Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Airing Labour's dirty laundry


I have spent the better part of 17 years  – eight  of those as a paid organiser for the Labour Party – practicing the ancient art of alchemy; turning supporters into volunteers, volunteers into members and members into activists.  I have recruited hundreds of union and Labour Party members. I have mentored and trained, supported and loved, nagged and inspired, motivated and enthused thousands of people over the years. I know what empowers us and what makes us invent excuses to stay at home despite the desperate emails and group texts designed to ‘activate the networks’.
I make this point because I am deeply concerned about what’s going on with some members of the Labour caucus and the long term effects their behaviour  will have on Party members and supporters leading into the 2014 general election.
The latest revelation that two senior MP had a bitch session with Duncan Garner ( good post here about some  other questions we’d like to ask Duncan) about David Cunliffe is the last straw for me. I’ve not taken sides in this debate (I was happy with either David for leader)  and I’ve tried not to pass judgement on my erstwhile comrades – I have a real appreciation of the life they live in their parliamentary gilded cages – but I’ve had, to use one of Helen Clark’s more visceral phrases, a gutsful of this crap.
I can only hope David Shearer was misquoted on Newstalk ZB when asked if he was happy with the behaviour of his caucus.  Labour Party members deserve better.
MPs  just can’t  indulge in this sort of disloyal, backstabbing, bitchy and  frankly unkind behaviour .  It will affect supporters and activists (not to mention the general voting public).

This is dynamite stuff from Jenny Michie, who as recently as 2009 was David Shearer's campaign organiser in the Mt Albert by-election. But she isn't done yet; read on:

And just in case this is too cryptic,  here are the simple rules of volunteerism:
How to get people to do stuff:
a)  make people feel inspired by working together towards a common cause for the greater good
b)  be inclusive not exclusive
c)  set the bar with your own behaviour and live up to your own rhetoric
d)   love them up, be kind and grateful,  say thank you often

How to piss off your activists and ensure that your volunteer base is depleted:
a)   put your own ego and ambition first and bugger the Party
b)  be disrespectful of a fellow MP; especially one whom many Party members wanted as their leader
c)  act like your behaviour won’t ultimately affect the hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders who look to a Labour led government for inspiration, leadership and practical help and support in a scary world.
Labour, get it together.
You’re letting us all down.

We wonder whether caucus will heed her warning though, or whether anyone in the Labour caucus will even notice it. Divisions run deep, and MPs' attention is likely to be on more pressing issues at the moment.

But she's dead right on one point; Labour Party members and activists DO deserve better than what they are getting. It is the volunteer base that does much of the work in getting a party elected, and Labour is proving very adept in upsetting its support base as egos and agendas collide in the caucus room.

We doubt that Jenny Michie has taken the decision to publicly air Labour's dirty laundry lightly, but these are extraordinary times. It will be interesting to watch the response to this post from Ms Michie.

2 comments:

Quintin Hogg said...

Ms Michies comments can be applied across the board to all political parties and further to all entities that rely on volunteers to do the heavy work.

Upset them and they are gone.

It takes an extraordinary effort to get people back into the fold.

pdm said...

The country cannot afford another Labour led, left wing government in my lifetime - I am 66. Therefore the infighting, airing of `dirty linen' and involvement of form loyal party activists such as Jenny Michie should be seen as being f=good for New Zealand.

Long may it last

Having said that we do need an effective opposition but I suppose `Red Russel' is fulfilling at least part of that role.