The
Wintec Press Club meets for lunch three times a year in Hamilton: guests are
the students of the Wintec journalism course, important media types from the
Waikato and Auckland, politicians, famous sporty types, and me. The host is
Steve Braunias, Editor in Residence on the course.
Present
last Friday for the first lunch of 2014 were former National and Act leader Don
Brash, independent MP Brendan Horan, local Labour list MP Sue Moroney and local
National real MP Tim McIndoe. Sadly National minister Simon Bridges was a
no-show, as was Labour’s non-candidate Julian Wilcox. I was seated at a table
with two sparky students (Rachael from Otumoetai and Jason from Whakatane, so
we bonded over our Bay of Plenty origins), Waikato
Times columnist Joshua Drummond, Listener
and Herald columnist Toby Manhire and
a very nice chap from the Act Party called David Seymour.
David and
I were the first to take our seats. Showing my deep interest in politics in this
election year, I asked him, “Are you standing as a candidate somewhere in the
Waikato?”
He replied,
“No, I’m standing in Epsom.” Oh, that
David Seymour. The David Seymour upon whose shoulders rest the hopes of Act
getting back into Parliament and possibly National being able to form a
government, so he is kind of central to the election. The poor bastard said he
has knocked on 6000 doors in Epsom already but worse was to come – Josh and
Toby took their seats, to his left, and climbed into him about Act policy. I
suppose he has to get used to this sort of thing – people being either entirely
ignorant of politics (me) or passionate about it (Josh and Toby).
Steve
insists that at these events Chatham House rules apply so nothing that is said
can be reported, but I have never paid attention to him before (see my accounts
of the lunches starring John
Campbell, Jesse
Mulligan, Robyn
Malcolm, Greg
King, Paul
Holmes, Michael
Laws and Winston
Peters) and don’t intend to start now.
In his
witty introduction to the guest speaker, Duncan Garner, Steve used the phrase
“temporarily sober” but my notes are unclear if this referred to himself or
Garner. Possibly both.
Garner
was very amusing. He told lots of stories from his career, in the order in
which they happened, and seemed to be winging his speech without notes. But
every time he lost the thread he finished the anecdote and shouted, “And that’s
why journalism is important!” The students loved it.
He said
that he at 22, after only three weeks in the Press Gallery, he was summoned to
then PM Jim Bolger’s office with a few others. There was whisky. Bolger left at
2am, Garner and the others left some time later. Next morning Bolger opened a
childcare centre in the Hutt Valley, bright as a button, and grinned at Garner,
knowing that he was suffering.
Later, Garner
covered an election campaign when National hired a plane so the politicians and
journalists could fly with Bolger and a chilly bin full of booze in the aisle,
drinking their way around the North Island: “No one reported it.”
And
this, he said, was one difference Helen Clark made, “the end of the whisky
bottle”. She managed the journalists brilliantly, but didn’t depend on getting
them pissed.
Garner had
a great story about the Key-Banks tea tapes, which he had. John Key’s main worry
about them getting out led to him ringing every night, asking “Did I swear? Did
I swear?” And then there was waiting to doorstop Winston Peters in Parliament,
hiding behind a pillar so Patrick Gower couldn’t see him as he would know that
something was up.
Many of
his stories were about collecting politicians’ scalps, e.g. David “tennis ball”
Benson-Pope, and he was pretty much focused on political journalism. Rachael,
the student next to me, had no interest in this kind of reporting, no interest
in radio or TV: she wanted to be a feature writer for a serious magazine like
the Listener. Probably, depressingly,
all the other students see themselves as TV stars one day.
Garner
is now working for Radio Live which, he says, is “not about scalps” but
debating issues: “It’s not talkback, it’s interviews”. So he has covered print,
TV and radio – all the different mainstream media the students will consider
for their careers. From the students’ point of view, he was probably the most
useful speaker of all the Wintec Press Club lunches I have attended.
Throughout
his talk there was a bit of baiting of Brendan Horan. Well, you would, wouldn’t
you. For example, on post-election coalition negotiations, Garner said, “You
can’t trust Winston, can you, Brendan?” There followed some baiting about
Winston’s shameful smears of Horan as a New Zealand Jimmy Savile. Horan did not
take kindly to this and was heard to say – I didn’t hear it but trust my
witness – “”I’m going to deck the c**t.” Afterwards Garner's people kept him away
from Horan, while some locals kept Horan away from Garner. So, no decking.
Guyon
Espiner was a bit of a theme, the friendship and rivalry between them. At
question time Herald journalist David
Fisher asked, “Guyon has been your main competition for a long time. What’s the
best dicking you’ve given him?”
Random
quotes:
I can’t
recall the question about Key and the GCSB but the answer was: “That’s how I’d
do it, two minutes every night, five nights a week, just to fuck him off.”
To Don
Brash: “Do you remember this story, Don?”
“Not
clearly, no.”
“Well,
it’s true.”
Later, mid-story,
“Do you remember it now?”
“Yes.”
And
then there was a question about journalistic ethics. Braunias quickly shut that
down: “You know you’re coming to the end of the Press Club when people start
talking about ethics.”
There
were a dozen T-shirts as a give-away, courtesy of Brendan Horan, emblazoned “No
Bullying”. As a distinguished graduate of the Wintec journalism course Josh Drummond
was given one. I suggested he should get Horan to sign it but he wimped out and
went to his wedding rehearsal instead.