Scoop Election 08: edited by Gordon Campbell

On today’s protest march in Christchurch

February 1st, 2012

Reading meaning into the utterances of Christchurch mayor Bob Parker is always a risky business, but Parker’s comment to the Press the other day that ‘People should be careful what they wish for’ was a fascinating statement in the light of today’s citizens’ demonstration in Christchurch.

It is tempting to read Parker’s comment as a warning that the marchers – who clearly want the heads of Parker and CEO Tony Marryatt and new council elections by April and May – could end up by accidentally validating the government’s agenda. Which may be to declare the entire Council dysfunctional, sack the lot and appoint a Commissioner, along the lines of the Environment Canterbury coup de-etat.

In which case, the eventual main casualty of today’s march – “See ? In their thousands, people have no faith in the current Council!” – could be the last vestige of the very democratic procedures that the marchers want to restore.

These days, former Sydenham MP and one-time mayoral hopeful Jim Anderton is an interested observer from the sidelines. People are looking for a clear and co-ordinated approach to the reconstruction of Christchurch, he says, and there are now only three options for getting there.

“One, the present Council has to tough it out, and sort itself out. Which is what they’re now being challenged to do. What are the chances of that with the present incumbents? Not great. I don’t think Parker has learnt anything. The second choice is that you have a Commissioner. But the government has probably lost the stomach for ending all democratic processes in the city. We only have a Council left now. Thirdly, you take it back to the voters. Have another election.”

And if there were fresh elections to be held mid-year, would he be interested in standing again, against Parker? “No. No, I wouldn’t. Look, there’s a window of opportunity in politics, and you’re suited for it and you’re ready for it and that was it. It was one of the places in time and I’m not going to go back there. I don’t need it. Its not like I ever really wanted to be the mayor. (According to Anderton, he’d tried to convince former mayor Vicki Buck to stand before ending up as the candidate last time.) I was prepared to do it. But no. And that’s a problem, getting the right person [to oppose Parker]. It is a tough job now.”
The sources of the Christchurch Council’s malaise goes back well before Bob Parker and Tony Marryatt, even though their autocratic managerial style – which has bypassed inclusive Council-wide communication – has only compounded the problem. In his Press column yesterday, Chris Trotter put his finger on a couple of very relevant points. One, as Trotter pointed out, Christchurch used to be exceptionally well governed, by a larger Council with a more inclusive style of operating:

In 1993, Christchurch – which then boasted a council of twenty-four elected representatives – won the coveted Carl Bertelsmann Prize for “Best Governed City in the World”. A decade later the Local Government Commission reduced the number of Christchurch City Councillors to sixteen. Where once the Mayor and CEO of Christchurch City had to round-up twelve to thirteen compliant councillors, they now needed to corral only eight or nine.

The subordination of active democratic participation to “effective and efficient” management is a dangerous development at the best of times, but in the face of natural disasters on the scale of the Christchurch earthquakes it is nothing less than catastrophic.

Citizens desperate to “get things done” all-too-easily fall prey to the hard-edged promptings of administrative authoritarians – handing over powers that should never be surrendered to those who dismiss democracy as an unwelcome hindrance to “good governance”.

So how do you get from being the best governed city in the world to the current mess in no time flat? Easy. You bring in a ‘change manager’ with a mandate to pursue ‘efficiency’. The crucial structural change, as Trotter indicates, was the one that reduced the Council from 24 to 12. This reduction has made it so much easier for the likes of Parker/Marryat to get a majority, and rule via their own coterie on Council – even if this has been at the cost of sharply split voting patterns on key issues. That change, Anderton recalls, was introduced ten years ago, when Lesley McTurk came in as a ‘change manager’ to replace long serving CEO Mike Richardson, who retired in 2003.

McTurk was CEO during the term of former mayor Garry Moore and, Anderton claims, McTurk oversaw the retirement or constructive dismissal of almost all the senior managers on the Council. “All that institutional knowledge, all that built-up high quality governance that had won the city so many accolade was all gone in a very short period of time. We’re talking about four years.”

McTurk’s drastic innovations were supported by the Local Government Commission which – at the time – included Kerry Marshall, the recently appointed “Crown observer” who is now supposed to help the Council to heal its divisions. McTurk has moved on to become the CEO of Housing New Zealand, and was succeeded by Marryatt in the wake of his own controversial stint as CEO in Hamilton – which had included the promotion of the financially costly V-8 car race, some controversial large pay increases and a handsome exit payment that the Waikato Times recently reminisced about in this editorial:

Mr Marryatt has made enemies in high places. Columnist Joe Bennett has lampooned him and made some excellent points about the tendency of local authorities to imitate the corporate world when they are not a corporation, but just a public body which is handed ratepayers’ money to play with….

When he was in Hamilton, Mr Marryatt negotiated himself a generous exit package worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. It was known as the Marryatt “golden parachute”. One wonders whether he perhaps has a similar deal with the Christchurch City Council. If so, he could well soon be using it.

