Seven years ago, during the 2013 election campaign, there was a debate at the Broncos Leagues Club in Brisbane — just about the most blokey place you could have, outside of a men’s rights meeting in a UFC changing room I guess.
(In the foyer, they had a statue, over a fountain, of a bronco rampant, and I do mean rampant. You could have hung your coat on that thing. Your club fees at work.)
There, Tony Abbott — remember him? — was spruiking his scheme for paid parental, mostly maternity, leave. It was something not popular with his party, nor much of the base.
In the Q&A a man stood up, not a blokey type, but a tradie, and he said that he supported the idea of extending the existing, paltry arrangements. But Abbott’s idea of making it 1:1 with existing salary up to $150,000 was a deal-breaker for him, and many others, and he wondered why so much consideration was being given to the “pretty little lady lawyer from the North Shore” who would be taking up such a scheme.
With that killing phrase and caricature, the scheme was dead, and faded from the campaign.
The moment returned to mind last week when Tanya Plibersek began spruiking the idea of an Australian pledge of allegiance — part of Labor’s push to ditch its image as, to paraphrase Woody Allen, “inner-city communist homosexual pornographers” and reconnect with the ‘burbs.
That push is worth doing, indeed it’s essential for Labor to do, though the move created a howl of reproach from parts of the left inside and outside of the party.
There was, after the shock election loss, some hope on my part, that Labor might turn things around by having a deep think about what Labor and labour was in 2020, what social class and party was, and what a social democratic should therefore propose.
Faint hope. They’ve gone for the symbols and gimmicks.
Fair enough too, to a degree, to get back in the game. But the crucial art to this schtick is knowing what you can get away with, and, dear me, does anyone really believe that Tanya Plibersek has a deep desire to stand before a flagpole, make the cubs/brownies salute and recite a loyalty pledge?
The trouble for Labor in starting up all this malarkey is that Plibersek is exactly the sort of person people have in mind when they talk about “pretty little lady lawyers from the North Shore”.
Plibersek and her retinue will squawk at that and insist that her family came over on a raft, worked in the slurry pits, she got to uni etc etc… so “pretty* little lady lawyer from Newtown” then.
People outside both Newtown and Mosman make less distinction between them than those within them do. They may like or dislike Plibersek, see her as a good member, but they know who she is, and she ain’t the pledge-making type.
Nor is Chris Bowen, nor Richard Marles, nor Penny Wong. Albo maybe, just maybe, but only ‘cos he looks like a nasho lance corporal on latrine duty.
Indeed, the ham-fisted manner in which Labor has taken up the patriotism cause has the risk of taking them backwards, since it is, to many, so obviously not felt.
When was Australia Day ever about pledges of allegiance, before the day became a culture-war artefact? Wouldn’t it have been better to suggest a barbeque? They could just about get away with that, if they skipped the artisanal sausages and grilled swordfish. And there they could find some way to talk about the nation from within progressive traditions, something felt and personal.
Whatever their class origins, Labor’s leaders may love their country and their society, but they aren’t “patriotic” in the sense they’re trying to dodge up. At the heart of patriotism is an irrationality, like love — you “know” at one level that your country, your lover, is not special, but really, they are — that can’t be faked.
This mildly comical pledge push (a pledge pin! On your inner-city elite uniform!) appears to be a revival of Tim Soutphommasane’s “progressive patriotism” idea, spruiked a decade or so ago before being adopted by Kevin Rudd, and then, for a while, by Ed Miliband and other great political successes.
The problem with Soutphommasane’s formula, which sought to overcome the idea that all progressives think Australia is a racist sinkhole, was that it proposed to remove all concrete content from patriotism and replace it with a series of abstract values, to which we adhere.
It was, in other words, an elite piece of cultural engineering, exactly the sort of thing that the mainstream found suspicious and creepy.
Nick Dyrenfurth, in his recent programme for Labor’s renewal via a return to a more socially conservative — or more, let’s say suburban-aligned — value base, has recommended Soutphommasane’s programme without recognising that it’s in direct contradiction to the reconnection he seek for the party.
The idea of a pledge is exactly that sort of abstract formula that looks like patriotism to people who don’t really know what the passion of patriotism feels like. It’s like that episode in Third Rock From the Sun when they try and work out what the purpose of french kissing could possibly be.
That is a fault with Dyrenfurth’s programme — the general aims of which I agree with — more broadly: it’s an elite re-engineering of the party, in the cause of being less elite.
