This authoritative account of the 2011 New Zealand election and electoral system referendum is the story of an odd campaign of leaders' debates where the most memorable line, "Show me the money!”, comes from a Hollywood movie. Set against the backdrop of a country caught up in rugby heroics and the aftermath of several life-changing natural disasters, it is the story of an election that topples two party leaders and ends the three-year political honeymoon of a third.
This authoritative account of the 2011 New Zealand election and electoral system referendum is the story of an odd campaign of leaders' debates where the most memorable line, "Show me the money!”, comes from a Hollywood movie. Set against the backdrop of a country caught up in rugby heroics and the aftermath of several life-changing natural disasters, it is the story of an election that topples two party leaders and ends the three-year political honeymoon of a third.
Jon Johansson is a lecturer in comparative politics at Victoria University of Wellington. He is the author of Two Titans: Muldoon, Lange & Leadership. Stephen Levine is a political science professor at Victoria University of Wellington and the founding head of the university's School of History, Philosophy, Political Science, and International Relations. He has published extensively on politics and security in New Zealand and is the coeditor of The Baubles of Office, Left Turn, and New Zealand Votes. He is the author of New Zealand as It Might Have Been.
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