For public consumption, there are four Scott Morrisons. There’s the daggy dad (how good is the daggy dad?); the serious leader (see agitprop photos of Scott-at-desk); the smarmy dismisser (reserved for parliament and the media); and, most rarely, righteous anger Scott.
We saw righteous anger Scott in full incandescence last week, calling a snap press conference in response to a tweet and expressing Australia’s national outrage at a faked image depicting something which Australian special forces soldiers are actually accused of doing in Afghanistan. Scott, described by the official transcription service we also call mainstream media, was “visibly angry”. Ooh.
Scott, a man of strong moral conviction, gets occasionally exercised to high emotion by truly dreadful things. It’s instructive for all of us, since our leader sets the ethical tone, to reflect on the kinds of matters that do, or do not, invoke his moral rage.
The high (or low) point of outrage for Scott was, of course, the 2018 outbreak of needles in strawberries. That was so horrific that Scott made new laws to punish the “grubs” and “cowards” responsible.
In 2020, undeniably the worst year in living memory, Scott has actually remained mostly sanguine, getting righteously upset very few times. The Chinese tweet, obviously; the Maritime Union of Australia, whose go-slow industrial action in Sydney was — according to Scott — stranding 40 container ships at sea. The story was entirely untrue but Scott’s anger looked genuine.
There was toilet paper panic buying, which made Scott really testy (“Stop it!” he admonished us). Journalists saying “bonk ban” provoked a similar prime ministerial dressing down, because the subject of ministers having sex with their staffers is very serious and should be talked about with serious words.
But the most “disgraceful” act of 2020, which “appalled and shocked” Scott to his core, was the revelation that Australia Post had given Cartier watches to four senior executives. Heads must, and did, roll over that national shame, despite the absence of illegality, corruption or even a policy breach.
As for the things that a casual observer would think might (but most definitely did not) have raised even a flicker of moral indignation in Scott’s puritan heart this year… well, the list is quite long:
- The bushfires (I don’t hold a hose, mate)
- Climate change’s acceleration
- The Great Barrier Reef’s condition being declared “critical”
- COVID-19
- The Ruby Princess debacle, hotel quarantine failures (except in Victoria), or the 682 COVID deaths in federally regulated aged care
- Black deaths in custody or the failure to “close the gap” yet again
- Neo-Nazis on the rise
- The aged care and disability services crises
- The family and domestic violence crisis and the related deaths of 43 women this year
- International students trapped here with no access to welfare support
- Australians stuck overseas
- The universities’ death spiral
- The near-death experience of the arts during the pandemic
- Robodebt’s $1.2 billion black hole or the death and untold suffering caused by it
- Sports rorts
- Alan Tudge’s long list of acts that make his ministerial position untenable
- Endemic sexual harassment in institutional settings including parliament, ministerial offices and the High Court
- Spending $4000 an hour to fly private citizen Mathias Cormann around the world begging for the top OECD job
- The Biloela family celebrating 1000 days in detention
- Refugees generally, some of whom have been in detention for seven years now
- Gladys Berejiklian’s sudden self-reveal as a latter-day Lucrezia Borgia
- Facilitation of money laundering on a grand scale by Westpac and Star Casinos
- The small matter of war crimes allegedly committed by Australian soldiers in Afghanistan.
In fairness, unlike almost all of the above, Scott did not ignore the alleged war crimes, calling them “disturbing and distressing”. But not quite “repugnant” and “utterly outrageous”, like the Chinese tweet. And, unlike the apology Scott demanded from China, there was no prime ministerial call for anything in response to the war crimes revelations apart from his insistence that the armed forces chief back down from his initial call to strip citations from an entire army unit. On that last suggestion, Scott was quite upset too. The unfairness, you know.
My list, no doubt, is incomplete. It’s been a very big year, after all. Our leader has been busy, at least at Bunnings.
It is reasonable to expect him to ration his emotions and, more importantly, choose judiciously when to bring his moral authority to bear on issues of the day and signal to us when we, too, should be upset.
Good to be reminded, then. Cartier watches and a tweet.
Where should the prime minister be directing his anger? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication in Crikey’s Your Say section
A brilliant summation of Hillsong Scotty’s ongoing hypocrisy.
That’s an excellent (and very depressing) list Michael.
I’m still wondering if the Oz electorate will ever wake up to just how bad Morrison is for our country.
I desperately hope so.
Yes, and I suspect that what actually gets him angry, are things like: rivals getting more publicity than him; underlings expressing contrary opinions, and public scrutiny of things that he would rather keep secret.
Scottie from marketing HATES being called out on a plain and simple lie.
He blusters, turns aggressive and then dives into the personality swill.
When finally forced to acknowledge that he did not tell the truth, he tries to bury it in a pile of documents.
I will never forget the way he responded to Waleed Aly’s question about the Coalition exploiting community sentiment against Muslims in the wake of Christchurch, to further the government’s popularity with redneck voters, “No it’s not, I was actually trying to help!” Risibly pathetic.
I look forward to the day when President Morrison uses his confected outrage at a genuine target, untrammelled by his usual politicking. OK, I don’t really – I find the man repugnant and would hate to have to re-visit my opinion of him. It has become apparent that any time Morrison switches to his “I’m angry for Australia” mode, it is solely for domestic political purposes and usually to divert attention away from the latest piece of LNP lying, corruption or incompetence. His “rage” at the tweet was not entirely misplaced, but he isn’t astute enough to chew gum and walk at the same time. He was only able to focus upon the domestic self-promotion aspect wherein he could spout forth his customary jingoistic claptrap and not the foreign policy implications. The former was much more important to him – especially given he needs a distraction from the fact that it was his pompous, “I’m the great global leader” pretensions that triggered the present China malaise, despite that China has clearly been using the cover and distraction of Covid to enhance its world power while “no-one is looking”. It was also his government that for some time went to great lengths to try and cover up claims of Afghan atrocities – using, again, the AFP to carry out politically motivated attacks.
Just goes to show, Illfarest. Give any nationalist leader the opportunity to make radical changes under cover of the pandemic, and they will do so.
So there are four Scott Morrison, I cannot abide one, thanks for nothing.