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Your Daily Ten@10 - 2026/048

THE GOOD OIL March 18, 2026
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This is edition 2026/048 of the Ten@10 newsletter.

Hi all,

This is the Ten@10, where I collate and summarise ten news items you generally won't see in the mainstream media.

Enjoy!


1. Greens Who Will Be Missed.

Chris Trotter

  • 🎭 Compares the Green Party’s candidate list reshuffle to “a little list” from The Mikado , suggesting some MPs are being quietly sidelined
  • 📉 Highlights the demotion of three sitting MPs — Mike Davidson, Scott Willis, and Steve Abel — noting all are men and implying gender may be a factor
  • 👨‍⚖️ Argues Mike Davidson’s short tenure shouldn’t justify his drop, as new MPs typically become effective within months
  • ⚖️ Suggests replacing experienced MPs with newcomers (like Tania Waikato) risks weakening parliamentary effectiveness
  • 🌿 Criticises Scott Willis’s demotion despite his background in green energy and rural environmental values
  • 🌳 Calls Steve Abel’s demotion especially puzzling given his strong environmental activism and alignment with core Green ideals
  • 🧠 Attributes the reshuffle partly to identity-focused politics (“you’ve got to see it to be it”), prioritising representation of marginalised groups
  • 📢 Describes the Greens’ approach as “performative politics,” focused on visibility and symbolic gestures rather than legislative outcomes
  • 🧣 Uses examples like MPs wearing keffiyehs to argue Parliament is being turned into a मंच for political theatre
  • ⚠️ Warns that excessive performative politics risks backlash from parliamentary rules and institutions
  • 📜 Emphasises Parliament’s primary role is lawmaking, not symbolic activism or social signalling
  • 🧩 Argues diversity is valuable only if it contributes to effective legislation and policy development
  • 🤝 Points to former co-leader James Shaw as evidence that pragmatic cooperation across parties yields real results
  • 🚫 Suggests Shaw faced internal resistance for prioritising outcomes over ideological purity
  • 🐱 Concludes the Greens should prioritise competent, pragmatic MPs (like Davidson, Willis, Abel) who can deliver results, regardless of identity
  • 📝 Final message: sidelining experienced legislators in favour of performative representation risks weakening the party’s effectiveness and impact

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