In public, senior federal Liberals spent yesterday exonerating themselves over their party’s abysmal performance in Saturday’s state byelection in Wagga Wagga, offering predictable mantras about the centrality of state and local factors.
However, anonymous opponents of the coup against Turnbull felt unrestrained in telling journalists the obvious: that an ample share of the blame, of which there was much to go around, lay at the feet of Scott Morrison’s much-invoked “muppet show”.
A definitive result will have to await the full distribution of preferences, but the almost certain outcome will be a win for independent Joe McGirr in a seat the Liberals have held since 1957.
This was facilitated by a collapse in the Liberal vote from 53.8% at the 2015 election to just 25.3% on the latest count.
Such a result would normally be quite outside the experience of a government that has either been level or slightly ahead in the polls, as Gladys Berejiklian’s has been throughout this year.
Even so, there are elements of the disaster that can clearly be traced close to home.
The immediate circumstances of the byelection were unhelpful, with outgoing member Daryl Maguire having fallen foul of an Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) investigation that turned up a phone call in which he appeared to seek a kickback from a property development.
The government also courted a regional backlash with its plan to spend $2.5 billion on Sydney sports stadiums, which lingers in the minds of country voters as a totem of the government’s Sydney-centricity, even after a government backdown in March.
Most of all, the Nationals clearly blundered in acceding to Liberal demands not to field a candidate, as federal leader Michael McCormack acknowledged a fortnight ago.
Indeed, some Liberal optimists have argued that McGirr should be considered a de facto National — he had been discussed as a potential preselection contender, and counted the wife of a Nationals MP among his campaign volunteers — in which case the “Coalition” vote might be thought to have held up rather well.
The problem with this is that the Liberals received so few of McGirr’s preferences that Labor would have beaten them in a straight two-party contest with a swing of about 14%, as revealed by the Australian Electoral Commission’s indicative preference count on Saturday.
The extent to which the recent shenanigans in Canberra played their part can be measured, however imprecisely, by polls showing a decisive fall in the already shaky level of Liberal support over the closing stages of the campaign.
At the height of the federal leadership crisis a little over a fortnight ago, one poll recorded the Liberal vote at 30% — nothing to boast about by any means, but probably sufficient for them to have pieced together an unconvincing sort of a win.
However, internal polling publicised by the Liberals in the interests of managing expectations recorded a downward trajectory from there to a final resting place of 24% (which was in fact slightly lower than the actual result).
So it can hardly be doubted that public revulsion against the removal of Turnbull — further illustrated overnight by Labor’s second successive 56-44 lead in Newspoll — has caused the Liberals brand damage that is by no means quarantined to the federal sphere.
It’s all the more extraordinary that this situation should have been conjured at a time when elections loom on the near horizon not just federally, but also in the two largest states.
How long will the fallout from the August leadership spill last electorally? Write to boss@crikey.com.au and let us know what you think.
This gives me great hope that the federal seat of Hume, presently infested by that well known flat Earther and generally traitorous snake, Angus Taylor…may at least think twice at election time.
I feel a lot of previously “safe” Liberal Party seats are now up for grabs at the next State & Federal elections.
Is this the beginning of the end for ScoMo?
It looks bad, and I fear that it can only get worse.
The end for ScoMo? Can’t see anything bad about that.
Oh wait! Unless it’s Bill Shorten. You’re right. It does get worse.
I come from Wagga, yes the Federal ‘Muppet Show’ had an effect, but but this one was more that the State parties had taken us for granted over many years. It was a perfect storm of corruption, state issues like the Council mergers, the stadiums issue & sheer bloody mindedness of the city centric politicians that anyone over the mountains doesn’t count. Those clowns in the Country party are no better, they forget where they come from.
Especially the country party. How many farmers still don’t believe in climate change. How many farmers are happy paying exorbitant power bills. How many farmers don’t want access to fast, reliable internet. How many farmers are affected by water supply corruption. On all these issues the country party has let farmers down spectacularly.
If what you have written is more than a frustrated generalisaton (i.e. assuming the assertions can be supported) then small wonder that farming in Oz is a major struggle despite the climate.
I spent some time in Colorado, Wyoming and Montana in the course of wafting eastward to Chicago recently. Farming there is highly mechanised; in fact very capital intensive. Few of the farmers have degrees in Agriculture but many (most?) have certificates from Agricultural Colleges and, in the main, the gear (machinery) and IT that they use is “top notch”. Support from research institutions is a big deal. As an aside Trump needs to take a number of matters into account if he is to embark on a trade war.
No system is perfect and there are some interstate anomalies but it is also interesting to observe that a thousands of people per month are leaving California and Illinois to live in these states.
I did encounter one individual who considered the Bible to be literal and that the Ark was hidden by “protectors” in Canada but he also acknowledged the existence of climate change.
After a many years in IT I now live in semi-rural NSW, so I’m not a rural expert, but talking points in my age group and younger at social gatherings are overwhelmingly (disregarding weather) about the effects of climate change, fracking, NBN, power bills and crap politicians. Not necessarily in that order 🙂
Very true Bref; add to that, crap roads rail and air services. But they still keep voting for these nongs, so weatherboard and iron will be returned in my old New England home and anything put up by the Nationals in Cowper where I now abide, to replace the retiring whirling dervish Hartsuker will slide into a safe seat to idle the days away bullshiting the electorate. A fence post would get elected as long as it has the Nats logo stuck on it.
Sadly true Vasco. Hartsuyker is a seriously stupid, arrogant idiot who can now go back to making clogs at his dodgy little tourist attraction. Don’t forget we have also had to endure having that drunk Andrew Fraser represent us in the State parliament, the only memorable thing he did in public life was trying to drunkenly assault Tripodi in parliament.
Such a beautiful area populated by ill informed people.
Could I point out that there is no such thing as the Country party and hasn’t been for decades. Thyte are now the Multinational Party.
Although I’m not a resident of the place it seems to me that the result was rather more about local issues than muppetism in Canberra. Only a brave soul would generalise the result to the magic date in 2019. There is the budget for 2019-20 awaiting us along with the memories of goldfish.
Having written that Andrews (short of gross idiocy) could breathe relatively easily for November but, depending upon how its looking for Berejiklian, Morrison could go early. The postal voting over the festive season would probably favour the Libs.
Imagine how much the lib caucus hates Dutton right now? If that man survives to even contest the next election I’ll be surprised. Surely the libs aren’t stupid enough to keep these idiots around any longer? But then again, they are liberals.