Anyone
watching the live pre-election TV clash between New Zealand’s
Prime Minister Helen Clark and Opposition Leader Don Brash on Monday,
could have been forgiven for thinking they had witnessed an actual
debate, as opposed to the airbrushed, insipid spin-fests we have
become accustomed to on this side of the Tasman.
The hour-long
slug-fest can best be described as a ding-dong barney, complete with a
howling cast of partisans in the audience. This contrasts sharply
with the carefully hand-picked “un-decideds” who make up the studio
audience in Australian election debates. So feral were the Clark
opponents, she labelled them a “Tory crowd” just minutes into the
debate.
Both sides of the aisle openly jeered, heckled and mocked
their respective nemeses, not ever to be scolded by the laid-back
host, Mark Sainsbury of TVNZ. Mr Sainsbury’s modus operandi also
differed starkly from that of his Aussie counterparts. At the beginning of
each segment, rather than issuing a raft of queries bound by
time-limits, he merely threw a hand-grenade – tax, race relations,
health, education – into the fray and watched calmly as the two
leaders scrambled to both inflict and avoid injury.
Mercifully, the
closing and opening statements – which are no more than an opportunity
to spout memorised platitudes – were kept to 30 seconds each, another
lesson that can be learned from our trans-Tasman cousins.
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