Election count points to a conservative victory as Labour cedes votes to Nationals and Greens

2 points

This is not true. I think a more accurate term would be we swung for change. Green vote held up, it was mainly labour that dived. Having said that, the extreme right, Act, did do well with about 9%. And it’s also worth noting that both national (right) and labour (left) would be considered quite middle of the road elsewhere.

permalink
report
reply
1 point
*

How do ACT and NZ First compare in terms of extremism?

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Act is waaaaaay to the right of any other party in NZ.

NZ First have partnered with Labour (left) and with National (right) over the years. Their strength is mainly around the leader (Winston Peters) who is a real firebrand and somehow they pull 5-7% or so every year (although they disappeared below the threshold in the 2020 election). IIRC their support is more in the older generation.

I would say their economics are centrist, but they tend to be conservative on other issues.

In the 2017 govt when they partnered with Labour (left), Winston became deputy prime minister and foreign minister and the rumours were that he was pretty effective and hardworking in the foreign minister position.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Thanks - interesting. I’d never heard before about Act (from here in the UK) but I was vaguely familiar with NZ First and always assumed they occupied the populist-conservative position analogous to UKIP/Front National/AfD. Very helpful to hear the wider perspective on where they sit in the NZ party system.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Non-paywall link: https://archive.ph/Wu9N4

permalink
report
reply

Neoliberal

!Neoliberal@kbin.social

Create post

Free trade, open borders, taco trucks on every corner. Latest discussion thread: April 2024 **We in m/Neoliberal support:** - Free trade and competitive markets

Community stats

  • 7

    Monthly active users

  • 455

    Posts

  • 972

    Comments

Community moderators