Next year, Tony Abbott will rack up 25 years as an MP. And the best way for him to celebrate it — for his party, for the government, and most of all for Australia — would be to retire. 2019 should be the election at which he calls time.
Abbott said to one of his media friends on Monday that he still sees himself as a young man. In fact, Abbott has always been an old man; he is the classic example of Keating’s “young fogey”, from his days as a student politician through his stint as a seminarian and his devotion to BA Santamaria, through his entry into politics first as a staffer and then as an MP. Abbott has only ever seen the world through the eyes of an old man furious at the changes wrought by young people, determined to reverse the desecration of all that is sacred in his world where Christian white males hold unquestioned authority.
It has been said so often that Tony Abbott is at his most effective when destroying something. More accurately, he is only effective when doing so. His quarter century of public life is untainted by any hint of positive achievement, good governance or lasting legacy. His causes have all been negative ones: against an Australian being Australia’s head of state, against women being able to control their own bodies, against government stimulus to prevent recession, against ending discrimination against same-sex couples, against mining companies paying a more rational level of tax, against climate action of any kind. And his record as an administrator is an abysmal one — a poor minister in the Howard years whose indulgence by the then-prime minister annoyed more competent and economically and fiscally literate colleagues; a shockingly inept prime minister who oversaw a budget deficit blow out, a surge in unemployment and wage stagnation, constant bungles and routine cabinet leaks.
It is only when there is something to attack does any semblance of political competence stir within Abbott. Then the clever, cut-through attack lines emerge; the knack for knowing which electoral button to push comes to the fore; the devastating lies are deployed — Abbott has campaigned as doggedly against truth at least as often as he has campaigned against anything else.
And after his ouster as prime minister, Abbott finally found the one great negative cause of his life, destroying those whom he believed wrecked his prime ministership. Having previously destroyed Malcolm Turnbull, Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard, Abbott devoted himself to again tearing down Turnbull, and to do so jettisoned any policy position that might have been a hurdle to vengeance — after all, consistency, like facts, was never of any particular importance for Abbott. He blew spending out from the <24% he inherited from Labor to over 26% of GDP, but attacked his successor’s more restrained spending; he boasted of his government’s commitment to a 26-28% emissions reduction target for the Paris agreement, but demanded it be abandoned as a mere frippery when Turnbull tried to implement it. He slashed protectionist spending as PM but from the backbench demanded handouts to coal-fired power stations. He — a migrant himself — maintained Labor’s immigration level of 190,000 in government but demanded massive cuts when he was out of power.
All in the name of causing trouble for Turnbull
So now, Abbott has got his way. Turnbull is gone. So too is Julie Bishop, who loyally served Abbott for nearly six years as his deputy, but who was deemed to have somehow failed him. He didn’t get his man Dutton up — they were hopelessly out-manoeuvred by Turnbull, who found some political smarts at the death — but he’s the last one standing. Problem is, he’s standing in a smoking ruin of a party, that must now start convincing voters — those who haven’t tuned out of this monumental shitshow — that it is genuinely interested in leading the country.
It can only do that if Abbott leaves and brings this wretched saga of vengeance and ego to an end. If he does not, he’ll sit there, like some sort of unexploded bomb, ready to start destroying the joint again.
And most of all, the nation needs him to go. His rancorous obstructionism to literally anything that smacks of life after the mid-20th century — most of us just have our musical tastes frozen at 20; Abbott had his entire world view frozen — is inimical to good policymaking in a range of areas crucial to Australia’s future: on energy, on climate, on economic growth and population, on national security.
This man who accomplished nothing but destruction in a quarter century of public life would finally do the polity a favour by taking his massive parliamentary super and going home. Literally nothing would become Tony Abbott’s public life more than his ending of it. For your party’s sake, for Australia’s sake, for pity’s sake, go.
What do you this Abbott should do? Let us know by writing to boss@crikey.com.au.
You really should be calling on an end to this Government and not just Abbott.
How many faulty re-set buttons are they allowed to push, how often the broken promise of “good government starts now” ?
Even Keane seems to be part of this press gallery desperation for the Liberals to magically fix themselves rather than just hand over to the ALP.
Not that any of them will even admit it to the tiniest degree. Keane is steadfastly avoiding even mentioning that in the week prior to the #libspill he claimed the Coalition were recovering and that Turnbull had defeated Abbott for good over the NEG, and my regard is genuinely dropping by the day as he has been morphing into Mark Kenny. “Give Morrison a clean slate as PM”, seriously?
