As if his election year was not already fraught enough, Tony Abbott has opened up a new front by involving himself in the media wars.
In announcing that the Government’s $250 million rebate to the commercial TV networks looks like a bribe to ensure favourable election coverage, the Opposition leader has aligned himself firmly with the moguls who run pay TV in their ongoing battle with their free-to-air rivals.
He has already been firmly slapped down by the heavies on Channels Seven, Nine and Ten; he must be hoping that the support of the others, and particularly Rupert Murdoch, whose New Ltd owns 39% of Sky News. So far it seems to be working; Murdoch’s tabloid attack dogs have become even shriller about the awfulness of Kevin Rudd and Abbott has had a very smooth run.
But the strategy remains high risk; the Dirty Digger’s favours are notoriously fickle and he does not like losers. If Abbott is seen to be unelectable, he will be cast aside like a burnt sausage at a barbecue.
It may be significant that Abbott waited a fortnight before entering the fray, and only did so after a private breakfast with Murdoch. A News Ltd spokeslackey says that media policy was not discussed at the meeting, but the News Ltd campaign against the rebate was well under way by then. The spokeslackey made the position clear: “We’ve never asked the government — or oppositions before they become governments — for any money. But we don’t like them giving money to our competitors with no strings attached.”
Fair enough, but there are various favours pay TV has asked for: access to major sporting events presently confined to free-to-air under the anti-siphoning provisions and the ability to tender for the new Asia-Pacific TV network. The stakes are pretty high and each side is accusing the other of attempting to duchess the relevant minister, Stephen Conroy. Conroy appears to have been even-handed, accepting every invitation that is offered and indulging in as much hospitality as is available.
But his justifications for the $250 million handout have been less than convincing. He has cited the cost of changing to digital; but way back in 2000 the Howard government kicked in $260 million for just that purpose. Then there is the expense of providing the statutory 55% local content; but the commercial networks fill it up with quiz shows and so-called “reality” TV, cheap as chips and far less nourishing. There is no suggestion that any of the $250 million might be spent on improving the quality.
The Australian last week stepped up its campaign with a full-page attack on Conroy and all his works. The whole thing reeked of self-interest, indeed direct conflict of interest, but the government is yet to provide a convincing reply. Certainly commercial television, once described as a licence to print money, appears an unlikely recipient for government largesse, especially at a time when spending is supposed to be undergoing stringent cuts across the board.
Some commentators have noted that the networks employed Rudd’s old boss, former Queensland Premier Wayne Goss, as their lobbyist, and this was the reason for their success. Pay TV seems to have responded by enlisting Abbott. He may find it hard to achieve a comparable result.
The weekend saw the belated publication of Malcolm Fraser’s memoirs, in which he excoriated John Howard for, as he saw it, portraying himself as a dynamic, reformist treasurer hamstrung by his leader’s caution and timidity.
The extract featured in the Weekend Australian gave the impression that this was the chief cause of the long-standing antipathy between the two. But in fact the rift is much deeper and more fundamental.
Howard was the only member of Fraser’s cabinet to oppose the Prime Minister’s welcoming of Vietnamese refugees, and more importantly to oppose the imposition of sanctions against the apartheid regime of South Africa. Fraser saw a pattern developing, and it was one that had more than a suspicion of racism as its basis, which for Fraser was an unforgivable political crime.
He promptly dropped any thought he might have had of anointing Howard as his successor and instead endorsed the more internationalist Andrew Peacock, despite their frequent disagreements; Peacock had even resigned to stand against him at one stage, describing his behaviour as manic and unreasonable. But this act of treachery mattered to Fraser less than the prospect of having a narrow-minded bigot as Australia’s head of government. Subsequent history has shown that Fraser’s concerns were fully justified.
And we can’t let the week go past without congratulating Miranda Devine for inventing a wonderfully pragmatic new moral philosophy. In her column in last Thursday’s Sydney Morning Herald, Devine’s obsessive hatred of green left issues climaxed in what she called “the burning batts fiasco”, which brought together those two notorious moral degenerates Kevin Rudd and Peter Garrett.
After a couple of dozen paragraphs of barely controlled bile, she summed up the situation in a quotation from a relative of one of the victims: “If someone gives people the opportunity to be dodgy, they’ll be dodgy.” This, she says, is the moral universe most people live in.
And a very comfortable one it must be. In this universe you don’t blame the dodgy installers who made the dodgy decisions that actually caused the accidents: you blame the government. Nothing’s ever your own fault. So much for those silly old doctrines of free will, personal responsibility and the need to choose between right and wrong. The Pope will be surprised.
Good stuff. I read that Miranda article as well and was just completely baffled.
Interesting to see Abbotts and the Coalition standing in the latest Morgan Poll, which News Ltd ignore completely.
Doesn’t suit their political agenda don’t ya know.
Of course Shanahan would have difficulty through the tears of anguish, reading it and as for understanding it, lets not go there.
Personal and corporate responsibility for workplace fatality are constantly being debated in the world of workplace safety. The lines are very well drawn in most OHS legislation but the lawyers become involved and companies, particularly small business operators, take the legal advice as gospel.
Many relatives of dead workers want someone to apologise and never hear the words. A good and current example is the workplace bullying case involving the suicide of Brodie Panlock. According to media reports, Brodie’s father has never heard the owner of the workplace say sorry, even though the owner, with three others, pleaded guilty to actions and inactions that the Coroner said contributed to 19-year-old Brodie’s death
Today’s Herald-Sun says
“Mr Panlock replied “you’ve got to be kidding” when asked if Mr Da Cruz had offered any apology to the Panlocks.”
“…barely controlled bile…”
Haliarious.
Unlike your mighty river of righteousness hey Malcolm?
EIGHT of your last ten ‘articles’ are little more than “barely controlled bile” around Tony Abbott.
Mungo MacCallum: Here’s the Goss — Abbott may struggle to win the media war
Monday, 22 February 2010
Mungo MacCallum: Should Abbott have been sacked? Yes, if you apply Abbott’s logic on Garrett
Monday, 15 February 2010
Mungo MacCallum: Abbott meticulous about his jockstrap, no so on climate change
Monday, 8 February 2010
Mungo MacCallum: Captain Catholic’s moral stance now par for the (once) coarse
Monday, 1 February 2010
Mungo MacCallum: Abbott’s cunning stunt is just a distraction
Monday, 18 January 2010
Mungo MacCallum: The whimper that was Copenhagen
Monday, 21 December 2009
Mungo MacCallum: The fantasy that is an Abbott-led government
Monday, 14 December 2009
Mungo MacCallum: Time for Rudd to restore rationality and for Abbott to self-destruct
Monday, 7 December 2009
With Abbott once being a fellow journalist and now Prime Ministerial aspirant you’re starting to sound a little pissed off and hysterical that the long ago opportunity to suckle the teat of public life in perpetuity took a long look at you and promptly threw up.
And now here you are writing for Crikey and other obscure low readership periodicals.
Professional jealousy perhaps?
Always a good laugh to here print media complaining about Government handouts. How about the massive amount of advirtising the Federal government puts thtought the News and Fairfax empires for which there is no legitimate justification (except to dispense succour and kill trees). For instance, those pages and pages of job ads could and should all be online (how about jobs.gov.au, which at the moment takes you to the DEEWR website). Same for stae governments.