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Bryce Edwards
Bryce Edwardshttps://democracyproject.nz/
Dr Bryce Edwards is Political Analyst in Residence at Victoria University of Wellington. He is the director of the Democracy Project.

Bryce Edwards: Time for a sober discussion about toxicity and personality in politics

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Since her shock resignation announcement, Jacinda Ardern has been at pains to point out that she isn’t leaving because of the toxicity directed at her on social media and elsewhere, rebutting journalists who suggested misogyny and hate may have driven her from office.

Yet there have been dozens of columns and articles, both domestically and internationally, blaming toxic public criticism for Ardern choosing to step down.

Rising toxicity and polarisation

Although some of the claims about Ardern being hounded from office by “deplorables” are questionable, they reflect the reality of rising toxicity and ugliness in New Zealand politics in recent years. And in terms of the hate that has been directed at Ardern, a substantial proportion of this is clearly gendered.

We do need to take a “moment for some national self-reflection” as some have argued, and we certainly need solutions for how to deal with rising polarisation and toxicity in New Zealand.

Ardern was the target of an extraordinary amount of abuse, but the toxicity extends further than the outgoing prime minister. Over the last decade or so, any public figure or politician – regardless of their politics, gender, and ethnicity – has become increasingly targeted for abuse, especially online. It began well before Ardern’s prime ministership.

Any sober observance of John Key’s time as prime minister shows the incredible hatred and abuse directed his way in the eight years he was at the top. This included his family, and Max Key claimed in 2016 that he received “death threats twice a week”.

Some of the aggression towards Key wasn’t even widely condemned. When gallows and death threats were cartoonishly made in leftwing protests, they were generally contextualised as expressions of anger and contempt for some of his policies as Prime Minister.

But a line was crossed in Key’s time – encapsulated by leftwing rapper Tom Scott’s “Kill the PM”, which spoke of assassinating Key and raping his daughter. At the time, the song and its artist had plenty of defenders on the left.

Since then, New Zealand society has become much more polarised. A survey published by the Herald in December showed 64 per cent of New Zealanders believe the country has become more divided in the last few years.

The impact of Covid and the Government’s response obviously played a key part in this division. Growing inequality and social dislocation have caused considerable damage, leading to bitterness and anger – some of which has been politicised and directed at politicians.

The role of gender in the rise and fall of Jacinda Ardern

Was the decline in Ardern’s popularity due to her gender? There is something of a strange reading of politics to suggest that Labour and Ardern’s poor polling in the last year was due to the Prime Minister being a woman. As journalist Graham Adams wrote this week, such narratives ignore how popular Ardern was: “Against reason, we are effectively asked to believe that a nation that gave Ardern an unprecedented majority in 2020 — alongside personal popularity ratings in the 70s that outshone anything John Key achieved — has become a deeply misogynistic nation in just two years.”

Yes, there were and are huge numbers of vile, sexist putdowns directed at Ardern. But the story of her rise to great heights has shown that her gender or becoming a mother while in office haven’t held her back in the slightest. If anything, New Zealanders strongly celebrated the progressiveness of having a prime minister become a mother while in office.

And the fact that the New Zealand Parliament now has a majority of women says something very striking about how gender is not the barrier for electability that it once was in this country. It could be argued Ardern’s gender and motherhood have been an electoral asset rather than a liability.

The personalisation of politics has accentuated toxicity

Political parties now market and emphasise the personalities of their leaders more than ever before. In New Zealand the “presidentialisation of politics” has reached a whole new level under the leadership of Jacinda Ardern. Since 2017 she became Labour’s biggest electorate asset, and so the party leveraged Jacindamania to win government in 2017 and 2020 – during which time she took the party from 24 per cent in the polls to the historic win of 50 per cent.

The leveraging of Ardern’s personality and star power epitomised the trend in politics for election manifestos, policy, and ideology to be de-emphasised. In fact, politics has become “hollowed out”, and substance and depth are now missing in democracy.

Few people join political parties, and the historic ties between parties and traditional constituencies have been eroded. Without the social anchors of strong ideologies and ties to social class and other demographics, elections are more about personality and the attributes of leadership than ever before.

Ardern was perfect for these times. Labour was able to focus their whole campaigns around her personality, with winning results.

Likewise, the Ardern-led Labour government since 2017 has been all about Ardern. She has towered well above any minister in projecting what the administration is about. This was particularly evident during the Covid crisis, when she was the almost-total voice and personification of the Government’s response.

The unfortunate flipside of having one personality embody and represent a party and government so entirely is that when the popularity of that institution plummets, it’s the personality at the top who becomes the magnet for all the discontent. Unfortunately for Ardern, by having her personify the Labour Government so totally, this has meant that she has been the recipient of, first the adulation, and now the blame.

Labour’s spindoctors might well have been smart to push Ardern to do the cover shoots, and develop a big media presence around her personality and charisma, but ultimately it became a double-edged sword.

The lesson is that the hyper-personalisation of politics is deeply harmful and unhealthy for all involved. The antidote is to shift away from personality politics. New Zealand political parties must rediscover their soul and substance, and not be based so much around leaders. They need to recruit members again, encourage their participation, and focus on policy development. Politics should not be an elite activity.

The media, too, could learn to focus less on personalities. The total concentration on Ardern’s star power was such easy journalism. But it came at the expense of a policy debate. A look back at the 2020 general election campaign shows how little policy and ideas were actually debated and examined. It was a policy void that few commentators were willing to challenge. The prime example has been the momentous Three Waters fiasco, which Labour didn’t even feel the need to foreshadow and persuade the electorate about – ultimately leading to a major backlash.

