consensus.
Modernise
The new co-leader also said also that the Greens need to modernise how it campaigns, using techniques that are "technology-based, data-driven but founded on communities, self-organisation and the passion of volunteers."
"I do want to change the Green Party," he said. "We need to grow. We need to transition from an opposition party to a party of government.
"I want us to double our membership in the next year and then double it again the year after that."
The party also needed to be "more like modern New Zealand," meaning more Maori, Pasifika, Asians, businesspeople, farmers, artists, doctors and lawyers."
"People vote for people they feel a connection to. If we aim to govern the country, then we need to represent it," said Mr Shaw, whose speech did not refer once to the Greens' most obvious coalition partner, the Labour Party.
Mr Shaw, who entered Parliament after the September 2014 election, became the party's third male co-leader in its 25-year history yesterday, convincingly beating front-runner and long-serving Green MP Kevin Hague, winning the support of 69 electorate delegates to Hague's 56, with other candidates, Gareth Hughes and Vernon Tava, winning one vote each under the party's electoral system.
(BusinessDesk)