Before it is anything else, the Morrison government’s failure in the vaccine rollout is somewhat bewildering.
There are some who are arguing that this debacle is deliberate — for what reason, I don’t fully understand. I am always up for a conspiracy theory, so if any evidence is available, send it on. In the absence of such, however, I’ll continue to believe in the stuff-up.
Morrison gained points for his “mid-period” handling of COVID-19 (after the early debacle, and before the current debacle) with the national cabinet model; that effectiveness can now be seen as largely the product of state governments.
Left to its own devices, the federal government has shown every feature with which we have come to be familiar: clownish incompetence, including a giveaway privatisation tender bonus, followed up with slick PR.
Can this absolute disaster finally be breaking through, in the general public’s view of the Morrison government? It’s very hard to say, although the nature of the debacle should make it so. This is the most basic failure in a government’s duty, to ensure public safety against capricious or unnecessary suffering.
Yet the very nature of COVID-19 has tended to hold off the full reality of the pandemic. The fact that it overwhelmingly affects the very old, with not many years left, and the disabled and chronically ill, who are “pre-marginalised”, has held off the full force of this challenge to life, and the seriousness of the Morrison government’s failure to address it.
COVID-19 is a rehearsal for a catastrophe — the next pandemic, the one that doesn’t discriminate in its victims. Indeed, the new COVID variants are a first instalment of this; the so-called “Indian variant” has an R number of six, a substantial jump in its ability to infect, compared to earlier strains.
What has not changed, thankfully, is its lethality profile, which appears to be relatively set.
Perhaps that is why there is no general air of crisis with regard to these new developments and failures. Even in Melbourne, where the slow rollout has contributed to what is likely to be a fortnight-long lockdown, there is no sense of palpable anger, so far as one can tell. If anything, there’s a sort of Dunkirk spirit taking over, although I suspect this varies from area to area.
Are we getting used to this? Are some of us starting to enjoy it? That may be the reason why there’s no real political cut-through by Labor on the matter — although, once again, it’s hard to tell anything.
Maybe a whole bunch of people have quietly decided that ScoMo stuffed it, and they’ll give that funny little guy — you know, whatsisname — a chance at the next opportunity. But the widespread lack of anger at Morrison & Co is… troubling.
The right has spent a long time training people to expect nothing from the governments they elect. Is that what is happening now?
Should that be the case, it has been assisted by the mainstream media, and in particular the absence of any strong left-of-centre force, now that The Age and the SMH have been nobbled by Nine (the Fairfax papers would once have been tearing the government a new one). News Corp will run interference for the Morrison government until the end of time. Commercial news is braindead. The ABC doesn’t have the reach. There is a vacuum at the heart of the public sphere which benefits the right.
That said, Labor’s difficulty in making a case against the government is largely due to the fact that some time ago they got out of the case-making business altogether. Concluding that there was no forum in which to make complex arguments, and that the public’s attention was now too fractured for them to receive anything that was very joined-up in nature, they have relied on both a small target strategy and the old “never interrupt the enemy while they are making a mistake” argument.
Well, OK, but there are limits to the latter strategy. You’ve got to actually have an army in the field to sweep in as the enemy collapses, with a plan in place and an alternative on offer. Take the “don’t interrupt” strategy too far, and people become accustomed to the idea there is no alternative to the shambles and disengage from politics altogether. That’s possibly what is currently happening.
Labor has taken the gamble that the relative absence of an alternative program is more likely to give it victory this year or next. If it’s wrong, it will suffer a double penalty: not gaining government, and having wasted three years when it could have been filling out the idea and making the case of an alternative.
The fact that the government remains substantially intact, despite extraordinary, malign incompetence, real disdain for governing, and indifference to the welfare of its own people, is a testament to the right-shifted nature of the Australian polity.
But it may also be the acid test of Labor’s now decades-long commitment to not arguing a clear alternative. If you can’t gain purchase during the chaotic mismanagement of a pandemic, when can you? Bewilderment is becoming a general condition.
