Scott Morrison’s failings as a national leader are once again on display, just as they were earlier in the year. And his response is the same: treat everything as a political problem that can be addressed with announcements and spin.
The outbreaks across the country at the moment — the one that has locked down Sydney, and the one that has locked down the Northern Territory and sent other states into border closures or precautionary lockdowns — are the direct result of the failings of Morrison’s government.
Failure to get even a substantial minority of Australians vaccinated months into the rollout, failure to vaccinate staff in aged care and residential disability care — the one area where the Health Department had full responsibility — and failure to establish an alternative to hotel quarantine nearly a year after being warned of the weaknesses of relying on tourist facilities to accomplish medical goals.
Worse, Morrison is starting to be called on it — by the NSW government, by normally loyal media allies.
Thus the mild but unmistakable whiff of panic emanating from the Lodge where Morrison remains isolated following his not-quite-triumphant G7+ trip. It’s an apt symbol for a prime minister who appears unwilling to, and perhaps is unable to, provide any leadership. His response, instead, has been announcements.
Thus Sunday night’s sudden reversal on AstraZeneca, the vaccine that Morrison, in the face of warnings at the time, bet the house on last year. He encouraged people under 60 to get it, subject to medical advice, without consulting with the states or medical authorities, and in the face of his own expert medical advice.
A characteristic of Morrison in panic mode is that he doesn’t focus too much on the long-term impacts of what he’s doing to fix the short-term political problem. Anything that comes to hand will do to get him through the answer to a difficult question, to the end of the press conference, to the end of the parliamentary week.
Thus it was yesterday: the queue of state medical authorities, health ministers and health groups lining up to say they didn’t agree on AZ was damaging — not merely to Morrison but to the credibility of the vaccination program. Should you get AZ if you’re under 60 or not? “Go see your GP” is the answer from Morrison, who has extended the vaccine indemnity scheme for GPs. And what happens when a young person, encouraged by Morrison to get AZ, gets blood clots, as the numbers say will inevitably happen?
Meanwhile the disaster of the aged care rollout continues, with national cabinet belatedly mandating vaccinations for all aged care workers. Remember when they were all going to be vaccinated by the end of March? The possibility of one of the current outbreaks getting into a nursing home is still a plausible nightmare scenario that will represent a colossal failure by the government.
Health secretary Brendan Murphy, who has already worn the blame for the disastrous “not a race” rhetoric from Morrison, is now the target of leaking to government-aligned media outlets. Murphy will be a handy scapegoat for a rollout gone wrong, but who wears the blame for the stolid refusal of Morrison to consider expanding the Commonwealth’s quarantine facilities until last month?
The announcements are designed to give the appearance of action when, in fact, Morrison is doing nothing. There is no acceleration of the arrival of non-AZ vaccines. There is no mechanism for ensuring all aged care workers have access to vaccination. There is no movement to take pressure off hotel quarantine facilities.
Morrison seems to float above the governing process — a prime onlooker not a prime minister — with plenty of commentary to offer on events but sadly divorced from the mechanics of government and unable to do anything, stirred into movement only when imperiled by the political consequences of his failures, and then merely to announce, declare, enunciate and outline his achievements and how lucky we are to be under his benign oversight.
Tony Abbott used to goad Malcolm Turnbull by accusing him of being in office but not in power. Scott Morrison at the moment seems to be absent from both, leaving the governing of Australia to premiers who have some acquaintance with how to actually get things done. It’s an awful lot of power to hand to a group of men and women unlikely to surrender it easily.
I only read Thea Age, ABC, Crikey and sometimes the Guardian. I watch media watch, Q+A, The Project (and Married at First Sight in the interests of full disclosure). I refuse to pay for Murdoch’s rags so I am left with the impression that 100% of people know Morrison is a fraud. What are those other journals saying? How is it that the latest opinion poll averages are only 51/49 against the government? Do people really not just care? Yesterday’s disclosure of a further $600,000,000 rort barely made a ripple. AAAARRRRRGGGGGHHHHHHH!
And – I just discovered you cannot vote for your own comment!
No worries, I voted for both of them.
The 5 million + population of the Greater Sydney area may have something to do with the 51/49 split. Vic, SA and WA have a somewhat slightly different view.
I am moderately hopeful that Newspoll is based on landline calls (I think) and so hits mainly the middle-aged and elderly, but bypasses a younger generation of mobile-only users. So the result is skewed in favour of the Sky News audience profile. Hope so anyway!
Depending on whose running the polls and what areas/seats are contacted. I am over 70 and never in my voting life have I been contacted for a political poll of any sort. Perhaps it’s the Federal seats I have resided in. Just like all this government’s many rorts they pick and choose which areas get polled
I got robo-polled last night, in Eden-Monaro. Don’t know who was interested. I was given a choice of 5 topics from which to choose the most important to me (climate change and environment weren’t among them). Asked who I would vote for if there were an election, how certain I was to hold to that vote, and my age.
And gender.
Keith Pitt has a similar questionnaire on hie website, with more than 5 options. Not including climate or renewable energy. What an insult to his constituents.
Robocalled two nights ago in Adelaide. Machine questions which I did not answer.
As I said in a earlier piece, “Where are the vultures from Murdoch Media and especially SKY right now” they were always at Dan Andrews and how he mismanaged covid (according to them) in Victoria, and here we have N.S.W in crisis.
Murdoch’s vultures are missing!