If followed — and it appears to be influential — it will produce these embarrassments all the way to 2022. And it will always be undermined by Labor’s elites themselves, who won’t be able to keep up the act. Take a look at Victorian Attorney-General Jill Hennessy’s statement today over whether one right-wing culture warrior should get a minor gong or not. Yeah, really crucial issue.
If you’re a pretty little lady lawyer from the northside, that is.
Labor is going to have to find a way to connect to the mainstream from within the progressive tradition. Otherwise it will be on the barbeque, not around it.
*I’m keeping the “pretty” in, here and below, out of sheer gallantry.
One needs to look at progressivism through a lens of *morality*, not empiricism, to understand it.
Labor used to to be seen to stick up for the downtrodden, the workers, the poorer folk who, at the very least, want their kids to jump from a level springboard as the toff kids. Sticking up for poor people can and should be viewed as a moral crusade. (At least with this gedankenexperiment.)
Modern progressivism is much more concerned with immigrants, especially refugees, and race/gender. Hence, obsessing over race and racism (real or imagined), now trumps obsessing over Aussie workers in the suburbs. Because, it’s on a higher *moral* level.
Those white aussies who are perfectly happy with 26/1 and who roll their eyes with good homour at foreign accents they can barely understand, instead of being the ones Labor champion, have morphed into the racist bogeyman whom ‘inner city elites’ try to distance themselves from at all costs. Because worrying about refugees is of a higher purity and virtue-signalling compassion, than worrying about ordinary workers.
The US is way more advanced than we are on this. But as usual we take our queues from them even though our society is very different. But we’re heading that way. The problem is for Labor, I don’t know if the new left and old left are reconcilable.
“One needs to look at progressivism through a lens of *morality*, not empiricism, to understand it”.
There are two problems with your assessment. The first is contained the the quote (above). What, pray,
is “morality” to be founded upon? It seems (it’s not clear) a sense of economic equality or at least
ten bob a day socialism.
Indeed the chard slupers do bang on about (immigration) events in Europe without ever having traveled
or worked there but one requires a definition of “progressive” to make sense of matter. What is intended
by the word “advanced” (last paragraph)? Is the construction of The Wall more “advanced” than the governments successful strategy to avast the queue jumpers from sea?
Frankly (consider the revised European experience) empiricism is the only approach to stable communities.
Multiculturalism has proved most divisive. Assimilation is the effective empiricist approach.
Morality in my case is people wanting to appear righteous and compassionate in order to feel superior to those who aren’t. Then, even more importantly, these people must *tell* others their righteous opinions, so they can *look* like wonderful human beings to others. Drinking soy milk and being vegan is this taken to an extreme. Turning anyone who disagrees into “the other” is a part of this too, but this is natural to all humans and not just progressives.
Whether or not one thinks this morality is really great and everyone should be this way is irrelevant to the fact that this is all a manifestation of our DNA and how we’ve evolved as a species over eons.
‘Advanced’ is not necessarily meant in a positive way, but rather, I could say, the US is *further along* than Australia in this regard. It could be more advanced in a bad way (if that is ones take). (i.e some cancer is more ‘advanced’ than others).
The US has very different racial issues than we do but doesn’t stop the new left in Australia being inspired by the new left over there despite most of their issues not being an issue over here (with the exception of native Americans and Australian aboriginals)
‘This is all a manifestation of our DNA and how we’ve evolved as a species over eons.’
I can vouch for that as my parents were the first apes down from the trees.
Admittedly they didn’t climb down, they were pushed.
You want loyalty to the country? Well how about making people proud(er) of the country. How about making great policy that shows a land heading to the future and honestly attacking all the challenges in its path. How about policies that address and right past wrongs. How about saying ‘no’ occasionally to that land which cannot bear embarking on misadventure without its Australian comfort koala tucked under its arm. How about treating all people with humanity and respect. How about wanting to be seen as a world leader on positive issue. Those few suggestions may make people living in the Land of Oz want to be loyal and to support the country, not some nonsense, once said easily forgotten pledge, or making it compulsory to stand and put one’s hand on one’s heart when anywhere near a flag. Pride drives loyalty, not effusive, myth laden pride, but pride in tangible things that others look to and say ‘Hey, we should do that.’
Yeah totally agree. We could be such an awesome country and be proud of our own existence. We could start with A real genuine world leading Treaty with aboriginal and Torres Strait islander people’s. And actually reckon with our history in a real way.
