In the last couple of weeks, there have been plenty of journalists complaining about the social media abuse to which they’ve been subjected in relation to election coverage. The level of contumely directed at political journalists has indeed been noticeably worse, and much of it has been driven by the rage of left-wingers that the media isn’t acting as the eager trumpeteers of a Shorten victory. Instead, journalists dare to question Labor policies and push for details. “This election is a contest, not a coronation,” Chris Uhlmann correctly noted, and there are many progressives on Twitter enraged at that, prepared to call bias at anyone not acting as a PR agent for Labor.
But on climate policy, the mainstream media — Nine, News Corp, the TV networks and the ABC — have indeed failed voters, and spectacularly so, in three crucial aspects.
First, climate change should be the central issue of the campaign. That’s not merely because climate change is the most serious threat to Australia’s economic future, and threatens major disruption to the global economy beyond the costs it is already imposing. It’s also because climate change is the central issue of Australian politics. Twice in the last 10 years the Liberal Party has removed a leader over the issue. It played a key role in the demise of Julia Gillard. Scott Morrison is only prime minister because of the Liberal Party’s unwillingness to accept the existence of climate change and the need to address it.
Despite that, climate has been mostly at the margins of the campaign. Neither side has been particularly willing to talk about it, except where it is the pretext for new spending. Labor spent the entire first two weeks of the campaign talking about health, an area of policy success for Australia that needs little extra attention for all its totemic political importance. The media have taken their cue from the parties and mostly ignored climate.
Second, a gross imbalance exists in reportage of the two sides, given Labor is the only major party with a genuine climate policy. Scott Morrison is rarely questioned on the lack of any serious Coalition climate policy — journalists seem to take it as a given that the Coalition just doesn’t do climate, so it gets a pass from scrutiny. That appears to be why the Coalition’s figleaf “direct action” policy, intended only to prevent the charge of wholesale denialism and pump more money to Coalition supporters, attracts no critique. The media know it’s a fake policy, so have never examined it closely in the 10 years since it was put together on the back of an envelope in the wake of Turnbull’s first removal.
Third, to the extent that the issue has featured in campaign coverage, it has been entirely around the issue of the economic cost of climate action policies. This is exactly the Coalition’s preferred framing of the issue, and one that it has used since the Howard years to obstruct action. The framing involves using economic modelling to claim that climate action will impose massive economic costs, when even the modelling does not show that, but shows the difference between two fictional scenarios involving “business as usual” and an assumption-laden confection of the policies the Coalition wishes to discredit. In fact, the Coalition has actually brought back the very man who was central to that technique, Brian Fisher, who is getting another run today with a new round of nonsense modelling claiming massive costs for climate action.
Remarkably, the mainstream media never mention Fisher’s central role in the Howard government’s climate denialism strategy (or that strategy itself). News Corp has even attempted to portray Fisher as “independent” and some sort of even-handed economist who served both sides during his time in government. In fact, he comes to the debate with little credibility given his long history of peddling modelling designed to discredit climate action. Saliently, as he himself has admitted this time around, his modelling never addresses the costs of failing to address climate change.
And political history demonstrates how little real interest the media has in the issue of the economic impact of climate action. The Gillard government’s carbon pricing scheme was estimated by Treasury to have a one-off impact on household CPI of 0.7%. This was virtually never reported; instead, the Abbott opposition’s claims of spectacular price increases and warning it would be a “wrecking ball”, a “python squeeze”, a “cobra strike” etc were given strong prominence. As it turned out, the carbon price may had had even less impact than Treasury predicted, as an array of economists noted in the aftermath. This, too, received little media attention. The focus on costings is thus not a mechanism to genuinely assess the impact of climate action but to deter action.
There are plenty of reasons for scrutiny of Labor’s climate policy — it’s a grab bag of measures, some of them adapted from the government, rather than a coherent policy like Gillard’s carbon-pricing scheme. Very little of the economy is actually caught by its proposed safeguards scheme, some of the biggest polluting industries will be given exemptions to continue pumping out greenhouse emissions. But little of that is being reflected in the coverage. Instead, the media is stuck in the same rut it’s been in since the Howard years.
