Monday, September 20, 2010

The future of David Garrett

David Garrett is now deciding whether to quit parliament completely or return as an independent MP.

"But it seems to me the people elected five Act MPs - not four and an independent..."

That's according to Rodney Hide.

There is talk that Sensible Sentencing contrived the placement of David Garrett at number 5 on the ACT list. That Rodney Hide had to swallow this because he needed the votes that SST would bring. One commentator put the number at 100,000. I do not know what the size of the Trust's membership is, and there is no guarantee that members would vote ACT simply because they belonged to the Trust.

However if it is correct that a sizeable share of ACT's 2008 party vote came from SST members (as the left would have us believe) then with their continued support David Garrett does have a mandate as an independent MP.

I mean the SST could spin their continued support as embracing redemption which adds credibility to their hard-line-on-only-the-worst-offenders claim.

There are around 2,350,000 voters so each MP is worth 19,500 votes. Are there 19,500 people who want to be represented by David Garrett?

I don't but I never made any secret of that. It just irks me to hear the PM telling Paul Henry this morning that New Zealanders have spoken and the polls say Garrett isn't wanted.

Neither was ACT by the vast majority of people. Isn't that the point of MMP? That small minorities get a voice?

(My apologies if this proposition has already been put elsewhere. I haven't seen it.)

3 comments:

Unknown said...

I have commented on your post of four years ago re Frank Macekasy and his David Garret like escapade. Was there another Frank Macekasy? Just put the subject of politics aside for a minute.

peter

Redbaiter said...

Bloody hell, its a bit rich for Key to say Garret isn't wanted. If Key had told the truth during the last election about what he was going to do when elected, its doubtful he'd be PM himself.

Anonymous said...

No MP can be forced to resign from Parliament.
Allegience is to the Crown.
This is a strength of our Constitutional Monarchy system of Government.
An MP convicted of a crime which carries a penalty of two or more years in prison (whether applied or not) forfeits their seat by law.

kurt