There was a brief moment when Kevin Rudd came to power when it looked like we’d start to be forward looking on things like China, indigenous Australia and climate change. Seems quaint thinking about it now.
I was in Singapore recently and the cab driver taking us to the airport raved for the whole trip about all the amazing things Singapore is doing – best education system in the world, Moving to all renewables, climate change proofing the city, no homeless people because they have universal housing (!!!).
I love Australia for our wry humour, egalitarian tendencies, union movement, aboriginal and Torres Strait islander culture and history, bloody beautiful country and wildlife. But we’re so stuck in the past with so many things. And it’s us the people who lose out as a result of this, not the fat cat mining barons.
Thank God we have a pretty little Old Boy from Brighton Grammar to tell us what the masses think and the elites eat.
Does anyone think that Jan 26 is about a pledge of allegiance – a US style thing? Masses or elites, has it ever been part of our marking of it?
No more than anyone but Guy could think that Albo at 56 looks like a Nasho lance corporal, most of whom were aged between 20 and 25 when conscription was abolished in 1972.
Now I like to think I’m down with the kids when I see my nieces and their daughters at Christmas but if they don’t get my cultural references I’m happy to be the mad uncle. Irrational I know but that’s love and patriotism for you and I know it’s the real thing because love is never having to say you’re sorry and I know we are two hearts beating as one when it comes to not saying sorry.
The only problem is I can’t keep this up from Christmas through the New Year and all the way to the Australia Day Weekend.
No more than anyone but Guy could think that Albo at 56 looks like a Nasho lance corporal, most of whom were aged between 20 and 25 when conscription was abolished in 1972.
Now I like to think I’m down with the kids when I see my nieces and their daughters at Christmas but if they don’t get my cultural references I’m happy to be the mad uncle. Irrational I know but that’s love and patriotism for you and I know it’s the real thing because love is never having to say you’re sorry and I know we are two hearts beating as one when it comes to not saying sorry.
The only problem is I can’t keep this up from Christmas through the New Year and all the way to the Australia Day Weekend.
I agree that Labor politicians pretending to be right-wing culture warriors is a bad look for them and that they need to find an authentic way of connecting with voters across the ideological divide. I disagree that progressives can’t have a passionate and authentic love of their country. Many of us do but it’s connected to wanting our country to actually BE good and worth supporting, and not just an irrational, ‘anything goes’ love that often characterises abusive relationships.
Colour me surprised though that giving a woman who championed paedophiles an Order of Australia award doesn’t count as an issue worth discussing. It seems us progressives can never have anything we care about read as important – even things that speak to our moral and ethical values – while conservatives enjoy great deal of attention being lavished on even their smallest and most irrational fears.
Well it is worth discussing – for progressives, the knowledge class etc whatever. But this is Labor, not the Greens and many Labor votes wokld either agree with Arndt’s views on a man hating culture, or see it as an utter sideshow. If Labor wants to get rid of that inner city obsessive image, its got to show some discipline
Discipline is the key!
We Old Boys of Greyfriars still talk, forty years on, of how the Head, Dr Furedi, nipped any malarkey in the bud by soundly thrashing the Owl of the Remove and biting the head off the Owl of Minerva. He had to be cruel to be unkind but neither were seen to fly at dusk ever again.
Floreat Letona !
Unfortunately the Norwegian Blue was too quick for The Beak.
The problem with this mission of the ALP to rediscover its meat-and-three-veg roots is that stuff doesn’t exist anymore. They sell house-blend fair trade coffee at Tamworth al fresco cafes these days. You’re more likely to hear Bon Iver than Bon Scott piped through the mall in Bathurst. Labor lost the traditional working class not because its inner city professionals got sophisticated but because they forgot what it was like to get screwed over, exploited and generally pissed upon from a great height. That then left the way open for the young fogies on the right, who’d been derided at uni for their dress sense or lack of it, to vent their fury by rallying the working class around their flag. You don’t win these people back by knowing all the verses to Advance Australia Fair and rediscovering a love for Iced Vo Vos.
Spot on. The ALP is trying to have its neoliberal cake and eat it too.
But I’m not sure how you connect with those pissed-on without alienating the aspirational middle class who are doing pretty well out of the current system, and who feel threatened, fearful, anxious and discriminated-against (yes, really!) if you take away their perks like franking credits and negative gearing.