One of the more consistent and accurate criticisms levelled by the government at the opposition has been about Tony Abbott’s negativity and lack of interest in policy, particularly in question time, which last year become a rather banal procession of muckraking, invented scare stories about the carbon price and suspension motions so frequent that betting pools were set up for the time they’d happen.
Behind that approach was Labor’s conviction that if Abbott did switch his focus to policy, his weakness would be revealed and Labor’s strength demonstrated.
Yesterday in question time there was no muckraking, no MPs using coward’s castle to call the Prime Minister a “crook” or “corrupt”, no smearing of her. Instead there was, shock horror, policy; 11 straight questions about policy — on the budget surplus, principally, but one each as well on superannuation and the NBN (from Malcolm Turnbull, a rare contributor to question time).
The result was a government that looked decidedly bereft of inspiration. The Coalition enjoyed its best question time in some time. Part of its enjoyment came from a decidedly poorly-thought through piece of political literature from Labor — newsletters dispatched to voters boasting that it had “delivered” a surplus, the sort of claim that wasn’t accurate even after last year’s budget and which of course now looks embarrassing in light of the Treasurer’s retreat from the surplus commitment in December.
The government may still produce a surplus this year, of course, but at the moment its rhetoric is that it has focused on jobs and responded to changing circumstances, rather than sticking to its commitment.
And no one in the Coalition’s ranks enjoyed the government’s discomfort more than Joe Hockey, who asked three questions and presented a giant pile of paper composed, he said, of the several hundred occasions on which Labor had committed to a surplus. Nor were the questions simple gotchas (well, not all of them); Hockey made the point that the government’s argument that revenue had collapsed more dramatically than predicted after the GFC wasn’t necessarily borne out by past budget papers.
The response from the Prime Minister and the Treasurer was an unusual level of bluster and evasion. Then again, there’s nowhere for them to go on the surplus issue: they themselves made sure of that with their endlessly repeated insistence that they’d deliver one.
Hockey also adeptly used Bob Hawke’s presence in the chamber as grist to the surplus mill. Bob was the last Labor PM to deliver a surplus, he cheerfully observed. It was, all in all, a good day at the office for Hockey.
One wonders if, having found it more effective than either side might have expected, the Coalition will make a habit of actually focusing on policy.
One more thing: when Hawke eventually left, he observed standing orders for MPs and bowed to the Speaker — giving a slow and grave bow from near the main doors, almost unnoticed. One suspects it was a final acknowledgement from an old warrior to the arena in which he’d made his mark.
Hockey makes a claim by saying Labor has said on whatever number 100, 150 times about a surplus which is itself a stunt . Costello said a thousand times that the GST was a state tax . It didn,t make it true because it was always a federal tax and always will be . The cardboard cut out bearer will always go for the clown act and the number thing is irrelevant . Its like the brat saying to a parent ” You have told me that ten times already “
BK, about time the LNP concentrated on policy, but of course its easy to run the agenda when the media cowtows to any inane comments made by the LNP, and does not dig to find out the truth, such as yesterdays recent sugestion of us all moving to the tropics to create a brave new world of no tax and serfdom for the Gina Rinehardts amongst us.
Pith helmet anyone?
half a stomach.. why not he’s been operating with half a brain for a long time..
Despite agreeing with a couple of the previous comments, I do wish Labor would make their public pronouncements a bit more interesting to listen to and stop using cliches all the time. As Tony Wright wrote in The Age yesterday, it would be nice to have some Paul Keating moments from time to time. They can’t rely on Abbott behaving like Attila the Hun all the time. He is clearly in image-making mode and they will be left far behind unless they get their act together.
I what is a daming indictment of the mainstream media I wouldn’t have know about this other than Crikey.
If something asinine but sexy had happened the I’m sure there would have been headlines.
No , some policy got debated and the govt’ failed to handle some reasonable questions and the reward……
Almost total silence.No wonder politicians go for stunts over substance