The tumbrils are beginning to roll down Macquarie Street to carry Nathan Rees to a premature execution as Premier of NSW.
At the other end of the street, a chariot is being polished to transport Health Minister John Della Bosca to the top job.
Rees became the accidental premier in September last year when Morris Iemma lost control of his Cabinet, caucus and the NSW branch of the Labor Party over his misconceived plan to privatise the State’s electricity industry.
Then a 40-year-old greenhorn with 18 months’ experience in parliament, Rees was plucked from the left-wing faction as a stopgap leader and given the brief to stem the anti-Labor tsunami in NSW. After initially promising to have a “red hot go”, the MP for Toongabbie has not been able to convince his colleagues, the media or the public that he is leadership material at a time of a devastating economic downturn.
Enter “Della”, the most senior and seasoned political operator in NSW. To comply with the constitution, he needs to vacate his place in the NSW upper house and move to the lower house, the Legislative Assembly, to become Labor’s fourth premier in four years.
Della Bosca is also Minister for the Central Coast, his home and his political fiefdom for the past 25 years. His local Labor MP is the member for Gosford, Marie Andrews, a right-wing loyalist who served as private secretary to three branch secretaries of the Australian Railway Unions (ARU) before entering parliament in 1995.
Last week Ms Andrews issued a peculiar press release saying that she had been “given approval by the Parliament to complete her study tour relating to research for the Committee on Children and Young People”.
She gave no details of the countries she would visit or how long she would be away, merely saying: “I am pleased to be able to complete this fact-finding tour that involves visits to Commonwealth Parliaments as well as child and youth advocacy and protection organisations.”
As there are no less than 53 Commonwealth states with parliaments, this could be an extensive overseas mission.
Among Labor backbenchers there is a widespread belief that the hard-working Ms Andrews may be taking this exhaustive trip to make one final contribution to the social landscape of NSW before stepping down. In other words, a back-breaking Last Hurrah.
After 14 years in parliament, she has secured the maximum parliamentary pension entitlement for a backbencher – about $80,000-a-year, index-linked for life.
If she resigned, Della Bosca could shift seamlessly into the neighbourhood seat of Gosford and be ready to challenge Rees for the premiership.
In a head-to-head clash in caucus, how many votes would each candidate receive? If Rees voted for himself, he would receive one vote and all the rest would go to Della Bosca, the party’s NSW general secretary from 1990 to 1999.
Since last year’s speeding conviction and the Iguana’s Cafe affair at Gosford, Della Bosca has remade his image and retaken control of his life. He has lost a reported 15 kilos, he wears tailored suits, his hair is groomed and he has started to speak with greater confidence.
Gone is the “old” Della, the rumpled, crumpled, waddling figure in tracky daks who appeared as if he had fallen out of a sleeping bag during a Senior Scouts camp. But what about Mrs Della Bosca, aka “Typhoon” Belinda Neal, federal MP for Robertson? Is she his biggest hurdle in reaching for the premiership?
Apparently not. Della’s supporters say that she is a reformed person and the counselling recommended by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has worked wonders.
Surely NSW cannot possibly end up with a Premier (Della Bosca) whose wife is in the federal parliament (Belinda Neal) and a Deputy Premier (Carmel Tebbutt) whose husband is in the federal Cabinet (Anthony Albanese)?
In the State of Despair, anything is possible.
Except that Gosford sits on a margin of below 5%. A by-election held now would be highly likely to be won by the Libs.
If Della wants to move to the LA, to be safe, he’s got to be looking at a handful of seats on margins above 20%. Mainly in western Sydney, with a couple around Wollongong.
If geography is a problem, the Hunter-based seats generally had their own problems for the ALP last time (so the 2007 margins perhaps don’t truly reflect the unlikelihood of anyone but the ALP winning them), but they might be a better shot than Gosford.
Della still needs to find a sitting member willing to fall over for him.
I haven’t read it yet Bernard but I’m having the heebies about Belinda Neal being NSW’s First Lady!!!
bad govt. is the bastard child of poor opposition
the NSW libs are that desperate they were talking
about Joe Hockey (go the Bron)
Well nice push, we shall see.
Certainly Marie Andrews profile is underwhelming, by all accounts NOT commensurate with her talents, but that’s the old boys club in the ALP quite possibly.
Certainly DB has a slick voice and talks a good game but then how much exercise and diet can really remake the values of the man, and all for the sake of a highly polluting $5B truck tunnel under the city from the M4 East to Port Botany (Tripodi’s folly).
Because to be sure that’s what all the ALP Right sour grapes and undermining of Rees and Tebbutt (and her politically buddy Roozendaal) is all about.
Exhibit no. 1 in the Della Bosca character profile – smoozing and high school japes in combo with ex MP, ex Treasurer Dr Evil aka Michael Costa. To put it another way, when he had the power and the ascendancy in the Upper House he abused his position. Power it like that, and more so in the wrong hands.
Take more than a diet to change that. I notice on the electronic media Tebbutt is shoring up her status with some big survey about 38M visits to NSW icon national parks. And ditto Tripodi with his multifactorial coal transport deal in the Hunter.
The trouble with the ALP Right, and this includes Rudd at federal level is that they are the Coal Party, expand, expand, expand behind the veil of rhetoric on climate. The electors might as well vote for Barry OFarrell’s mob than choose the facsimile?
Absolute garbage Alex. Firstly, Della won’t move to the lower house. Gosford is a joke because the margin is too low for a by-election and he won’t find anywhere else who will vacate for him.
Despite what people like Mitchell like to believe, Rees has the numbers in the NSW Labor caucus and by no small margin. Now is not the time to experiment with Sartor/Della and they know that.
Rees’ leadership is safe and he will lead the Government to the next election.