Hey, I didn’t make the call. Tony Abbott did.
That was my reaction when the Twitter trolls came after me in a torrent after I revealed on Paul Murray Live on Sky News that the former prime minister had given me some gratuitous advice: “Shut the fuck up.”
Some of the twitterati claimed I must have made it up because “Mr. Abbott would never use that sort of language”. Some thought it was “fake news”, as the Donald would say. And I will concede it’s the sort of unseemly, and potentially damaging, message I would never leave on anybody’s telephone message bank. Friend or foe.
But an angry Tony Abbott did.
I said, on Paul Murray’s eponymous show, that it was a few weeks ago. I have since checked back and worked out the abusive message was left on Thursday, June 22. (I now recall the timetable because that was the week they had the dry-run anti-terrorist security lockdown of Parliament House).
I had been on Sky the night before and repeated something I’d said on Neil Mitchell’s 3AW program the day before: that some Abbott supporters were so relentlessly determined to destroy Malcolm Turnbull they were leaking to Bill Shorten’s office. I’d heard News Corp was also onto the story.
An irate Tony Abbott got my super private phone number from a mutual friend, introduced himself, and left a message demanding that I provide him with proof to back up what I had said, or name the source for what I’d said. “Otherwise,” he said, “shut the fuck up.”
I played it to my staff in Melbourne that morning and also in a “guess who?” quiz with my former HINCH producer Dermot O’Brien, at our regular Romeo’s lunch catch-up in Toorak two days after it happened.
It only came up again last week because Abbott had made headlines with his goats and volcanoes “climate change does more good than harm” speech in London. Then another former prime minister, Julia Gillard, gave the 2017 Bob Hawke lecture in Adelaide and started talking about the election of Donald Trump as President and Brexit and an “age of anxiety”.
I was asked about former prime ministers airing their views and suggested Tony Abbott, the man we used to dub the “Mad Monk”, should, perhaps, heed his own message machine advice.
***
And now, in reference to the NEG — the national energy guarantee — let’s talk about chewing gum.
Winston Peters, currently playing kingmaker across the ditch, almost cost the Labour government the 2005 election when he derisively shot down finance minister Michael Cullen’s budget “chewing gum” tax cuts.
They were such a big deal, and so generous to the worker, the New Zealand First leader said, that everybody would be able to afford a pack of chewing gum.
If the Turnbull/Frydenberg NEG predictions are accurate, in 2020 your electricity bill will have come down by $2 a week. Bring on the chewing gum!
To be fair, I don’t believe NEG is an abbreviation of negativity (as The Greens and Labor would have you believe). And I don’t believe it is a Turnbull kowtow to Abbott. I also don’t believe it signals an exit from the Paris Agreement which (pre goats and volcanoes) the Abbott government signed. Give it a chance.
***
Speaking of chances. It is hard to believe that it will be 10 years next month since prime minister John Howard not only lost office but also lost his own seat — the first PM to achieve (?) that distinction since Stanley Bruce in 1929.
It was an ignominious end for a politician who, before he regained his party’s leadership and then the keys to The Lodge, had said he would have to be “Lazarus with a triple bypass” to make a comeback.
You have to wonder if yon Lazarus ever creeps into Tony Abbott’s thoughts these days?
He was asked on 2GB this week about comebacks and said:
“When you’re an ex (leader) the only way you can come back is if you are drafted. That’s a pretty rare and unusual business in politics. The only way an ex could ever come back is by way of a draft and that’s almost impossible to imagine.”
But you can dream.
***
During last year’s federal election campaign, we covered 11,250 kilometres in the Justice Bus and I promised, if elected, I’d keep going back to rural and regional Victoria. At least once a month.
Last week’s adventure by train and car was to Bendigo, Swan Hill and Mildura. In each town, we visited the local RSL club just in time for the 6pm recital of The Ode “… at the going down of the sun …”. It’s a great, stirring, tradition.