“Instead, journalists dare to question Labor policies and push for details”
And they don’t dare question Coalition policies (and lack thereof) or push for details.
They are quick to accept Coalition framing – for example, other than Mark Riley during the debate, what mainstream media figure has even made a half-hearted effort to question the Coalition’s “Retiree Tax” attack? GetUp get hammered for suggesting Frydenberg was involved in the rolling of Turnbull, but Frydenberg gets to trot out the “Labor’s Retiree Tax” at every press conference, and you think progressives out there are angry at journalists for not being biased to Labor?
And that’s just the non-News media. Pretty sure you’re aware that News really is out to bat for the right wing and is genuinely biased against Shorten and Labor?
It’s good that you note the failure of the media on climate change, but strange that you seem to think that it’s the only issue out there on which the media gets it wrong and progressives have a right to be angry.
The tired idea that left wing anger at the Australian political media is otherwise baseless and is solely a desire for the media to cheerlead for Shorten is just bullshit. I’m sure you can find a few dozen Twitterers for whom that is true, the sort of people who claim every Newspoll is rigged and the real state of play is 60-40 or something; tarring every progressive person out there with that brush so that you can gloss over the media’s many failures and the genuine bias of huge swathes of the commercial media is just crap.
It’s like when so many in the media went ape-droppings at News Corp’s bias against Turnbull during the leadership challenge. It spoke volumes that they didn’t care about News Corp’s bias against the ALP; or against progressive policies in general; no, they only cared when Turnbull was affected, thus giving away the degree to which they (and I include you in this, Mr Keane) were in the tank for Turnbull, whether they had admitted it to themselves or not.
The point is that anthropogenic climate change threatens the existence of humans and many other species, yet the general public and the MSM focus on business as usual. As does the ALP, which is certainly better on climate change mitigation than the alternative, but nowhere near as realistic (in the sense of taking the science seriously) as the Greens.
The ALP needs to offer much more in mitigation measures, though I agree with Bill Shorten that to put a precise figure on this is impossible. The MSM lives in a fantasy world, as do many Australians in respect of climate change, though not in terms of economic inequity. The MSM attempts to conflate monies spent on climate change mitigation with monies that could be used to expand economic growth, much of which would trickle down to those at the bottom. Of course, that is incorrect, but that is the argument that is being pushed.
It is clearly wrong on any rational and evidential grounds and it is time the ALP began to push this, though they would receive little sympathy from the MSM and therein lies the difficulty. Though they would never state this explicitly, both the two main political parties and the MSM have a low opinion of the average voter’s capacity to go beyond their immediate interests, many of which are defined in quantifiable terms and expressed in what Gut Rundle rightly termed “anxiety” yesterday. They do not see it as their goal to educate the general public, though I suspect many in the ALP would like to. Consequently, distractions–like somebody going to a strip club–receive more attention than existential policy issues having long-term implications.
Arky – you have hit the nail on the head. It appears to me that even the alleged “doyen” of balanvced reporting, the ABC has spent WAY more time attacking Shorten and Labor than querying the utter vacuity of the failed corporate hack Morrison.
Labor apparently has to put a single number on the cost of its environmental strategy, but Morrison doesn’t have to demonstrate how Shorten has lied; how Labor’s proposed changes will “wreck the economy”, how the changes to negative gearing will decimate house prices; how “more of the same” from his runaway success of a government translates into anything but more government for the rich, more LNP dysfunction , chaos and corruption; how the LNP will fund the generous tax cuts in future years that will overwhelmingly favour the well off at the expense of the poor and favour men over women and how wages will suddenly skyrocket on the back of a series of utterly optimistic and likely flawed assumptions (that’s a short list). The MSM is worse than the ABC, but they all disgraceful – Morrison is absolutely getting the inside running gifted to him by the media in this election. Where is the ongoing attention to Watergate and water policy generally? Where is the attention for the LNP band of nincompoops, misfits, far-right extremists and simpering IPA hacks (e.g., the born-to-rule Georgina Downer)? The ALP really needs to sharpen its attack on these clowns to make the point that a vote for Morrison (what Mr Shouty McPottymouth wants) is a vote for a pretty awful bunch of politicians – who like people to think they are good people making “tough” decisions. Time to shatter that notion.
