the podcast on
Don鈥檛 you hate it when the kids fight.
The quiet war between David Seymour and Winston Peters has kicked up a little lately with both the boys playing games in court to win the hearts of the public.
That's the problem when you鈥檙e a minor party, you need to make noise to be noticed.
The big noise for a while has been David Seymour who has taken conversations by the throat with his Treaty Principles Act. Love it or hate it, you're all talking about it which is all a politician wants.
Last week I warned that Winston has been a good boy while he鈥檚 held the Deputy Prime Minister job but that鈥檚 coming to an end in a few months and he does a swapsie with David Seymour. That will free his hand and you鈥檒l hear much more from him.
That's started, which explains why he鈥檚 taken over the railways. He wants to be seen as a saviour and solver.
Seymour and Peters have very differing views of the railways - Winston blames past privatisation's. David wants to privatise 49 per cent of it.
Winston also has a treaty principles strategy. He鈥檚 looking to cancel the legislation that already exists that proscribes how the treaty inveigles it鈥檚 way into legislation, it鈥檚 got a much better chance of success than Seymour's act and referendum but has flown under the radar since the election. That hacks him off.
You鈥檝e got to remember that Winston is an old school conservative and closer to the old socialists that cared about the working class. David Seymour is part of a new conservatism that believes in capitalism, markets and winner takes all.
They鈥檙e not naturally compatible.
So the next 18 months looks to be increasingly entertaining and that鈥檚 a good thing because a contest of ideas is a good thing.
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