It’s fair to say the week did not pan out as well as the government might have hoped.
The reasons why will have some bearing on whether Liberal and media hopes of a Tampa-style recovery prove plausible. There is real concern within Labor that a Liberal scare campaign around boats will lead to victory an otherwise bitterly divided government. It may not be 2001, but Labor faces not merely News Corp in full pro-Liberal mode, but Fairfax outlets, now overseen by a former Joe Hockey staffer and controlled by a company chaired by a senior Liberal, while the ABC is hopelessly cowed and terrified of upsetting the government.
Rather than let the agenda be dominated by boats, a subject it would prefer not to be talking about even if it doesn’t end up shifting votes, Labor threw out a lot of chaff, including announcing Hayne royal commission legislation and talking about a floor price for milk — a half-arsed idea that it is an act of charity to call a “distraction”.
But it also had Helloworld ready to go, carefully dropped ahead of the relevant estimates hearings. Forget about Mathias Cormann’s embarrassment, that was nothing. If Cormann’s worst sin is that he arranges family holidays through his mate and didn’t realise he hadn’t been charged for airline tickets, so what (they flew economy, by the way).
Joe Hockey, though, is a different matter, and in retrospect Cormann’s embarrassment was only an entree for the main course that was delivered mid-week. Hockey has been an excellent ambassador at a difficult time for Australia-US relations (and, for that matter, reality-US relations) but quite what he was thinking in setting up a meeting for a company in which he was a notable shareholder to pitch for government business defies explanation.
Regardless of what declarations he might have made, and when, he should never have done it. As for “Hockey owes me” — the uttering of which is disputed — the point is less specific misconduct than a cosy world in which the roles of friends, political donors, party officials and tenderers for government business are hopelessly confused.
Bill Shorten’s line on Thursday about the Liberals being a “government of their donors, by the donors, for the donors” perfectly summed up the image of the party at both the macro-level — the party that ran a protection racket for the banks for years — and at the micro-level of government contracts.
You can tell from the government’s defensiveness, and Scott Morrison’s reluctance to even answer questions in parliament about it, that they knew what Hockey had done was a bad look. And it’s not over yet: at the end of last year, when the government put in place its 2019 sitting calendar that was noticeably light on parliamentary sittings before the election, Labor used the Senate to override the Coalition and make sure there would be at least two days of estimates hearings right after the budget — and maybe more if the election isn’t called straight away.
That means Labor will have an opportunity to pursue the issue further, and any other mini-scandals it can dig up — Paladin and Michaelia Cash v the AFP bubbled along during the week — right when the election is being called.
That didn’t prevent Labor from stumbling on asylum seekers, and particularly the government’s plan to send medical evacuees to Christmas Island. If the point is providing medical treatment that can’t be provided on Pacific islands, and that treatment can be provided on Christmas Island, the only possible objection is cost, no matter how malicious the government’s intentions are.
That was the position Labor arrived at, but only at the price of appearing confusing and contradictory. But both that and Helloworld would have been obscured by Julie Bishop’s departure, which will shine a light — yet again! — on the Liberal’s growing women problem. Losing two of your three most senior women — Kelly O’Dwyer delivered her valedictory speech this week — including the only Liberal MP widely recognised in the community, without any obvious replacements doesn’t do much for your gender credentials.
As if to round out a week that soured as it went along, coal fetishists within the Coalition like Matt Canavan were enraged when Glencore announced it was capping its coal production. Glencore, one of the world’s biggest minerals companies, a global-scale tax dodger and Australia’s biggest coal miner, announced “we must invest in assets that will be resilient to regulatory, physical and operational risks related to climate change.”
Much of the Morrison government, of course, doesn’t even believe in climate change; imagine their shock and resentment that a company like Glencore has joined the ranks of the warmist conspiracy. A dispiriting end to a week that they hoped would have turned out very differently.
This is how far we’ve sunk. Taking a principled and ethical stance against cruelty and injustice becomes a ‘stumble’ in the polls.
I refer you to Mr Rundle’s piece earlier this week re nausea and disgust.
Let Canavan rage against physics.
He’s always been a stupid young fuckwit.
Now he’s being schooled by even Glencore, after all he’s done for the coal industry…
‘Gee, how good is mining?’ muses our vacuous PM, quite possibly not rhetorically.
The mining industry is increasingly seeing itself as ill-served by its gauche hired hands at the MC and in parliament.
It’s really bullshit from Glencor though. They already have most of their applications approved and they are capping their production, not reducing it. Paris targets blah, blah, blah
True, but the MC have hired Canavan for PR and he’s obviously keener on clearing scrub.
High hopes Bernard?
You may still harbour some hope for an absolutely hopeless government – most of us just want them gone, and gone for a long time.
Bernd, I know it’s good to be a worry wort and that an election isn’t over until it’s over, but but I’ve decided as I am sure many others have also. And I am going to vote to toss these bums out. as they say in America.
I’ve had it up to here (motioning my hand to be level with my forehead). I just can’t stomach ScoMo’s arrogant evangelical sermonizing and Freydenburg’s jingoistic lack of discernment. This regime has been the cruelest I have known, except for Donald Trump’s fascism. And worse every grand scheme they conjure up to manipulate the electorate they fuck it up and it costs us billions (Christmas Island reopening anyone?). I hate everything the LNP stands for and had we the pleasure of living in the time of William Wallace and Edward Longshanks, hung, drawn and quartering would be too good for them.
So the campaign is over for me and voting will just have to do. I now go into monkish silence until next time. Cheers.
spot on
Hear hear!
Thank you for that, David.
You saved me a lot of typing.
Yes David, this rotten carcass of a government needs to be dragged out and buried
Bernard says: “If the point is providing medical treatment that can’t be provided on Pacific islands, and that treatment can be provided on Christmas Island, the only possible objection is cost, no matter how malicious the government’s intentions are.” In the same issue Greg Barns refers to “the well documented lack of medical facilities on Christmas Island”. I wonder how many millions the government’s malicious intentions will cost the taxpayers?