I saw the utterly turgid Leigh Sales interview Shorten on Wednesday and her fixation on trying to get Shorten to announce a single figure cost for Labor’s climate change policy. Of course, Sales is a “credible” journalist although lord knows why (her rudeness and obsession with “gotcha moments” is exceed only by the insolent Trioli – an excellent journalist soured, in my opinion, by her boorish demeanour). But because he didn’t quote a figure, people will be inclined to believe that Shorten is being evasive – and yet there have been countless instances where Morrison has evaded probing questions in his usual boofhead style and largely been able to dictate his own agenda. It is, in my view, an outrage.
ABC AM this morning campaigned vigorously against Shorten’s refusal to invent a figure for the cost of his party’s climate policy. Apparently they didn’t like his answering back to Leigh Sales.
Set aside the ABC – it has been starved of funds and gets threatening messages -from the toilet brush, Turnbull, probably the whole lot of tawdry ministers and the PM. Though I think Leigh Sales is a very nice woman, she’s out of her depth. She and Uhlman are similar tabloid journos.
What really irritates about Keane is, even though now a confused but self-confessed “neo-liberal”, that he can’t imagine anyone should call out Morrison. The News Corpse fetes him. Ask Morrison: do you admit the GFC occurred? And that Swan-Rudd-Gillard saved Australia from a Depression? Ask him where are his Ministers? Ask Morrison to name one who is presentable for electioneering, knows her/his brief – at all; doesn’t tell even more embarrassing lies an slander the innocent, and so forth. Ask Morrison if he has one policy that aren’t about tax cuts. Ask him why the greedy hang on to tax perks down to the last cent, and the entire Coalition tell lies about the disgraceful franking credit ATO largesse to those who’ve mostly inherited their wealth or if not, have made a fortune fleecing bank clients even beyond the grave and etc etc.
Of course climate change is an extreme catastrophe, and there are rorters in this government selling rainwater etc; that spells a dire need for an ICAC, not just the vital alternative climate policies for which the ALP is being slaughtered; but who has asked Morrison about the warmongering spend-a-thon? About what his ghastly government, and starting with Howard have achieved beyond hate, divisivness and greed. Bag him for parroting the politics of ‘envy’ – I am well-off and I don’t want or need an ostentatious house and Beemer. There are so many preferable aspects to life the Coalition has destroyed – that’s their intention. If you can’t make obscene wads of money, you won’t “get a go”.
The Dum looked like it was trying to defend (by extension) that Sales pitch tonight – having a go at Shorten’s “lack of detail” – they even had failed/sacked ex-NSW Coalition Environment Minister Robyn Parker on to defend the Limited News Party line of attack.
Luckily the rest of the panel pushed back – to the apparrent frustration of Kathryn Robinson?
I believe the election coverage this time has actually been worse than 2016.
Media figures seem to believe that, having properly called out the electric vehicle scare campaign, their work holding the Coalition to account is done. Other scare campaigns may continue. The Coalition may as you have pointed out make baseless claims about the economy, negative gearing, renewable energy and energy costs generally, the medevac bill, and their far-future unfunded tax cuts and nobody says boo about it.
Turnbull was gifted the inside running by a media content to allow him to say “jobs and growth” a million times and not ask him about his policies on anything but big business tax cuts. There seemed to be a view that if only Turnbull could be ushered safely through to re-election, he could produce the climate policies, marriage equality and so on that he didn’t have the internal power in the Liberal Party to promise before the election. Some journos even enunciated this or hinted at it.
Somehow it feels like not only is the same don’t-ask-don’t-tell handling extending to Morrison, it is even worse.