Hopefully, in 2023, the election campaign is less about Chris Hipkins and Christopher Luxon, and more about the significant problems in New Zealand that need fixing. Although ideology and visions are now deeply unpopular, we actually need more of a big-picture focus than on the personal ethics, competencies, and personalities of leaders. And it would help if the political parties are actually able to present properly differentiated policy options for voters – something that has been in short supply in recent years, which has merely fuelled the focus on individual politicians instead.

Weaponisation of claims about political abuse

We need a debate about polarisation and toxicity in New Zealand politics. An increase in toxicity, and especially the gendered and racial nature of it, is likely to increase. We need to find a better way forward.

But this is very different to presenting Jacinda Ardern as a victim. As some commentators have pointed out, this desire to turn her into a victim of abuse is somewhat paternalistic and patronising. Former prime minister Jenny Shipley has warned, for example, that “If we overemphasize the abuse question, it implies women can’t do this job and that’s not true.”

Even worse, is if partisans and liberal-leftists attempt to use Ardern’s departure to provoke a culture war. By painting a picture of “the deplorables hounding the Prime Minister from office”, such voices are just increasing the toxic polarisation in a way that prevents a sober discussion of the problems.

An unsophisticated condemnation of political opponents just drives up tensions and looks like petty opportunism rather than a genuine concern to help find a solution for a real problem. Instead of reducing the hate and rancour, such “call out culture” methods tend to be counterproductive and are a dead-end.

Instead, what is urgently needed is a better understanding of what is driving social divisions, and an acknowledgement that the increased abuse of politicians comes largely from our unhealthy personalisation of politics.

This focus on individual politicians and New Zealand’s shift away from collective ways of doing politics is fuelling a hyper-individualisation by which political careers live and die, leaving us all the poorer.

Dr Bryce Edwards is Political Analyst in Residence at Victoria University of Wellington. He is the director of the Democracy Project.

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6 COMMENTS

  1. That was incredibly long Bruce! I could only read about 1/2 of it.

    No it wasn’t because she was a woman but she used this fact to defend herself. She pretended to be kind and virtuous but she was a bully.

    She used every opportunity to exploit her womanhood to gain popularity, She was fake and shallow. A narcissistic little piece of work. She never meant anything she said and thought she could promise without delivering.

    She felt like she could fix the world but had little experience to do so. People just got sick and tired.

    We are sick and tired of them all too. Try to he a little more ingenuous.

    Stop the media from having a feild day with other people’s opinions, the media are just as much to blame if not more for being one-sided and sycophantic.I think Tova O’Brien got her fair share of stick too and that silly Siouxie Sioux Wiles. No we have had too much of this self righteousness. Who’s laughing all the way to the bank? No sympathy dude.

    Media, Journalists, ofocianados et al stop telling people what to think it’s insulting.

  2. Try to be more genuine.

    Read the rest. Load of waffle.

    The more you lot go the more we go it’s game on. At the moment we say scrap the lot of them. Useless self congratulating, sanctomoious overpaid and out of touch with no regard for reality.

  3. Drivel. She headed a Party determined to attack our most successful industries- tourism and farming – and moved in lockstep with her global masters and did her best to create a totalitarian dictator state ignoring her duty to represent. She and all of the MPs have betrayed the people. Aided by paid off media. She destroyed the lives of millions of NZers with mandates and other rules that breached human rights, leaving a swathe of dead and seriously injured in her wake. But we don’t hear about them on msm do we. And the despicable lot of MPs in Wn have deserted them. And you wonder why people are upset? It’s like watching media show sympathy for an abuser.

  4. Maybe don’t go out of your way to ruin people’s lives and businesses.

    Maybe butt out of how they choose to raise THEIR children.

    Maybe don’t lock people up in their homes for weeks on end and criminalise simple trivialities like going for a walk in the fresh air.

    Maybe don’t try to force medical procedures we don’t want or need. Maybe next time don’t push digital ID and surveillance & try to reintroduce segregation and second class citizen status.

    Maybe stop f*cking around with our farmers and our food supply in the name of a fake catastrophe you and your elitist buddies clearly don’t even believe in yourselves.

    Maybe stop printing money in the name of your pet projects – our children go deeper into debt every time you do.

    Maybe stop trying to divide us at every turn, race against race, man against woman, parent against child.

    Maybe stop with the 3-waters style power grabs. No means no. We’re tired of being robbed and looted.

    Maybe stop trying to silence, ban and censor people for exercising their (supposedly) protected right to speak freely, to voice the legitimate concerns they might have with regards to all the other points above.

    It’s so rich how these people, the Arderns and Trudeaus and Dan Andrewses of the world, feel nothing to cavalierly trample the rights and destroy the futures of the people they’re supposed to have been elected to serve, but they’ll howl endlessly about all the horrible “toxicity” they have to deal with.

    World’s tiniest violin 🎻

  5. Ardern was toxic and divisive, she became more popular the more divisive she became, she reached peak popularity on the back of her force the vaccine mandates, the more she dumped on the vaccine refusers the more popular she was.
    She them allowed the State run MSM to platform the Covidians to sow hate against the unvaxed while she was promoting her `Christchurch call` she is a toxic cow that even showed up the likes of Jenny Shipley and Judith Collins both of whom would have done no different to what Ardern has done.

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