There are a number of good reasons why Barnaby Joyce should not merely not return to the Deputy Prime Ministership but leave politics — as, indeed, so many of his colleagues urged him to do a few months ago as his behaviour became increasingly deranged.
There’s the fact that Malcolm Turnbull’s recovery only really began when Joyce was ousted as Nationals leader and he no longer had influence over the government’s policy direction and presentation, providing hard evidence that Joyce was a problem, not a solution, to the Coalition’s woes. There’s the fact that Joyce left behind a number of major policy problems from his rotten administration of the Agriculture portfolio, including allowing sheep to be boiled alive in their own shit for profit, and corruption and maladministration in the implementation of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan.
And there’s the serious matter of the unresolved sexual harassment complaint brought against him, and the convenient “no finding” conclusion by his own party. Even press gallery journalists seem to forget Joyce resigned not because of his extra-marital relationship — the revelation of which has never been justified as being in the national interest, despite the media handing itself awards for it — but because of a complaint of sexual harassment that the Nationals apparently would like us to forget about.
It is unacceptable for any figure with such an unresolved complaint hanging over them to come to high office, whatever the degradation of standards of public life that have been inflicted by Donald Trump in the United States. But while the matter of whether Joyce engaged in sexual harassment remains unproven, what is far clearer is that the Coalition embarking on yet another leadership change — its sixth since entering government five years ago — will be a final demonstration to a jaded electorate that everything it thinks is wrong with politics is true. Politicians really are only in it for themselves, they really are disconnected from the real world, they really are obsessed with silly internal games.
Much of this isn’t true. Believe it or not, a great many politicians on all sides are there because they actually want to make Australia better, as they see it. But that doesn’t stop the navel-gazing, the revolving door leadership, the game-playing that overtakes them en masse in Canberra. And the return of Joyce would expose as a particularly ridiculous lie Scott Morrison’s insistence that Malcolm Turnbull’s ouster was merely some sort of blip that we should all just move on from, that he’s getting on with governing, that he’s on voters’ side. A good chunk of Morrison’s colleagues — who complained two months ago about the Liberals’ leadership debacle — are now determining whether they’re on Barnaby’s side or Michael’s side.
There’s no point asking when these people will learn. They won’t. And they’ll keep alienating voters until it stops being Pauline Hanson and the racists eating their lunch and she’s replaced with someone far more dangerous, someone yet unknown but with greater skills and a functioning brain, someone ready to gorge themselves on the disaffection and anger created in the electorate by a profoundly self-indulgent political class.
“There’s the fact that Malcolm Turnbull’s recovery only really began when Joyce was ousted as Nationals leader”
Turnbull’s recovery was, surely, nothing but a statistical anomoly?
The press gallery narrative is golden boy Turnbull was firmly on track to beat that nasty Shorten until Dutton and co intervened, because of a couple of 51-49 polls during the run up to the Super Saturday byelections.
These were achieved on the back of 2 months where the media gave no scrutiny to Coalition policy (including the upcoming challenge they would have with the NEG – whoops! – or the Ruddock report, which Turnbull didn’t even get to deal with and became a banana skin for Morrison instead) and spent every waking moment talking up a leadership challenge to Bill Shorten and trying to pick holes in Labor.
The moment parliament came back and Turnbull had to deal with policy, the wheels were visibly coming off those 51-49 results and we saw that Ipsos 55-45 poll on the back of the final collapse of the NEG before Dutton even began his challenge.
But those facts don’t fit the press gallery narrative so even Bernard will continue to steadfastly ignore them because none of them can ever admit to being wrong. They got sucked in to Liberal narratives for months and got sucked in to running leadership challenge stories (about the wrong party!) instead of policy for months, and it’s an indictment on the gallery’s groupthink as usual, but they’ll never even admit it happened.
Nonetheless, this is 100% true, and as someone who repeatedly predicted Turnbull falling away again as soon as Parliament began sitting and was proven right with great alacrity, I ain’t just talking with hindsight here.
That the Beetrooter would even consider a return to the leadership of the hill tribes much less mouth oaths about ‘faux modesty’ to turn it down if offered to him, speaks directly to Razer’s Class Warfare of two days ago. Peak stupid seemingly knows no limits.
I want to see the dream team…Morrison and Joyce. One cant keep his mouth shut and the other can keep his duds on.
This would surely be the worst Government in any western democracy at any time.
Hear hear
Hey, the Beetrooter can’t keep his mouth closed either, and going on the gross hypocrisy of many US evangelicals, you would have to wonder whether Scomoses really can keep his pants on.
Indeed, bring on the dream team, what a sublime idea.
Should it happen it will be proof the Coalition has a death wish.
And, if the electorate returns that nightmare pair to office, proof of Hanrahan’s dictum.
Roll on the thawing of the Siberian permafrost – once that methane is released it’ll be reset button time.
Excellent description of the current sad state of Australian politics. One addition
which may have relevance. Due to the invisible hand-outs from Barnaby’s big backer (Gina Reinheart) he has significant political power which also gives him a false sense of his abilities,
The return of Joyce would make what is already obvious, official.