Well, Leigh Sales’ interview with Morrison will be a bit make or break for her reputation. After insisting that Bill not talk about Morrison’s lies and leave it to her to ask Morrison the questions (which came off as rather arrogant), she has to actually ask the questions. And apply the same “talk about your own policies, not about Labor” attitude to him. If she fails at that there can be no defence. I don’t have it in for Sales, but she was definitely in the pro-Turnbull clique and the interview with Shorten wasn’t great.
Arky is spot on, I hope BK reads comments on his writing.
Our media, even specialist veteran Canberra journo’s, are mind numbingly careful about being seen to be neutral. It must relate to having limited career options in one, if not THE, most monopolised media in the world.
Hell, Michelle Grattan this week states that Morrison won the debate on style but Shorten won the the debate on substance!! Pathetic for a journalist of her experience.
There are mighty stories to hold Oz politicians to account but do journo’s feel they can’task further questions in the election campaign on:
– non tender multimillion gifts to Palladium, Barrier Reef Foundation
– Lib Treasurer’s Hello World national travel contract
– ongoing disunity bile in the LNP, and how it has removed so much experience from the LNP
– Morison’s religious beliefs in the second coming, the afterlife, speaking in tongues etc
– LNP use of electoral allowance to support their associated printing company
– their overnight announcement of a 3.8Billion incentive scheme for Oz arms suppliers to export
– many economic reports that show the record taxing and spending of the Howard and Abbott/Turnbull/ Morrison Govts that destroy the central myth that the LNP are economic managers
– that tax cuts do not result in wage increases
– that cancellation of penalty rates will result in more jobs
– that trickledown economics hs proven to lift living standards for all
The list goes on, of course the media has failed us.
Left progressives are sick of consistently seeing journo’s perpetuating the phrases and framework of conservative interests.
I seem to recall BK replying to a comment on one occasion but am under the impression that like Uhlmann on Twitter, BK has no intention of reading comments much less engaging in debate with readers.
well said – it seriously pisses me off that people are written off as “left-wingers” as if that is something unfortunate and their opinion therefore meaningless. If bigotry was removed and ears opened, journalists may well hear something interesting and revealing.
The ‘top’ journalists are of the same class as the politicians and often have the same interests and affiliations. The bulk of Australians live outside their world and want to live in a fair, harmonious society. Who does the stories of workers grafting away in the egg factory, the council, the sewers, etc? The owners of the media are almost all right wing with Newscorp known as the ‘government shills’. Last election every major newspaper ,except theAge, supported the governments return. Say no more.
Will the obstructionist bastards in the LNP ever be brought to book? I doubt it.
We have only 12 years to get this right before we fry. Why aren’t Australia’s people demanding that their politicians lead the world of the big CO2 emitters into some serious action?
Surely with our middle power status we can galvanize the USA, China, India the EU and other big emitters to realize what is happening and stop using coal and other fossil fuels and turn to sustainable solutions like wind and solar. Our coal industry should be closed in 5 years and after that any burning of fossil fuels subject to severe penalties.
what middle power status ? so a nation of a few million [25] will lay down the law to USA 300 + million, China 1000+ million, India 1000+million, EU 700+million.
So 25 million will lay down the law to 3000+ million – What planet are you on, we really don’t rate on this one.
Also obviously majority decision doesn’t really rate.
DG, by getting serious about climate change Australia would be joining a myriad of other nations around the world in the fight for rational changes. That is what will eventually bring the larger nation to heal.
Wake up, Desmond. The 3000+ million you speak of are already doing many times as much as Australia is currently doing to keep their per capita emissions in check. We’re the foot draggers who need to have the law laid down to US…..not the other way around. However, try convincing Indians & Chinese that they need to keep their per capita energy use to below 2MWh per year, when Australians use roughly 10MWH per per…….even before factoring in the massive difference in emissions intensity…….& you can see why Australia needs to do a *lot* more in its own back yard, before it has even a shred of credibility on the global, or even regional, scale.
Apologies, that should read less than 4MWh per year
Says the man who did his best to sink the CPRS in 2009.
No BK you can just sit in the naughty corner for another decade.