Beltway rumour has it that the current Council has about six weeks to get its act together – or else the government will take action. If true, that seems rash and unreasonable. A malaise ten years or more in the making can hardly be resolved in six weeks, and there is no milestone on the horizon via which the Council could prove it had suddenly, magically, been cleansed of dissent. To date, the feature routinely cited as evidence of the Council’s current dysfunctionality has been the “leaks” to the media – allegedly, by dissenting councillors.

In fact, as Anderton points out, you can count the number of leaks from Council on the fingers of one hand. More often, he says, the embarrassing information about the doings of the Parker/Marryatt/Ngaire Button coterie have come from OIA requests, subsequently published in the media. The recent revelations about Marryatt’s performance and pay review being a classic case in point:

Christchurch City Council chief executive Tony Marryatt was awarded a controversial $68,000 pay rise despite a steady decline in his performance reviews, official documents show…Last December, the council gave Marryatt a 14.4% pay increase, taking his salary to $538,529.

Documents released by the council under the Official Information Act show that Marryatt’s performance reviews have gone gradually downhill since 2009. His overall performance, excluding self-assessment, decreased from 4.3 out of 5 in 2009 to 3.9 in 2011. Marryatt’s ratings declined in six out of seven categories over his three performance reviews, based on anonymous reviews from councillors and senior management.

Leaks are not a cause of dysfunction – they are a symptom of it. With the Council almost equally split, one concern for Parker/Marryatt must be whether any maverick within their inner group would be willing to break ranks and seek personal advantage from being seen as the city’s saviour from its current leadership. In the meantime, none of the options on the table must be looking very attractive to Gerry Brownlee, Nick Smith and their colleagues in Cabinet.

“It is a hard call for them,” Anderton agrees. “They’re going to be tossing up between doing nothing – which is almost not an option if the Council gets worse, as it is possible it will. Putting in Commissioners is not the ideal solution for them. Holding new elections again? That’s not an ideal solution, either. But the one thing about elections is that at least [central government] can then say well, the people had their choice, and they’ve now only got themselves to blame.”

To date, Parker has shown few signs of being willing or able, to take the initiative. There is now no credibility remaining in the autocratic, secretive style of management that has been the hallmark of the Parker/Marryatt era. If Parker is to survive, he needs to break up his cartel and begin to act inclusively and co-operatively. Such a transformation seems unlikely, at this late stage. Instead, blind loyalty is likely to remain the focus. “And if that’s how it works,” Anderton concludes, “its not going to work.”

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    1. 13 Responses to “On today’s protest march in Christchurch”

    2. By The Duuuude on Feb 1, 2012 | Reply

      Dangerous Article in points. Stating that the protest could unravel the democratic process is like telling a rape victim that reporting the rape may make it worse so just shut up.

      The Author is as bad as Parker and his henchmen.

    3. By Vaughan on Feb 1, 2012 | Reply

      Gordon campbell as bad as parker the thief? How does that work? He specifically quotes anderton as saying that the further dismantling of democracy in christchurch is unlikely. He’s not warning us to shut up, he’s warning us about the kind of people we’re dealing with. The elections that saw parker defeat anderton should be taught in high school history to show kids what happens when you pick style over substance.

    4. By Pete on Feb 1, 2012 | Reply

      And further to what Vaughan said Duuuude, Campbell is only warning that one of the options on the table will be a return of what happened when Environment Canterbury was ousted – replacing a body voted for by the people (though supposedly a shambles in that case due to specific lobbying) with a body appointed by the powers-that-be, on-high. This is also alluded to by Parker – likely in order to reign in the dissent of the public (though clearly a failure).

      The key will be what central government does next – it’s hard to tell with the same faces around the table, my guess is that it will depend on how unpopular the decision is likely to be with the public at-large (i.e. little thought given to *why* people were marching, instead, looking to *nip-it-in-the-bud*).

    5. By Joe Blow on Feb 1, 2012 | Reply

      I’m sceptical about how unpopular Parker actually is. He and his wife were supposedly disliked for being too easy with Council money before the earthquakes, but he still won with a landslide last election. The problem is that there really isn’t a TV friendly rival to take him down. Jim Anderton doesn’t cut the mustard when it comes to mainstream Christchurch voters. I’ve never really understood local politics but in Christchurch it’s becoming more and more like national politics… Women’s Weekly poster pinups…

    6. By Maggie on Feb 1, 2012 | Reply

      Love it: I have left unemployment in Christchurch to work overseas. Not because of the quakes- I have lived through worse- but becuase of the sickeningly obvious abuse of power and monumental greed and incompetence of these smug old boys. Seeing the people of ChCh finally overcome their apathy and protest, at long last, has made my year. I have been asking all along why I pay rates and insurance. I am with the people of Christhcurch and behind their protest 100%. We are not so stupid after all Bob- we wnat more than a good show and empty words-we want our rights.

    7. By pclarebu on Feb 1, 2012 | Reply

      There were 68,245 people who voted for Bob Parker and 58,892 who voted for someone else.

      Now we have 3,000 who want Bob out? It would be interesting to know how many of those 3,000 were in the 68K who voted for Bob.

