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Turns out it wasn\\u2019t just on the Mike Hosking Breakfast the Prime Minister got caught out saying stuff that you can quite justifiably say wasn\\u2019t true.
\\nIn defence of the poll that shows his party heading for Opposition, Hipkins told the TV that he hadn\\u2019t started campaigning - which simply isn\\u2019t true.
\\nWe called him out on that; he danced for a while on the head of a pin.
\\nHe also suggested on TV yesterday that the poll result was in part because the media hadn\\u2019t covered the GST on fruit and veges announcement widely enough\\xa0and people might have missed it.
\\nSmall note to those who surround the Prime Minister and in some way shape or form offer him advice - tell him to stop it.
\\nOf all the announcements the Labour Party-come-government have made these past few weeks while they haven\\u2019t been campaigning, the GST call got more coverage than any of them - and I would argue by quite some margin.
\\nNow it might not have been the sort of coverage they wanted i.e. most people and - certainly all the experts in tax that were asked - quite rightly bagged it.
\\nThe Opposition got kudos for the leak being right - and Grant Robertson spent quite a lot of time explaining his road to Damascus.
\\nHe actually explained that on this show through another series of made up stories\\xa0around frozen veggies and who buys more of them.
\\nBut what the Labour Party /Government can\\u2019t even begin to argue is the policy announcement didn\\u2019t get coverage.
\\nNow I am not sure what\\u2019s going on here.
\\nIn my briefish time in dealing with the Prime Minister, he does tend to argue for the sake of arguing and that might be starting to trip him up.
\\nHe might be one of those people who says the first thing that comes into his mind and in the general cut and thrust of a day it never really gets picked up.
\\nBut in an election campaign words matter, accuracy matters and facts matter.
\\nAnd given the heightened awareness of policy - whether through announcements or detail - you can\\u2019t just make stuff up.
\\nYou can\\u2019t say poor people buy more frozen veggies when you don\\u2019t know that to true.
\\nYou can\\u2019t say you aren\\u2019t campaigning when it\\u2019s patently evident it isn\\u2019t true and you can\\u2019t say your signature policy announcement didn\\u2019t get enough coverage when it got more than anything else.
\\nWhat matters most and what swings votes is credibility.
\\nWhether that is credibility through your record, through your ideology or through your consistency of message and policy.
\\nMaking stuff up and hoping no one will notice isn\\u2019t credible.
\\nIn election campaigns, too many people are watching.\\xa0
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