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I think we got enough out of Nicola Willis on the programme Friday to know that today, cabinet’s gonna sign off this money for Pharmac to solve the cancer problem. Â
The big outworking of this is - I hope they've learned their lesson. Â
This government has a couple of problems. The biggest one is the mess they inherited. We are going to spend at least the next year deep in it. Â
Two years of economic misery is a lot to ask of an electorate, and it's a lot to expect of a government to rectify. Â
Even on a good day - with plenty of intent and hard work - voters get grumpy with whoever’s in charge, whether it was their fault or not. Â
So given that, problem #2: self-inflicted wounds. The cancer promise was mad. It was mad because governments don't pick drugs. Â
That's what Pharmac is for. If you don't like Pharmac, fine, change it. But don't keep the same system while trying gerrymandering. Â
They also put out a list of thirteen drugs, some of which aren't even fit for purpose anymore. Â
And then, Problem #3: failure to deliver, I mean OMG – did they learn nothing from Labour? Â
And then last week, scrutiny week, Shane Reti says they'll deliver the 13. Nicola Willis says they will deliver some. David Seymour says he can't make a comment because Pharmac is independent. Â
Three people, three messages. Mixed messaging - is that problem #4? Â
So this week, an answer. And seemingly, an elegant one - more money. Â
The money gets spent on stuff that's needed. Not automatically the 13. It's spent by Pharmac. And it might well mean some spending on other drugs as well. Â
So, sorted. But big lesson: it never had to be this way. Â
And if all they're doing this week is handing out money, why didn't they do it in the budget when they had the chance? Â
Delivery and confidence, that's what we want from governments. Â
If this is a one off, they'll get away with it. If it's a habit. They're toast.Â
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