      Either way 3,000 seems an insignificant number – 2.36% percentage of the voting population does not make a broken democracy. I know the real number opposed to him would be larger, but would they be more that the 58,892 who voted against him at the last election anyway – who knows but my guess is not. Unless they can get a more significant number behind them a new election would be a waste of time and money – with the real possibility of putting Bob back in power.

    8. By Leon Henderson on Feb 2, 2012 | Reply

      Cheers Banjo.

      I love you Elyse!!!

    9. By Leon Henderson on Feb 2, 2012 | Reply

      http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=28753

    10. By Leon Henderson on Feb 2, 2012 | Reply

      How many angels can fit on the head of a pin Joe Blow???: I still do not know whether you are a Troll or a Train-Spotter. Probably both!!!

      A good rule-of-thumb is to always be suspicious of people who spout complex statistics such as “0.03% of the people in each family in New Zealand put tomato sauce on their cornflakes”.

      Like the Bible, statistics can be made to “say” literally anything, whilst simultaneously providing an initial (usually false)impression of being “factual”.

      Finally, the American government has for several years been sending delegations all over the Jewish-American Empire to force the “governments” (Puppets) of the Empire-Of-Greed to secretly acquiesce to a thing called “ACTA”.

      What is ACTA??? ACTA is “Anti Counterfeiting Trade Agreement” (the ruling filthy-rich Oligarchy of the USA are obsessed with copyright aren’t they??? In spite of their literal OCEANS of ill-gotten Loot they endlessly worry and fret that a few bucks might be slipping through their insanely greedy fingers) and it does EXACTLY the same thing as SOPA and PIPA: it is another angle-of-attack by the ruling-class of the USA and it’s massive Empire, to grab absolute control over all of the ISP’s throughout the Jewish-American Empire, and total control over the Internet/Web and every user of the Internet/Web.

      What everyone reading this (YOU) has got to realise how fast things can be changed now: YOUR access to the Internet/Web and ability to use commercial software that you have paid for, can under ACTA be either severely restricted or stopped totally, in literally the blink of an eye.

      ACTA is a big fishing net: it is designed to “catch” not only people who put on the Web, or in some way make available on the Web, copyright material. But not only, that, it is designed to get the police in every country of the immense Jewish-American Empire to bang on YOUR door if you are downloading or watching any copyright material on your computer or digital Web-accessed device.

      If that already does not make your head spin, then how about this: anyone who creates, and/or makes available software that enables people to “keep out of reach/get around” ACTA is gonna have the paramilitary police throughout the Jewish-American Empire heading straight for them in black overalls, with loaded guns, stun-grenades, tear gas, and a great big battering-ram for YOUR door.

      Do some reading:

      http://www.google.co.nz/search?q=Stop+ACTA+Petitions&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a

    11. By Leon Henderson on Feb 2, 2012 | Reply

      And not one swear-word Banjo! Told ya I was trying!!!

      Cheers Banjo.

    12. By Leon Henderson on Feb 9, 2012 | Reply

      Joe Blow claims: “I’m sceptical about how unpoular Parker actually is/but he still won with a landslide last election”.

      You are wrong, Joe; Parker “won” with an extremely convenient Earthquake (Parker was, until the Earthquake, trailing so far behind Anderton in the Mayoralty Polls that Parker was to all intents and purposes, out of contention), a grovelling, fawning mass-media (Parker has always been a darling of the extremely right-wing mass-media of NZ), and the arrival of “His Glorious Magnificence” John Key who, with his “Mr. Rescue Hero-Man” crash-helmet and safety vest (Do not fear!!! – Me and my faithful sidekick “Bob” Parker will rescue everyone from the rubble!!!) appeared before his ecstatic horde of kowtowing, servile “journalists” with “Bob” (“Bob” being all dressed up in “Rescue Man” gear too) and from then onwards the television was saturated with “John and Bob”; the “news”papers were plastered with photographs of “John and Bob”; and the radio was full of incessant “interviews” with “John and Bob” by obsequious lackey-”journalists”.

      Anderton meanwhile was equally relentlessly ignored by the mass-media: no front-page coloured photographs of Anderton in “Rescue-Man” gear was there Joe Blow?

      But Joe is incapable of grasping things like that, because all Joe ever see’s is what he wants to see.

    13. By Leon Henderson on Feb 9, 2012 | Reply

      The huge eruption of mass-media engineered publicity for Parker (and the media “lockout” of Anderton) saw the woefully gullible public reverse the pre-Earthquake (election) polling results, and put Parker so far ahead of Anderton, that Anderton was very rapidly shoved out of any real contention.

      To slightly paraphrase a very old saying: “Even bad publicity is better than no publicity”. Anderton got NO publicity!!!

    14. By Leon Henderson on Feb 9, 2012 | Reply

      Dammit: was pretty mean to ya Joe Blow, wanna apologise; but just thinking about how the media and Key hijacked the Mayoralty Election (just like the media nearly tipped over MMP in the original MMP Referendum, and then did everything in their power to wreck the prospects of The Alliance getting into power in 1996 – which included refusing to let The Alliance have a “voice”) made me furiously angry and I started taking it out on you in the earlier post, Joe, so apologies.

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