Murdoch’s rabies ridden pack of lap dogs
I am 83 DL. And if you are inferring “middle-aged and elderly” responsible for Newspoll call and/or Sky News profile . . . I shall resort to ‘dark arts’ and all your Crikey numerical be turned RED!
I don’t know any over-60s who watch Sky News and I know a fair few. On the other hand we met a man in his 20s out walking one day and all he watched was Sky News. His views were very ill-informed.
Agree about over 60s and watching Sky News, and suspect few younger people watch or read much news at all. The information they get is from whichever social media platform is the one of choice so unless they are politically engaged to begin with – and they’d be in the minority – they tend to be ignorant of what’s happening outside theIr own little circle. And when it comes to voting they probably rely on name recognition from all those blue posters that far outnumber any red or green ones.
Straight out of the late Bob Ellis’s bible. I hope you’re right, but these days, landline surveys would be hopelessly unbalanced.
News poll is owned by Rupert Murdoch.
I also wonder what misinformation the majority of people cheerfully take on board each day. It is a serious worry when coupled with a cynical mainstream journalism that is designed to manipulate rather than to inform.
could find no reference to it in limited news today.
Never forget the master of propaganda, Herr Goebels said you only need to repeat stuff as infinitum and the peasantry will swallow it- looks like we are back there
Die große Lüge
The Big Lie die große Lüge SOPof theRepublicans and their enablers…as well as that ofthe LNP and their enablers here in Australia and the Tories in the UK
The expression, coined by Adolf Hitler,when he dictated Mein Kampf in 1925, about the use of a lie so “colossal” that no one would believe that someone “could have the impudence to distort thetruth so infamously”.
The phrase was also used in a report prepared during the war by the United States OSS in describing Hitler’s psychological profile:
“His primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it.”
The above quote appears in the report, A Psychological Analysis of Adolph Hitler: His Life and Legend, by Walter C. Langer,available atthe US National Archives.
A somewhat similar quote appears in Analysis of the Personality of Adolph Hitler: With Predictions of His Future Behaviour and Suggestions for Dealing with Him Now and After Germany’s Surrender, by Henry A. Murray, October 1943:
“Never to admit a fault or wrong; never to accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time; blame that enemy for everything that goes wrong; take advantage of every opportunity to raise a political whirlwind.
Propagandaminister Joseph Goebbels used it all the time but did not create the idea.
grâce à wikipedia
Is not the above exactly how Trump. Johnson and Morrisonand their enablers behave?
Absolutely and Berejiklian is a classless act
He was sacked from two previous jobs.Please, please, can he be sacked from this one?
Please, please, can somebody find out why he was sacked twice, tell the world, and thereby hasten his political demise?
Could be the missing $185 million dollars from Australia Tourism , or maybe in new Zealand trying to white ant their Tourism board to take it over, John Howard appointed him here and then sacked him with no explanation while the Tory national party N.Z government did the same, maybe an integrity commision could get to the bottom of it, oh hang on, we dont have a federal Integrity Commision , wonder why that is.
https://kangaroocourtofaustralia.com/2020/10/10/scott-morrison-was-sacked-as-managing-director-of-tourism-australia-for-financial-fraud-why-should-we-trust-him-with-our-money-now/
Have a look on the website Kangaroo court. All looks very similar to what he’s up to now.
Moving our money into mates pockets. Smirko.
https://kangaroocourtofaustralia.com/2019/11/02/scott-morrison-left-tourism-new-zealand-in-similar-circumstances-to-his-sacking-by-tourism-australia-why/ Tourism Australia, Tourism New Zealand and something in the Lib party
It would be nice to see him sacked, but any replacement would likely be just as bad- the LNP enjoys a very very shallow talent pool for anything other than corruption.
Google kangaroo court Australia
Hallelujah brother.
It’s what you have to do when you’re doing the work of god.
From https://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/news/politics/2019/06/08/fresh-documents-morrisons-sacking/15599160008252:
Emperor Morrison has no ‘clothes’ and no clue!
What an appalling image you conjure up, Argentina2021!
Must be such a tough gig for a prime minister who does nothing. I think the running of the country should be in the hands of all state premiers, everyone of them is doing the heavy lifting. And why are the feds not getting on building quarantine facilities – can’t be that hard surely. But then I guess smirko doesn’t really care, and thats sad.
He was vaccinated ages ago mate, why should he care what happens now?
And guess what he had the Pfizer vaccine, the one they are refusing to supply in the number requested by Queensland!
Lynne, it is an interesting point you raise. Morrison et al LNP created, empowered National Cabinet to sideline Labor during pandemic. Post pandemic: # Will Premiers for-go their up-graded profiles via fighting to retain a National Cabinet? # What will Labor do should they win or lose up-coming election? One thing is certain Pandorah’s Box opened; and to the last man/woman each Premier will assess options, opportunities? Morrison, or his replacement, has an electoral challenge. Every Australian of voting age knows independent State Premier(s) ‘backs’ carried, contained, the Covid-19 fiasco. Not the National Govt who solely manufactured an Australia-wide fiasco to the detriment of all.
Morrispin had nothing to offer as a politician from day one, his further failing as PM is not surprising from someone whose ambitions
far exceed his meagre capability, it wouldn’t surprise me if he couldn’t tie his own shoe laces.
That`s why you only see him wearing R M Williams boots !
Ah!
Or thongs.