The impending appointment of Steven Joyce as chair of NZME may be the best thing that has happened to the media company in quite some time.
The former National government minister has a background that is eminently suited to recharging a board that has been at a strategic low ebb.
Joyce’s political past will doubtless give rise to criticism from the Left that he is a Capital-C-Conservative ‘plant’. He is certainly no Keir Hardie but nor is he hard right.
I admit that my perceptions of Steven Joyce changed after he left politics. Like many, my view of him had been based largely on media reports. I thought he was hardline, doctrinaire and sometimes brutal. That changed after I had read his autobiography On the Record and had a long conversation with him over lunch.
Joyce is not the man I had imagined. And his political leanings are more small-c-conservative than I had thought. Witness this line from his book when he is deciding which party he might join at the start of his political career: “While I was attracted to some of ACT’s policies, it could be a little uncompromising and doctrinaire, and in my experience the world was a little more complicated and nuanced”. So is Steven Joyce.
I do not expect a Joyce chairmanship of the NZME board to be defined by his political past. I expect it will without doubt be defined by his knowledge of the media scene and his strategic and governance skills. Continue reading “Steven Joyce may be just what NZME needs”
