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Greens back Labour in Mt Roskill byelection

Author
Claire Trevett, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 27 Sep 2016, 3:59PM
The Green Party's putting its money where its mouth is, backing Labour by promising to pull out of a Mt Roskill by-election (Photo / Facebook(
The Green Party's putting its money where its mouth is, backing Labour by promising to pull out of a Mt Roskill by-election (Photo / Facebook(

Greens back Labour in Mt Roskill byelection

Author
Claire Trevett, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 27 Sep 2016, 3:59PM

Labour has claimed the first dividend from its agreement with the Green Party after the Green Party decided not to contest any Mt Roskill byelection.

Green Party co-leader Metiria Turei said today the Greens would not stand in a byelection in Mt Roskill should current MP Phil Goff win the Auckland mayoralty.

"The Mt Roskill by-election will be closely contested, and we don't want to play any role in National winning the seat."

However, she said it did not have a position on whether it would endorse Labour's candidate Michael Wood or actively encourage Green supporters to vote for him.

It is the first 'deal' in an electorate under the agreement between Labour and the Greens to campaign together more closely and work to increase the centre-left vote.

Labour leader Andrew Little said it was the Greens' decision. "I welcome it."

He said it did not mean Labour now owed the Greens and there had been no discussions on any other electorates as yet.

Turei said it showed the memorandum of understanding was working. The Green Party reached its decision after several weeks of discussion.

"The decision was made by the Green Party, and has no bearing on any other electorates or the 2017 election campaign."

In the past Labour and the Greens have criticised National for doing deals to secure electorate seats for Act and United Future.

The byelection provides an early test of whether there will be any backlash from their own supporters by doing similar deals.

The announcement got a swift reaction from the Act Party on Twitter. It accused Labour and the Greens of "absolute hypocrisy."

"In Epsom, no party ever pulled a candidate yet it was still a scam according to Opposition. Now they go further in Mt Roskill - shameless."

Wood was Labour's candidate in Epsom in 2014 and spent the campaign ridiculing National's candidate Paul Goldsmith for his low-profile campaign in favour of Act's David Seymour.

That included taking a sack of flour to debates as a fill-in for Goldsmith.

The Act Party also tweeted a photo of a bag of quinoa, saying "Hey @michaelwoodnz, we can't wait for your use of props in the Mt Roskill debates.​"

Although Prime Minister John Key had urged National voters to vote for Seymour and United Future leader Peter Dunne in Ohariu, National had still stood candidates in those seats.

The Mt Roskill deal could prove critical - in 2014 Goff won with an 8,000 vote majority over National's candidate Parmjeet Parmar but National got 14,275 party votes - about 2000 more than Labour.

The byelection will test how much of Goff's support was down to incumbency.

The Green Party candidate Barry Coates got 1682 votes and the Greens got 3279 party votes.

Coates will enter Parliament next week to replace Kevin Hague on the list.

Goff has said he will resign from Parliament immediately if elected Auckland Mayor early next month, allowing for a byelection before Christmas.

- NZ Herald

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