“The fact that the government remains substantially intact, despite extraordinary, malign incompetence, real disdain for governing, and indifference to the welfare of its own people, is a testament to the right-shifted nature of the Australian polity.” As precise a statement of where we are politically as you are likely to find.
And “Commercial news is braindead. The ABC doesn’t have the reach. There is a vacuum at the heart of the public sphere which benefits the right.” is another gem from GR that strikes at the very heart of Labor’s problems.
It bothers me no end that Labor luminaries have to stoop to Sky After Dark or Sunrise to get some coverage, and even more that the ABC invite the right wing sharks on to current affairs in an effort to strike apparent balance.
Actually the ABC has far greater physical reach than any other terrestrial broadcaster.
It is often the only radio/TV receivable in much of this much wide, browned off land – the only reason the gNats don’t support the IPA agenda of privatisation/abolition.
Whether it has a receptive audience, sans the Clockwork Orange treatment, is a different matter.
I think it’s got more to do with our totally inadequate Constitution. The standards of practise have been left to expected norms rather than being legislated it or encoded. The LNP have zero respect for societal norms and ethics.
Bingo. There are no formal mechanism to punish the incompetence and corruption, so they’ll just continue to ministerial reshuffle dance until we forget about it all.
That’s right. Citizens have no power whatsoever to discipline parliamentarians.
Re your final sentence, a Constitution or Bill of Rights are only useful when honour & integrity are the norm.
That ceased to be the case last century.
Thanks to othertrucking Howard.
Actually started in 1975, with the Whitlam dismissal.
Oh yes a bill of rights, studiously avoided by both the LNP and the OLP (Other Liberal Party) in our constitution would go a long way to stop this increasingly rapid descent into fascism.
Hmm, the US has a bill of rights…
Yes, and it does offer significant protections.
Not against their descent into fascism it seems.
No, they remain just ahead of us.
Correct. The IPA & LNP have demonstrated repeatedly their lack of any morals or ethics.
I bet Scomo and his band are laughing at the end of everday. Sitting in their relaxing rooms, smirking, thinking of the opposition and saying, with the chink of glasses ringing out “so where the bloody he’ll are yas?”. Hehehehehehahahu…
I don’t know – it’s all so disheartening.
I am probably desperate to vote Labor (just to change the present “government”), and if they could show even a glimmer of vision or a future plan, that would make it a lot easier to vote for them. They are barely on the attack, and there are so many targets..
There is no doubt a very cunning plan which will be revealed in due course, meanwhile win or lose the comfortable life style continues.
My theory, Vernon, is that the Liberal Party are deliberately making as many errors and presenting as many targets as possible in a sort of swarm defense (Rundle; take note). it’s the same principle that large flocks of birds or schools of fish use in order to distract predators; so many targets tends to confuse rather than present obvious choices.
They are thick . Fact . Simpleton . into boys power and dont get nuance or how bad a lie looks even when you deny the lie in front of camera but still denied. ICAC. And make it retrospective. And why not a Star Chamber… maybe they deserve it . It needs a clean up just like in the days when Bjelke was the only man and in the dead of night pulled out swathes of culture…. Now they are doing this in the hard light of day.. But with an ICAC we can force all governments to account….
Labor has to win office first before a proper ICAC will happen, it never will under this mob no matter what they promise.
Look at how successful ICAC has been in ridding NSW of… the lot.
You think they have been successful? For everyone they find there is another nest waiting to be exposed.
Corruption is rife in N.S.W Politics
I agree. That was litotes.
I actually, in my very cynical moments, wonder if this is precisely what they are doing.
They did offer a great alternative last time around, we just decided a tiny tax cut for the plebs, and a giant tax cut for the rich, was a better idea
Is ‘decided‘ the correct word?
That suggest a cognitive ability demonstrably, and woefully, lacking in the electorate.