In Mildura, I caught up with the old and the new in the veterans’ world: 92-year-old former Nationals MP Ken Wright and Afghanistan war veteran, Tyson Matheson.
Yes Derryn, I believe that is exactly what Abbott would say. I have met him ans seen the nastiness underneath. A former MP acquaintance indicated it too. As to the NEG, it is an absurdity looked at scientifically and risks major job losses in renewables. Senator, perhaps you can explain why the hell any supplier should be made to use coal if they use renewables. Perhaps you can then explain what despatchable now means . Three weeks ago it meant hydro, open cycle gas or batteries which could be on stream quickly. Now it apparently includes coal. It is calamitous in its backward looking. Howard of course missed the renewables boat and sent it to China with his coal fired antics. This has cost billions.
If a single political party made up of ex-lawyers and spivs can get together and develop a “energy plan” between themselves which entirely benefits the fossil fuel industry, and one that goes against the opinion of Australia’s chief scientist – might we inquire as to why we might “give it a chance”?
Hinch, Mitchell, Murray….in a bubble there, Derryn?
Frankly, I might be tempted to tell you and your ilk to shut the fuck up sometimes, Derryn, just like anybody would be tempted to headbutt Abbott … but of course you shouldn’t do that sort of thing.
And the NEG? It is at best a mule, even with the secret emissions trading in it, and obviously aimed at wedging Labor as much as anything.
And it contains too much bullshit eg coal is *not* dispatchable and coal and gas plants are not ‘reliable’, especially under hot and heavy load during heatwaves (check out Feb 10 in NSW, Feb 12 in Qld and March 3 in SA this year for the failure of at least 10 coal and gas plants to ‘reliably’ deliver when needed – luckily solar mostly carried us through). Basic premises are rubbish, so the ‘plan’ is fundamentally flawed.
And to spruik reliability based on the tired out boiler lines on 50+ year old coal power stations in a rich country with such renewable resources and smart engineers is idiotic! We are a laughing stock.
The Paris Agreement commitment is sold out. Can’t happen and Turnbull knows it. Even under Finkel, the restricting of emissions reductions in electricity probably doomed us, because it is so much easier to reduce emissions there with remarkable technological advancements and cost falls than in transport, agriculture etc. Now it is worse, and the lack of *any* plan in other sectors, while turning a blind eye to land clearing in Qld and NSW, shows the Turnbull sellout. A born again denier and no better than Abbott.
Jeff Kennett screwed up Victoria’s power Industry by selling off the efficient Gas and Fuel Corporation. Now his cronies in acanberra are trying to patch Humpty Dumpty back to a fractured and coaldusted mockery of itself. They just can’t admit that the privatisation experiment has failed the public badly. I would recommend everyone to switch to their own solar & battery supply wherever possible. I look forward to seeing how the SA Elon Musk collaboration works out – it could be a game changer for other States to follow.
It as plan as the nose on your face,,,,,,graft, corrupshon,&how much money these lib/nets hold in shares,,??,,,(just asking).
Should Abbott ever get to lead the Libs I will swear off them for a decade or until he goes whichever is the lesser
Caratom
Please, Tony, find a monastery with silent orders and GO!
I guess plenty of people have told Senator Hinch to stf up over the years. I would’ve loved to have told him this to his face back in the 80s when my dear old grandmother was too terrified to leave the house because “Derryn Hinch says …” That she did leave the house every morning is a testament to her. But, Senator, you’ve got form (decades of it) and it’s just as nasty, divisive and hate-filled as that which Abbott has. Now you’re on the national stage and enjoying your role as some kind of modern day Everyman: all very reasonable and rational and understanding. But you’ve still got form, Senator, and I for one would like to see an acknowledgement of this: a touch of humility and even an acknowledgement of responsibility. Otherwise all that you are is an old man with a lousy haircut and a pompous sense of your own self righteousness.
Disappointing, too, that Crikey hasn’t acknowledged Senator Hinch’s past as a tabloid tart in any way.