The CPRS deserved to be sunk. I get really, really, angry at one-eyed Labor apologists who pretend otherwise.
Agreed Scott.
Said it before, but happy to say it again. It was DESIGNED by Labor to (i) look like something was being done when in fact it would have achieved nothing and put climate change action into reverse and (ii) to shaft the Greens.
So Arky and co, by all means celebrate the 2009 CPRS as a masterstroke of ALP political strategy, which continues to allow their mortal enemy, the Greens, to be painted as high and mighty wreckers. But don’t fool yourselves that it was genuine policy.
Barnino,
Didn’t the Dept of Environment report that after 12 months of the CPRS under Gillard’s Govt, carbon emissions dropped by 7% or 8%?
If that was a non genuine policy, give me those every time.
Exactly, Pollietragic. Had Rudd’s 2009 version been legislated it would ave been part of the furniture and much harder to campaign against, and its numbers adjusted according to the politics. I’ve voted Green in most elections to keep pressure on the ALP, but it’s past time to let this history go and back what is possible now.
No. The CPRS was the anaemic scheme that Kevin Rudd negotiated with the then Turnbull led opposition. Despite getting agreement with the Liberal party, the senate voted against the scheme, and soon after that Malcolm Turnbull was deposed as party leader.
The scheme introduced by Julia Gillard, after negotiating with the Greens, was the Carbon Pricing Mechanism (CPM), one part of the Clean Energy Futures package. History shows that this was indeed successful in reducing Australia’s carbon emissions, which began to rise again after Tony Abbott repealed it.
OK Scott, no-one knows whether Rudd’s CPRS would have had a beneficial impact initially, whether it would have survived politically, or whether it was capable of gradual improvement. For my part, I believe all three, probably.
At the very least, if introduced when the Libs were divided (one party room vote in it when Abbott eventually took over) and the population supporting action, I believe it and its successors would have had a good chance of survival and success.
True “the senate voted”, but with the two Lib defections the 5 Greens and 32 Labour could have got the legislation up, by one vote. Turnbull was already deposed when it was finally killed off.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2009-12-02/senate-kills-off-emissions-trade-laws/1165856
Rudd (so advised by Gillard and Swan, whom I otherwise admire) squibbed “the greatest moral challenge of our time” and that was the end of effective majority public support. The probability that something like that was bound to happen is exactly why Brown’s Greens were foolish, in my view now and at the time, to refuse what was on offer, whatever Rudd’s initial motives. (I have little time for Rudd, but I’m not so cynical about those.)
We do know that the Gillard-Greens’ CPM plus CEF worked, but they did not survive.
If the CPRS had been adopted we could hardly be worse off than we are now.
I have voted Green since 2004, including 2007 and 2010, in the hope that the ALP would move on climate. Tactically, it has come to nothing. I’ll be voting Labour this time.
Bernard, without the help of the biased MS media, the coalition would never win an election.
The fact that the lies, fabrications, omissions and distortions published in these rags, have led to election wins for the coalition, does make progressive voters justifiably very angry indeed.
A fair go comes in many forms.
Heard Angus Taylor blathering about Fisher’s modeling on RN this morning.
When people like Taylor bang on, I don’t know why journalists don’t query them about the LNP’s 2013 pre-election claim that they could build an NBN faster and cheaper than Labor’s “gold plated” version. Well, as it turns out, the LNP’s version, whilst being technologically crap, has now taken twice as long as they “modeled” and is costing probably more than Labor’s FTTP model. Great modelling guys.
If the LNP can’t even correctly cost their own policies, I’d totally disregard their modelling of other peoples policies.
Good one Bjb. I don’t hear anyone in the media question the Morrison Government about the abject failure of their NBN debacle. That train wreck is still happening. Why too is it that the media promote the LNP as ‘great money managers’? They gave half a billion dollars to some mates up on the Great Barrier reef, $80 million to some unknown mate in the Cayman Islands for some floodwater and $30 million to old mate Rupert. Failure of journalism? A huge one.
And the Howard/Costello budgets left us with structural deficits that every subsequent government has struggled to deal with.