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notices and features - Date published:
5:30 pm, December 2nd, 2024 - 7 comments
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Great series from the ABC. This is the last part – well worth a watch if you have the time. Americas Last Election.
I just saw the lead story on 3 News: Andrea Vance reporting a poll done by The Post, with National at 34%, Labour 31%, Greens 13%, ACT 8%, NZF 6%.
Totals give an exact left/right balance in parliament, she said, 61 seats each. Didn't mention the margin of error but on the face of it, the nation has regained parity between govt & opposition – as far as sentiment is concerned.
Unless another poll appears on ONE News soon with a significant difference, kiwis will head for the summer break underwhelmed by govt performance yet again…
Scroll down to the bottom for the real story. It's unprecedented in the MMP era, and really quite astonishing:
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/535469/new-poll-delivers-hung-parliament-bad-news-for-christopher-luxon-as-preferred-pm
Luxon gets only 29% total approval (combining favourable and very favourable). Worse still, on the "very" (i.e. strength of feeling) he loses by a huge margin: 32 to 9.
In the MMP era, the 3 PMs of a new government (Clark, Key, Ardern) all had consistently high levels of approval after they took office, and all won a second term comfortably.
Luxon is uniquely unpopular.
(geek note: "approval" and "preference" are different, and unfortunately the NZ media tend to focus on "preferred PM", which is less useful than "approval" ratings, historically a better election indicator).
Yes, good on RNZ for such an in-depth analysis. The underwhelming effect does indeed seem rather substantial. All that getting of things done that Nats kept boasting about seems to have wafted over the nation like hot air – or maybe warm.
How the Reagan era policy allowed corporations to engage in unfair price fixing increased food prices, reduced competition, jiggered small time grocery shops and thousands of jobs and ushered in the age of food deserts.
.
The Great Grocery Squeeze
How a federal policy change in the 1980s created the modern food desert
[…]
With discriminatory pricing outlawed, competition shifted onto other, healthier fronts. National chains scrambled to keep up with independents’ innovations, which included the first modern self-service supermarkets, and later, automatic doors, shopping carts, and loyalty programs. Meanwhile, independents worked to match the chains’ efficiency by forming wholesale cooperatives, which allowed them to buy goods in bulk and operate distribution systems on par with those of Kroger and A&P. A 1965 federal study that tracked grocery prices across multiple cities for a year found that large independent grocers were less than 1 percent more expensive than the big chains. The Robinson-Patman Act, in short, appears to have worked as intended throughout the mid-20th century.
Then it was abandoned. In the 1980s, convinced that tough antitrust enforcement was holding back American business, the Reagan administration set about dismantling it. The Robinson-Patman Act remained on the books, but the new regime saw it as an economically illiterate handout to inefficient small businesses. And so the government simply stopped enforcing it.
https://archive.li/Rv4pP (theatlantic)
Please give support (a toot, perhaps) to the nurses that are going on strike tomorrow.
Striking to save one of the few mechanisms that show when they are understaffed- CCDM. Care Capacity Demand Management.
Striking because of the insult of an offer they received – up to 1% in April.
Luxons lament……..remember that swashbuckling pirate wanting to be PM last year….