I remember pre-2019 there was an idea how good it was that Labor presented a clear alternative to the government. There were just some snarky voices saying maybe it wasn’t such a great idea to present such a big target for a scare campaign. In the end the Libs even invented a few extra policies, like a death tax, to campaign against. It worked a treat. An incompetent lying rabble who had lied, bungled and fought through terms of place holding government got another term.
Interesting article, despite some bias.
A lot of people will now pile on for the usual “Scotty from marketing” bash, which achieves nothing.
Your issues you discuss apply more widely that you explored.
Look at the state oppositions who are largely in the same position, unable to lay a glove on the incumbent.
We have an “opposition” issue in Australia.
Look at the Victorian Liberals for example, who are feckless, despite repeated Victorian quarantine breaches, highest number of deaths and lockdowns. Without wishing to bash the Victorian Labor government, not one glove has been landed by the Libs, and this is truly remarkable.
Look at the WA opposition, recently slaughtered in the last election.
Look at the NSW Labor party who have practically zero chance in the next NSW election if the Nationals win and the leak of ALP votes in the Upper Hunter means anything.
Look at the last QLD election.
No opposition party at any level is a force to be reckoned with, and its a real problem, because without viable alternatives the electorate are putty in the hands of the incumbent government.
A failure of democracy perhaps? We need competing forces in a democracy for it to work, but we have single party states and single party Feds.
“We need competing forces in a democracy for it to work”
Yes. There are other requirements too, but that one is necessary. Since Labor is aligned with the Liberals on most big issues, such as accepting neo-liberal economics and no clear commitment to tackle global warming, and both of them are beholden to corporate interests even if not to the same degree, each election looks like a choice not between opposing teams but whether to pick the First XI (the one on the playing field) or the Second XI (sat on the reserves bench, looking sad).
This is such a nonsense argument. We have compulsory voting. It isn’t like hordes of left wing voters are staying home because Labor fails to provide a “real left” alternative.
So far as your remark it relevant, it only proves my point. Every voter, if law abiding, must choose which of the two parties to put ahead of the other: so, as I said, to pick either the First or Second Eleven.
So true – “..Labor is aligned with the Liberals on most big issues..” such as the Draconian security laws they wave through.
Presumably in the (vain) hope that they’ll be able to use them the next time they stumble into office.
One day, perhaps but the next Labor PM is probably still in kindie.
Opposition is almost the same salary without any of the work.
I sometimes wonder. I really do. I wonder, if Oppo salary was half that of Govt salary, that it might sharpen them up?
As a group they are so lazy that, if sitting on a hot stove, they’d just complain rather than move.
The Conversation and punditry does not detract from the fact the media is now largely propaganda, I pay for this outlet. Most don’ they accept blithely the opinion of jocks and trickle down economic 101; it aint working when it is a cartel and the market is so corrupted wake up… taxation is now focused on the smalll and middle. There is little nuance all these so called glib explanations are just too simplistic. It is expensive and needs excellence to run a place. We did fine and were punching gin science and education before the import of smart people to take up Australian jobs… Now it we need to import skilled workers… Our poor kids …. and the panellists many self interested and or just glib and incorrect smugly acquiesce or bully… It is a great big scam…. When Abbot wanted to cut the red tape it is akin to what Trump did; the big boys with money wanted to take over the money making ventures ; health, data, car parking infrastructure, disability. .. that is why it looks like the economy has grown cause of the money washing around…. but it is a cartel just like the 2 big multinational supermarkets…. no room it is not a capitalist free trade economy it is an duopoly … And Albo is gunna have to get ugly and mean to wake the $$%% up the populace .. or we will do it for him… cause people are angry where I hang out….
Gough, Hawk and Keating had one overriding trait. They had plenty of mongrel in them. One look at our opposition front bench and it becomes quite obvious what’s missing.
