Malcolm Turnbull should obviously resign and go do something else with his life. It’s over. And it’s a measure of the times that between writing this and sending it to the Crikey bunker, Turnbull may well do so.
Your correspondent had always assumed that Turnbull was dead meat — he was fatally wounded by the Grech affair. Without that disaster calling into question his judgement, nous and skills, he might have been able to survive the ETS brouhaha.
But the two were a fatal quinella. The past six months resemble nothing so much as a trail of blood across the tundra, the wolf who chewed through his foot to get free of the trap, bleeding out beneath a winter sky.
Your correspondent picked it months ago, of course. While the dinosaur media was humming and haahing about Turnbull’s chances, let the record show that we noted: “Turnbull is dead”. The only mystery is why he lasted as long as he did.
So, if Mr Tony takes over, what is the strategy? Abbott may be delusional enough to believe he’s a contender, but those around him surely don’t. If he gets up, then the Liberal Party would have to consider a reversal of the longstanding “single shot” leadership, where you get one go at gold and that’s it.
They could instead all but acknowledge that 2010 is lost, and present an Abbott-Hockey or Abbott-Bishop (ohhhh godddd, we just got shot of the Costello gags) leadership as a five-year proposition — reconstructing the party, redefining liberalism and conservatism etc. A 2010 loss wouldn’t then count against Abbott, because he would set it up as pretty much what he wants — an opportunity to rebuild.
The only problem with that little strategy is that most of the electorate think that Abbott is a prick. He’s obviously the smartest, feistiest, best politicker around — but the Banton stuff, the teenage (non-) paternity, the RU486 sleaziness, the Pauline Hanson stitch-up, the excess aggressiveness he reserves for female opponents, they all ring alarm bells, especially in women voters.
He may well give Labor up to five seats extra. Indeed under an Abbott leadership, the coalition would be fighting for its life in a seat such as Higgins, and other previous heartlands. Unless Abbott could convince the party and its penumbra that he is rebuilding a genuine liberal-conservative coalition, then he would be taking the party along the same route as the US Republicans, which is, yeah, really an outfit to emulate.
Cleaving the Liberal party to conservatism would exile them from the metropolitan centre, and threaten to transform Mr Menzies grand ventre into a permanent minority party, its core support in rural areas, and seats with aged anglo populations, lower middle-class ressentiment etc. Gumboots and white shoes is what the party will be wearing when it kicks the bucket.
Could Abbott reunify the party from the right? Maybe, but he can’t or won’t refashion it politically culturally in the way that David Cameron has done with the UK Tories. Intellectually and in other ways, Abbott appears to be dominated by Christopher Pearson, the ex-Maoist celibate gay ultramontane Roman Catholic former editor of the Adelaide Review. Immensely intelligent, learned and effective in micropolitical intrigue, Pearson’s influence jerks the chain whenever Fido Abbott shows signs of wanting to range further across the fields (the smell of a dying wolf in his nostrils). I don’t mean Pearson’s standing behind Abbott, whispering in his ear — a la Double Indemnity he’s much closer than that.*
Thus, Abbott just can’t help himself — at the end of weeks of trying to remake himself as a nice guy you’d want at your barbecue, he’ll make some remark about Kevin Rudd being responsible for kids drowning in a leaky refugee boat, and suddenly the mad monk steps back out into the light.
That will never happen, for the tragedy of the modern Liberal party is that it is evenly split between people who believe deeply in absolutely nothing, and those with a concrete and explicit political cosmology that would be most appropriately illustrated by Hieronymous Bosch. At the moment, there’s no one in the front rank who gives the Australian people even the slightest sense that they are focused on the issues that really confront a 21st century nation, so their vote is reduced to the immovable third share of loyalists who would support them even if Hannibal Lecter and the future Mrs Edelsten were the leadership team.
They won’t do anything radical about it either — like, say, introduce a US primary style system, capable of throwing up a leader such as Petro Georgiou, politically loathed by a hardcore within, but an instant hit with the public were he to don the mantle.
