They say there’s no loyalty in politics, but it’s a filthy lie. This government knows how to look after its friends.
It looked after the banks, which contributed generously to both sides of politics but particularly generously to the Liberals — even employing a number of senior ministers between staffer jobs and public life. It protected them against a royal commission and gutted the corporate regulator, until politics demanded that sacrifices be made. It looked after financial planners and retail super funds, protecting them against Future of Financial Advice (FOFA) regulations, instead going after industry super funds.
It looked after News Corp, with a $30 million handout. It looked after the rest of the commercial media as well, with the repeal of the last media ownership laws and cuts and endless reviews of the ABC. It looked after big business donors with a company tax cut package worth tens of billions of dollars to Business Council members, despite knowing the economic benefits were trivial at best.
Then there’s the extraordinary extent to which MPs who hit the fence at the 2016 election have been looked after, with former MPs appointed to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal or statutory positions.
That former government staffers now well-placed in the private sector can call up Peter Dutton’s office and obtain a rapid fix to an au pair’s visa problem, or Liberal Party donors can expect similar silver service, is consistent with the generosity and loyalty for which this government is known. You look after your mates. It’s the Australian way.
If you’re not a mate, though, look out. As generous as it is toward its friends, this government is relentless to its enemies. And “enemies” includes anyone who has embarrassed the government by exposing its misconduct, wrong doing, or how its claims don’t stack up. We’ve itemised these “enemies” so often. The whistleblowers, opposition politicians and journalists improperly pursued by the AFP. The civilian critic who was smeared using personal information. The ABC journalists targeted with vexatious complaints. The prosecution of Witness K and Bernard Collaery (again, targeting the ABC). To this list can now be added the alleged leaker of embarrassing details about Dutton’s carefree use of ministerial discretion to rescue mates’ au pairs from detention.
“Unacceptable and probably in breach of criminal law” was how Home Affairs secretary Mike Pezzullo described the shedding of light on the use — or is it misuse? — of Dutton’s extraordinarily wide-ranging discretionary powers. He went on to lament “unlawful and indeed criminal disclosures that have not otherwise gone through the protections that are provided by this Parliament,” and said the matter had — like so many other leaks from his department — had been sent to the AFP for investigation.
Labor members of the committee investigating the au pair scandal were unimpressed, suggesting Pezzullo might have come close to threatening reprisals against people who had provided information to the committee. We may yet see a repeat of AFP officers trawling the bowels of Parliament House trying to track down emails that contained embarrassing information.
Police states are distinguished by, inter alia, a highly selective approach to the rule of law. Those deemed opponents of the government faced the full legal apparatus of the state, intend to punish those who embarrass or expose it, and deter any others who might similarly be tempted. But friends of the government can skirt the apparatus entirely, securing favour with a phone call, an email, an appeal to old mateship, business ties, mutual interests, donations. One rule for the former, no rules for the latter.
In all walks of life you see this stuff…but with the Coalition you get the added entertainment of them insisting that the largess to their mates is somehow in the public interest…$400 mil here and $30 mil there…a nudge nudge wink wink to mates who are stealing water from the Murray Darling system. Get your mistress promoted and phone the TV networks so they televise raids to bash some Unions.
With updates on the Au pair saga on the hour I can’t wait until they eventually nail Dutton and his department. To be blunt, the man is a vicious bastard and is dangerously unqualified for his position. The only silver lining seems to be, and to paraphrase Darth Vader: “Dutton is as clumsy as he is stupid”. He’s left a trail of bread crumbs for his enemies to follow. And some of those crumbs include those on his own team remarkably. The sooner he is ousted and then prosecuted for crimes against humanity the better. Perhaps we can then finally begin to repair the damage to our international reputation.
Pezzullo, must be the first go in any new Government. Get rid of him urgently as first action.
Holy Jesus ….. There are so many first actions that I can think of we may have to exhume the great Gough.
You are right, so many, what was I thinking. Just every time I see him or that name, I think treason, firing squad! I am totally non violent, but with people like him, a red haze appears and….how do you permanently erase their insidious, poisonous influence.
Yep. I mentioned a ‘first action’ the other day on crikey but there are now so many I’ve forgotten which bastard it was.
We should start a ‘first actions’ list. That should be our first action.
He is the sort of apparatchik Hannah Arendt had in mind when pointing out that enablers essential for true wickedness to be put into action.
He rose without trace through Customs (as was) and is a perfect example of the evil of banality.
But will the ALP do anything about this pox?
Unlikely given they too share the same post very early retirement careers that are part of this cesspit.
Exactly. How many times has one side piously pointed the finger only to adopt the same corrupt practices once their shiny arses kissed the government benches?
We need a Federal ICAC and we need it yesterday.
Agree, and whistle blower Protection, backdated! & criminal charges laid, and prosecuted to the fullest capacity of the law that binds all.
Maybe they should add laws to restrict the movement of MPs into public service roles and similarly for political staffers.
For example, exclude MPs, state or federal, from government positions for 5 years. Under that rule Hockey and Brandis would not have got their current roles. Nikolic, and the like, would not be on the AAT.
I’d also like to see that political staffers are ineligible to stand for parliament for 5 years after leaving their position. That way they would have to get a real job in the real world before entering parliament.
I’d advocate term limits for individuals – governments only have 3-4 years (Fed/State) so why are some pollies on the gravy train for life? Not to mention those gold plated pensions.
I’m with old Wartface for those worthless seat polishers “You have sat too long for any good you have been doing lately… Depart, I say; and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go!“.
Wayne, your idea has merit but May have perverse outcomes. I’d go the other way and guarantee all politicians a middle to senior management public sector position on losing their seat or retiring while banning ambassador appointments. I’d then go further and ban employment with any medium to large enterprise or director roles for 10 years minimum, and nan them from any lobbying roles.
You have to stop them from thinking they can benefit personally from any decisions they make or connections they have.
We need these low life’s held accountable to the same jurisdiction as everyone else.
Same penalties apply to them as to the people they purport to represent.
This is out of control and we the people should be ashamed of these parasites are accountable
Well said – on this.
Disagree with you passionately on the journalists’ back-patting echo chamber on Twitter regarding free speech and putting down “lefties” (journalism-as-usual has delivered us the unfettered Fox News, Breitbart, Infowars, fake news etc – great job letting the sunlight in, maybe the 50th time Bannon is given a platform and someone else ISN’T given the same platform – the oppportunity cost, you know- will be different! ournalism as usual in the West has delivered us “changed man” Prime Minister Abbott, “totally going to deal with climate change” Prime Minister Turnbull, Trump, Brexit, now PM ScoMo. At some point the people who fundamentally misread Tony Abbott let alone Malcolm Turnbull, e.g.
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/abbott-is-a-new-man-but-the-left-cant-see-it-20130911-2tkl3.html
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2015/feb/08/how-liberal-party-machine-swallowed-tony-abbott
need to have some self-reflection. How’s the Coalition recovery and the Tunbull victory on the NEG going by rhe way?
Seriously, watching a collection of people who’ve got it so wrong smugly telling each other how superior they are to the hoi polloi on Twitter was absolute disgusting. I hope you reflect on that.