New Zealand’s economic crisis is well-documented: rising living costs, stagnant wages, collapsing public services, and a generation locked out of stability. Commentators have spilled oceans of ink diagnosing the symptoms. But far less attention has been paid to the political crisis that sits beneath it. Verity Johnson has captured that contradiction with unusual bluntness.


POLL AFTER poll keeps circling back to the same bleak conclusion: most New Zealanders believe the country is heading in the wrong direction. The latest Stuff online survey, where more than 70 percent of respondents said they don’t believe either major party can make the country any better after the election, simply crystallises what has been simmering for years. It’s not just dissatisfaction with a government or frustration with an opposition, rather it’s a deeper, more corrosive sense that the political system itself has run out of answers.

Stuff columnist Verity Johnson has captured that mood with unusual bluntness. She
writes that New Zealand is in the worst shape it has been 'in living memory', yet she sees no sign that Labour is prepared to offer anything resembling an economic alternative. Her indictment is stark: fuel insecurity, food insecurity, mass emigration, record hardship withdrawals from KiwiSaver, and a social fabric fraying into 'tissue paper'. And, she writes, after two years of crisis, Labour still has 'nothing to say'.

That silence is not accidental. It reflects a party that long ago abandoned any ambition to challenge the economic model it inherited. When Labour finally releases its election policies, they will be modest, technocratic, and framed around the same managerial logic that has dominated the party for decades. The pitch will be familiar: Labour, not National, is the safer pair of hands to run the market economy. But that is not a vision of a better future, it is simply a plea for continuity dressed up as competence.

For many (including this writer), the hope was that the Green Party might step into the vacuum. Chloe Swarbrick has been one of the few high-profile politicians willing to name neoliberalism as the root of the crisis. But, unfortunately, the party’s direction has not been shaped by her views but by the centrist instincts of her fellow co-leader Marama Davidson, who has consistently signalled comfort with aligning the Greens to Labour. That alignment, tested during the Ardern years, produced little more than incrementalism and a handful of policy concessions. It did not produce structural change. It did not produce a break with the economic orthodoxy. And it did not produce the political alternative so many voters are now searching for. But Marama Davidson, apparently, is more than happy to drag the Green Party down this road again. 

New Zealand’s economic crisis is well-documented: rising living costs, stagnant wages, collapsing public services, and a generation locked out of stability. Commentators have spilled oceans of ink diagnosing the symptoms. But far less attention has been paid to the political crisis that sits beneath it. The crisis is not simply that governments are failing to fix the economy. It is that the political class has lost the capacity—or the will—to imagine anything beyond the narrow parameters of the system that created the crisis in the first place.

The parliamentary parties are locked into a competition over who can better administer a failing model. National promises discipline and efficiency. Labour promises compassion and competence. The Greens promise influence at the Cabinet table. But none of them are offering a way out of the structural conditions that have produced inequality, insecurity, and stagnation. None of them are proposing to redistribute power or wealth. None of them are challenging the dominance of markets over public life. Instead, they offer tweaks, adjustments, and minor recalibrations—tinkering with the settings of a machine that is already broken.

This is why the electorate is so deeply disillusioned. It is not apathy. It is not ignorance but recognition. People can see that the system is not working for them, and they can see that the parties vying for their votes are not prepared to confront the reasons why. The media, meanwhile, continues to frame politics as a series of personality clashes, leadership dramas, and tactical manoeuvres. But beneath the noise, the centre of the political spectrum has collapsed. Voters are not drifting aimlessly. They are looking for an alternative that does not exist within the current parliamentary landscape.

The danger is that this vacuum becomes fertile ground for reactionary populism. When mainstream parties refuse to challenge the status quo, others will step forward to exploit the anger and frustration. But populism, too, offers no structural alternative. It channels discontent without transforming its causes. It promises disruption but delivers only a different flavour of the same economic orthodoxy.

New Zealand is not suffering from a lack of ideas. It is suffering from a lack of political courage. The crises we face—economic, social, ecological—are not inevitable. They are the result of political choices made over decades. And they can be undone by political choices made now. But that requires parties willing to break with the orthodoxy, not manage it. It requires leaders willing to articulate a vision of a different kind of economy, not a more compassionate version of the same one. It requires a political movement rooted in the lived realities of ordinary people, not the comfort of the political centre.

Until such a movement emerges, the polls will continue to show what they show now: a country that knows something is fundamentally wrong, but sees no one in Parliament prepared to do anything about it. The economic crisis is real. But the political crisis—the crisis of imagination, of courage, of alternatives—is what keeps us trapped. And unless that crisis is confronted, the next election will offer little more than a choice between two managers of the same failing system.

3 comments:

  1. Peter L Collins5 May 2026 at 08:27

    Yes! There are certainly obvious steps for reducing and even reversing the 'slide'. But the first, and most essential, indeed, is cross-party cooperation at least to the extent of agreeing sensible tax rules and not reversing our economic and infrastructure decisions every three years.

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  2. All true. If we wait for the political class to make the necessary changes we will be waiting forever. So it will come back to the people themselves to establish a new political reality. Not a new political party, because that would just be more of the same. A new system of governance, more or less the same as the system we had prior to the advent of colonialism in 1840 but adapted to a modern technologically based society. Mana motuhake and rangatiratanga in the form of self-determined non-uniform constituencies, continuous election and the open ballot. Political and economic colonialism are behind the ills that afflict New Zealand today. To enable change for the better we have completely dissociate ourselves from the colonialist project and restore universal rangatiratanga.

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  3. I'm in full agreement of the above! Labour at present under Hipkins is a pale shadow of the pre-Roger Douglas stalwart force that truly represented people of all societal sectors, and who actually STOOD UP FOR the very people who are presently feeling that there's NO ONE in Government or Opposition who REALLY CARES about them! The only thing going for Labour at the moment is that it simply isn't possible for them to be as revoltingly toadyish as are both National and Act in Coalition towards the "toe-the-line" power-mongering forces that are circling like vultures around and about this country at the moment (some have already landed and have already begun feasting!) demanding that things like environmental concerns and regulations be abolished, the health and education systems be reshaped in the image and likeness of business models (i.e. profits matter more than people in "the economy"!) Treaty principles and undertakings be abandoned (so that , in the weasel-words of David Seymour and Hobson's Pledge, "we all become one people!"), and the electoral system becomes defranchised so that only "suitable" people will be permitted to vote (those in, or aspiring to, the "rich-and-sorted" category). If the Coalition gets another term this country will either become unrecognisably Trump-like or Kiwis will "wake up at last, but too late", and people will be plunged into a kind of civil war between classes which nobody will win without irreparable devastations (Yes, I'm probably being over-alarmist, but neither can I totally and utterlyu support Verity Johnson's understandable but risky and scarily unhelpful assertion "I really should be voting Labour but I really don't want to" or words to that effect. The danger is that, if we do nothing to remove the current bunch of clowns, the circus will completely take over, and possibly with Winston Peters as the Ringmaster!

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