They won’t, of course. The right will stay and stay and stay, hoping they can be in place when Kevin ’27 is caught with the proverbial live boy or dead netball team. God knows since I started typing they may have changed leaders twice. Strange things happen in the wilderness, with no shelter and only the howl of a dying animal for company.
* when Fred MacMurray, the insurance agent who has murdered Barbara Stanwyck’s husband for a huge payout (Double Indemnity), he’s eventually caught by his boss, Edward G Robinson. “You were looking for the bad guy all this time,” says MacMurray, “and there I was right across the desk from you.” “Closer than that,” says Robinson.
**on which grounds Joan Didion suggested that Californian civilisation was one in which fidelity to the King James Bible had been replaced by a literal interpretation of the plot of Double Indemnity.
Give that Rundle Guy a gold star and a bloody Walkley!!!
Outstanding stuff!!!
So many scary images, so many truths……such an excellent summation.
This rehashes what Rundle’s already said in the last few days: the Turnbull Cameroons are “21st century”, the Lib Right are the Lungfish of politics, not extinct but overdue:
“(Abbot) can’t or won’t refashion (the Libs) politically or culturally in the way that David Cameron has done with the UK Tories. ”
Of course he won’t. Abbot is Santamaria’s love-child. But he is also smarter than Rundle: Cameron may have a bike in the garage but Toryism still drives a Bentley. British Conservatism will tolerate cosmetic change only and the same applies here.
Logically, the Libs should elect Hockey. For a start he’s electable. No one wants a Christian Brother on the premises. Hockey will have to become Joe Hockey-stick though. See the climate graph upside down. This IS all about the ETS. If Hockey is alert, he’ll realise that he must bet against AGW. Polls say the electorate is fast becoming sceptical of the millenarian cult. The ETS would have no effect on local CO2 for 26 years, so Rudd’s spruiking of The Cult is hypocritical. Why the frenetic urgency? People aren’t stupid. So, Hockey calls Rudd’s bluff. He might lose respectably in 2010. If the globe inconveniently fails to heat up, partisan Bumcrack scientists notwithstanding, the Libs could knock off Dr Death in 2013.
Rundle has missed the essence of this political drama: it’s not the dying spasm of an archaic Right- we’re seeing the reassertion of capital’s naked power. Tossers beware. The soggy, “modern” Turnbulls are being spat out. Capital has woken up to the fact that Rudd corporatism will hobble big capital. The ETS may just be for openers.
Therefore, Rundle’s prognosis is false: “Cleaving the Liberal party to conservatism would exile them from the metropolitan centre, and threaten to transform Mr Menzies grand ventre into a permanent minority party, its core support in rural areas, and seats with aged anglo populations, lower middle-class ressentiment…”
The Libs have slammed the door on Rudd’s massive Trojan horse just in time. Turnbull was about to bend the knee as vassal to King Rudd. Off with his head. Now the climate war is joined, Capital cannot afford a Republicanesque moralistic Abbot/Andrews Liberal Party to alienate voters. Religion is the piss of death in Australian politics. Uncle Joe with his vapid theistic generalities is tolerable.
Look who we’ve got now! Unctuous, faith-based Rudd. And that droning Lesbyterian, Penny Wong, intoning daily about climate heresy.
There’s no doubt the shrill millenarian hysteria of the climate cult has driven the faithful to the pub. The Hamilton Syndrome.
A new secular Liberal Party could give Rudd a run for his money in 2010.
Spot on.
I have said it before but I will say it again: the libs should call it quits.
Their sitting members can move in a couple of directions: The climate change deniers and other ultra conservatives (seems like over half of them) should join the Nationals. The ordinary conservatives should join their fellow conservatves in the Labor Party. And the Greens should become the real opposition in this land.
Then we will see it for what it is:
Green left of centre; Labor right of centre (where they are now); and the Nationals further right still.