PJK was all mongrel and no ability, Hawke was able but lazy when not corrupt and the country did not deserve Great Gough – as with Barry Jones, viz “Noodle Nation“.
Hanrahan was right, we’s rooned!
Ah, Gough. I refer you to his campaign speech at Blacktown for a real vision of vision, and a sad insight into how much remains to be done (and repaired).
Well worth reading by the kiddies –
https://electionspeeches.moadoph.gov.au/speeches/1972-gough-whitlam
Yes, that’s the one. If only…
We shall not see his like again.
Yeah courage is missing, insipid lot they are in Opposition. What is needed is someone who is not afraid, not some University hack who is to timid to do anything.
Someone with a gutter mentality and who attacks the ship of fools in L\NP without fear.
What there is now is brow beaten, insipid, sad reflection of what used to be.
When the ultimate leadership pond is restricted to those from NSW whose environment is the 2GB shockjock studio and the opinions centred around the Rooty Hill pub, you can’t expect anything approaching vision.
Australia is becoming a contentedly unimaginative country .
Donald Horne found that to already be the case half a century ago.
Yeah, but I get the impression that the luck is fading in the noonday sun.
Not so much fading as being monetised asap and sold to the lowest bidder, via secret tender.
Well, corruption IS all the rage these days – quite the fashion.
This article sums up the current political battleground perfectly….a Coalition that has the might of mainstream media to control the narrative, as well as the power to blitz any announcements the Opposition is foolhardy enough to make. Or if it can’t blitz, then it can just ignore.
So how does an opposition proceed, with the odds so heavily stacked against them?
Firstly, the advantage of incumbency means that in any election, it’s more about the government losing than the opposition winning. Morrison has supplied, and is still supplying, tons of ammo. A heavy duty negative campaign centred on the failings of Morrison, and the corruption and ineptitude of his ministers, is the only way forward for the opposition, as far as I can see.
Secondly, have policies, but don’t lead with them, and take the opportunities of government stuff ups to announce your alternative solution. But don’t let your plan become the issue, the spotlight always has to be on Morrison’s failed plan.
The only question is, does the ALP actually have a campaign like this, all figured out and ready to go? The waiting is nerve wracking, like being a front line redcoat, musket aimed, waiting on the command to fire which seems to be taking ages! “Hello?!? Is there anyone in charge back there? I can see the pimple on the nose of the advancing enemy!”
But assuming the ALP have weapons to launch, the first salvos need to circumvent the mainstream media …so billboards, texting, social media, postal drops, town hall talks, door knocking etc. These low tech methods still have a place, and are hard to combat too.
Regarding telly, expect the Murdoch stations to be the last to get on board, but I have noticed that the other stations, though inclined to back the government, can’t resist the allure of a negative campaign full of outrages and scandals and profligate spending of “your hard earned tax-payer dollars”, and if enough programs like Sunrise etc start to echo the negative message, Murdoch will reluctantly fall into line too. No one likes backing a loser, as we saw in the last days of the Trump/Biden election dramedy, and Rupert will switch sides if he sees Morrison on the nose.
But I do wish they’d give the order to fire muskets soon!
Agree, but further, look at the rusted on (for now) dominant legacy media demographics, allowed over time by legislative changes or ‘salami tactics’ precluding a fair and balanced media, which are dominated by baby boomers and oldies, who are catered to (this will continue).
The ‘message’ that political advertising etc. promotes is about getting people talking and reinforcing positively or negatively, via word of mouth; Labor needs to pull out all stops in creating the same space outside of legacy media via social media and local face to face.
Legacy media has an inherent weakness (due to hollowing out) i.e. already misses younger and/or more diverse generations, the target demographics are ageing and will start declining; but now bypasses most regional and/or local communities in news as they they are irrelevant while voting mostly LNP….
Friendly Jordies gets 150,000 to 300,000 views per YT video… doesn’t match Sky News YT but its high for alternative politics…