Act coup is great news for Key
In the brutal world of coalition politics, it's all about the numbers.
That's  the cruel truth that caught up with Rodney Hide this week, when he was  toppled as the leader of the Act Party by a man who was not even a party  member, much less a Member of Parliament.
The third caucus vote  that rolled Hide was that of the disturbingly blurred Hilary Calvert  (who may be less handsomely rewarded than she hopes when the party's  list is compiled in a few months).
But the numbers stacked up that  way because Hide had long lost the authority to lead. He was the  perk-buster who took his fiancee to London on a taxpayer-funded holiday;  the campaigner for transparency who connived in the cover-up of a  colleague's grubby past; the buffed buffoon in a television dancing show  who had been credibly criticised as a bully and led a caucus whose  members were barely on speaking terms.
Brash was right to say Hide's brand had become toxic.
Those  alarmed at the political resurrection of the former Leader of the  Opposition seek to remind us of what they see as Brash's toxic past.
Certainly,  he comes with baggage, but he's happy to display it: his agenda,  unchanged since 2005, involves slashing public spending and when he  speaks of delivering tax relief it is not the interests of the poor he  has in mind.
But the reincarnated Brash is a different animal from the 2005  version. He is not seeking to be Prime Minister but the leader of a  small, right-wing party that wants to, in his words, "give some spine"  to its senior coalition partner in a National-led Government.
He  does not need to carry the country with him; just more than 1 in 20  voters. And he will have a ready-made constituency of disaffected Act  voters who have been desperate for some reason to return to the fold.
The  scenario that is unfolding is such good news for the Key Government  that it is not hard to imagine that National Party strategists had a  hand in its design. Put simply, there is no downside for Key in what is  happening. He can advance unpopular policies, such as asset sales, and  use Act as his excuse.
A week ago Key was contemplating entering  an election campaign with his only natural coalition ally doomed to  extinction. And as his allies on the right melted down, storm clouds  were gathering on the left. Hone Harawira's Mana Party, born in Auckland  yesterday, poses a political threat to Key every bit as serious as the  death of Act would have.
If Harawira wins in Te Tai Tokerau, he  could bring a handful of MPs with him. If they and surviving Maori Party  members do a deal with Labour, they could add up to numbers that would  keep the Nats awake at night.
Key will give a nod and a wink to  Act's candidate in Epsom - the electorate held by Hide and as good as  promised to former Auckland mayor and National MP John Banks. But if  things get tight, Key might need to consider doorknocking for Act.
Recent  polling may translate into a seating plan that shows more than half the  House to be blue, but the electorate has not come close under MMP to  letting a major party govern alone and it's not about to start now.  Before NZ First even turns the ignition key, it looks like being an  interesting election.
We are too quick to take offence
By any reasonable reading, Breakfast newsreader Peter Williams'  remark about equestrian Mark Todd was not intended as a derogatory  comment about homosexuals.
Williams made the off-the-cuff remark  in reference to Todd's enormously impressive achievement in winning the  Badminton Horse Trials for the fourth time at the age of 55.
A  veteran sports journalist, he observed that some sports - golf and  snooker were examples - depended less than others on cardiovascular  fitness and that "Mark Todd's personal habits" included having "had the  odd fag over the years".
Williams and co-presenter Corin Dann  spent the next minute giggling at what was plainly an accidental double  entendre: Britain's Sunday Mirror newspaper alleged in 2000 that Todd  had snorted cocaine with a rent boy.
But GayNZ.com spokesman Jay Bennie objected to the use of a term "used to denigrate in every connotation".
Bennie,  who reportedly had not bothered to see the coverage before passing  judgment, works in a noble cause as a defender of gay rights, but his  assertion betrays a dim grasp of etymology.
The word "fag" as a derogatory term for homosexuals is less than a  century old; its application to cigarettes - initially "fag end" for the  last remnant of a cigarette - goes back to the 16th century. Gay rights  activists are on shaky ground in claiming ownership of the word so they  can decry its use.
Any follower of equestrian sports knows that  Todd has been an enthusiastic cigarette smoker - an Olympic champion  with nicotine-stained fingers is a rare sight.
But Bennie's comment typifies our increasing predilection for finding offence where none was intended.
Lobby  groups of all persuasions stridently object to careless but harmless  terminology, as Blues lock Ali Williams found to his cost when he  remarked that his teammates' encouragement on his comeback from injury  made him feel "like a special-needs victim".
Deprecation and  demonisation of minority groups can certainly threaten our social  cohesion, and hate speech should be treated with the contempt it  deserves.
But rubbing along together in an increasingly  complicated world also calls for a sense of perspective. Looking for  offence in every syllable uttered by others is in nobody's interest.

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