One day it’s going to come out why all of them are so terrified of a Shorten ALP government.
You mean like this – “God no, not a Shorten Labor Government! No! No!! No!!!! ARRGGHHHHHH!!!!”
What do they think Shorten will do to them, why are the LNP, most of the media and commentariat scared of? Beats me.
I think the whole “Bernard Keane being a stooge of the LNP” narrative doesn’t bear scrutiny. This piece, for instance, has nothing positive to say about the Libs yet it is seen as evidence of a cover-up of some sort?
Struth. I don’t agree with the man sometimes, but allow him to make a call, and one that doesn’t necessarily agree with yours. The trouble with media consumers nowadays is that they want every flipping article to be an echo chamber of their own opinions. It is possible to disagree with a piece without going all One Nation about it.
Calm yer Tiddies, people…
I didn’t say Keane is a stooge of the LNP. He’s obviously not, and if he was I wouldn’t subscribe to Crikey.
Do I think he’s anti-Shorten? Hell yes.
Has his writing of late fallen into the press gallery trap of constantly talking about how the government can turn it around rather than acknowledging the opposition at all? Absolutely.
You can be anti-Shorten but supportive of Labor’s policy positions. I think Labor has done some good work in adopting sound policy positions going into the coming election but having engaged with Shorten numerous times, I find him uninspiring and disengaged on any issue outside of industrial relations.
Also “The trouble with media consumers nowadays is that they want every flipping article to be an echo chamber of their own opinions” – come on. As a left wing person who’s not on the far-left with the extreme Greens and the sort of writers who make people say “peak Guardian” – that is to say, as a natural ALP-voter- I can’t find ANY article that’s an echo chamber of my own opinions. I just want to see a journalist who admits when they get it wrong and is willing to consider that maybe the conventional wisdom of the press pack doesn’t have all the answers. Keane sometimes is this, which is why his descent into Kennydom this past fortnight has been frustrating.
I like Guy Rundle because even though I often disagree with him (it’s rare for me to be to the right of any political writer in Australia!) he engages; he debates; when he gets it wrong he generally says so at some point, although not always without a bit of sooking (that’s OK, I can be a bit sooky when my side loses too).
Agree.
The Libs shouldn’t be in government for at least 10 years.
That should give the Labor party time t enact sensible policies (such as EIS) and for them to start working before the Libs attempt to tear them down.
A wonderful summary of the man and his achievements. Thanks
Beautifully said!
On the contrary – please stay Tony so we can guarantee a labor victory next election.
Exactly, Abbott is Labor’s secret weapon, deeply embedded and doing his best to ensure a Labor victory. Bring on the next election.
Oh I certainly agree with this. “Secret weapon…deeply embedded…” Wasn’t it Trotsky who gave us the strategy of the “Red Mole” burrowing from within… Tone the Trot? There’s a conversion!
Unfortunately, your comment and beliefs are the problem. It’s a bit like still believing in the Magnacarta or the it had anything to do with rights for the common man. It, they didn’t. There were 49 of them and all presented to the Kings by Afghanistan type of War Lords. Anyone who still thinks Australia is a Democracy is either a Claptomaniac or dumb. There are however those whose dream of re-creating the old English Empire here, because England started to sink with the Titanic. Why do you think the J.P Morgan’s ended up in the U.S. Because the U.S became the Empire after they took out or down all of Europe and England. Until you come to grips with who your masters are or think they are your just barking at the moon. Australia is a Claptocracy controlled by either the U.S or European Monarchs. Our problem is the curse of WW1 and WW2. Are we Liberal, Labour or Conservative/Monarchist, the conservatives hijacked the Liberal Party and Labour is either being destroyed by America’s Oligarchs or manipulated. Too many secret agendas and not enough of being Australian first and foremost.
Hear! Hear! Abbott without Costello is so much funnier especially when he gets on his bike to show us how much he confuses brawn with brain. The Liberals are saddled with a rider that is leaving skid marks wherever he roams.
Tony should stay for as long as he wish. He is an inspiring man for the youth of ours. Cycling, surfing and the rest I am sure.
He could be the Mahathir of Australia.
We need persons like him who talks and acts from his guts; at last it is the guts that keep us all going.
We all have different political and other mind sets.
That is no reason to kicj some one out side of your own set.