A fresh list ranking and a new policy have provided hints of a glow-up for a party that has at times seemed stuck in an identity crisis.
Labour arrived this week not with the haste of someone aware theyâre late to the party, but with the gusto of someone who knows it canât start without them. First came the list ranking . Then a long-awaited policy announcement. Soon, they promise, there will be âplentyâ more cost of living announcements to inspire our increasingly wet, whiny and inward-looking country.
They caught the late train, but without Labour, thereâd be no campaign track to ride along at all. And now that theyâre here, thereâs only one thing left to ask: what took you so long?
For the past few years, the image of the Labour Party has largely been that of a person standing next to a dumpster fire sparked by an exploding school lunch or a broken-down ferry and saying, âwould you get a load of this guy?â But once you stand next to enough fires, the public starts to ask why you havenât tried to wield an extinguisher. Criticism alone canât win an election.
Labour finance spokesperson Barbara Edmonds and leader Chris Hipkins last year (Photo: Dean Purcell/New Zealand Herald via Getty Images)
While Labour MPs have continued to monotonously mumble âjobs, health, homesâ into the policy void, other parties have put their proposals on the table. NZ First is leaning into economic nostalgia with a billion-dollar buy-back of BNZ . National still wants to play the managerial role by changing KiwiSaver settings . The Act Party is trying to play to populism by making school uniforms cheaper . Te PÄti MÄori and the Greens are still hoping, perhaps in vain, that thereâs an appetite for a wealth tax.
Labour, meanwhile, has taken the time to decide who exactly they wanted to show up to the conversation as. This week, voters found out.
On Wednesday, the party announced that if it won the election, it would institute public transport fare caps at $20 a week in main cities like Auckland and Wellington, and $10 for the rest of the country. The partyâs costing estimates predict the policy would be relatively cheap to roll out, using $65m in yearly funding from the National Land Transport Fund. That figure, Labour says, is less than 1% of the entire fund.
As well as it being the partyâs first policy in six months, its most notable feature is how meticulously moderate it is. A cap like this could provide some modest cost-of-living relief without scaring away potential swing voters by being too radical. It wonât radically change the transport system, but it gives certainty to commuters while also lightly encouraging more public transport use (Hipkins predicts a 6% increase in patronage in Auckland alone).
Itâs softer than the approach of the Greens, who have called for free public transport across the board. And harder than that of the National Party, who have chosen not to play a heavy hand in terms of state intervention in cost-of-living pressures. Nobody is forced into changing their behaviour, but nobody is entirely left to their own devices, either. Itâs not nanny state Labour, but more distant aunt Labour: happy to watch the kids every now and then, but not too keen on doing much to raise them.
Should it have taken Labour so long to come up with something so brilliantly basic? Take leader Chris Hipkins at his word, and youâll appreciate that the party saw an opportunity in the lack of sugar hits and cost-of-living relief in Budget 2026. More likely, Labour just needed time to decide what kind of opposition it wanted to be.
Which brings us back to that new party list. Pair it with the transport policy, and you can appreciate that Labourâs road to Damascus is paved with caution. There is salvation in moderation. The post-Ardern Labour Party isnât trying to reinvent the wheel, just keep it steady. And it needs the right drivers to do that.
Thereâs been plenty of criticism of a perceived lack of talent in the party pool. Labourâs MPs are highly capable, but they lack the star power you find in the Green and Te PÄti MÄori caucuses, or that seen in Labour cohorts of days gone by. Here, Labour has nabbed a few respectable names, hopefully without the baggage that sometimes comes with high-profile left-bloc MPs.
If the election was held tomorrow, based on current polling, Labour could bring in a slew of fresh talent. Thereâs a nice blend of climate activism, justice expertise, business leadership and left-of-left representation. Together, they form more of an institution than a centre-left movement. If National MPs are convinced their party truly represents a broad church, then Labour wants to be the whole denomination.
Labour MPs wait for the train. (Photo: Hayden Donnell)
But as with many things Labour does, thereâs a hitch . Their policy costs veer to the side of optimism (a trend in other policies announced by the party since last year) and concerns over new high-ranking candidate Rakesh Naidooâs access to sensâŠ
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