For some time, national cabinet has been a forum for Scott Morrison to be dictated to by state leaders with more competence, more leadership capacity, and more at stake than a prime minister who’s not up to the job. Last Friday’s meeting was no exception.
The “National Plan to transition Australia’s National COVID-19 Response” makes “early, stringent and short lockdowns” the centre of the current phase (“vaccinate, prepare and pilot”, whatever that means). Gone are the days of Morrison hectoring Daniel Andrews for locking down Melbourne and praising the Berejiklian government’s steely determination not to go into lockdown. Indeed, gone are the days when Berejiklian was disinclined to lockdown early. You can bet a substantial proportion of the NSW state domestic product that she now wishes she’d gone a whole lot earlier.
According to the plan, even once 70% of the >16 population has been vaccinated, lockdowns are “less likely but possible”. Even once 80% of the target population is vaccinated, “highly targeted lockdowns” remain on the menu.
That is, lockdowns as far as the eye can see. In Sydney, home of the Damascene conversion to the virtues of confining people to their homes, there’s limited evidence so far that weeks of lockdown have moved the city any closer to an end. The outbreak in south-east Queensland confirms that the latest variation of the virus is brutally effective at finding and exploiting any weak link. Another major economic centre is likely to spend a fortnight in lockdown at least. Only West Australians, protected by the Nullarbor and a premier hell bent on keeping the slightest risk out of his state, can be relatively calm — and even then a quarantine slip-up could send Perth into lockdown.
The transition plan is all well and good — as were the previous Plans and Strategies — but there’s a palpable sense that at the moment the only one actually in charge is the virus itself. The federal government has already sidelined itself; now state premiers, currently charged with running the country’s health and economic security, are at the mercy of a virus that defies all efforts at suppression, and leaving it to the population to save themselves by getting vaccinated. Rarely have governments faced such a crisis with so limited a range of tools, and been so dependent on their own citizens to deliver a resolution.
It’s here that the lack of national leadership is harmful. The responsibility of the Morrison government for vaccination and quarantine failures (along with the states) has been endlessly rehearsed, along with the amuse–bouche of idiocy that was the COVIDSafe app. And in time that should be subjected to proper scrutiny by some form of judicial review. Morrison’s own failings have been on regular display. But perhaps of equal significance is the opportunity cost of not having an effective national leader, one who could give Australians reassurance and a sense that someone was in charge and knew what they were doing; a leader who is trusted, who understands the idea of national unity and can make people believe in the “all in it together” rhetoric that induces cynicism when projected by current leaders. For once, the nostalgia for the golden years of Bob Hawke isn’t misplaced.
In the absence of such leadership, the reliance on Australians to do the right thing and get a jab in a timeframe that will make the “National Plan” anything less than a multi-year endeavour looks problematic. The biggest driver of vaccinations appears to be having a major outbreak and a lockdown that focuses people’s minds on the risk of getting ill. Will we have to go through that in every state before we reach the kind of ambitious vaccination levels spelt out in the transition plan? Are we still going to be doing this next autumn?
A competent and effective national government would have:
…but then the words competent, effective or national don’t really apply to the Morrison Government.
Your added item, number 4 , adds volumes. It’s hard to keep track of this government’s kleptocratic behaviours. Seriously: will our planet recover from much more of the LNP? Vote early, Vote planet.
Has anyone noticed, that talk of an election has completely disappeared? I believe that there is a hope if the election is delayed for as long as possible two things will occur. 1 we the public will have forgiven them and return them gleefully to power and 2, if 1 does not occur the current mob will have had a further 12 months to completely empty the larder into their mates and their own pockets, and place a note to the next poor incumbent, buy more milk please the cupboard is bare.
Rather than adding to the general misery, the various state border closures have helped to prevent uncontrolled na tionwide spread. Indeed, the efficacy of the initial WA border closure was recognised by the High Court.
I think there is something of a population density differential between the WA/SA and WA/NT borders and the VIC/SA, VIC/NSW, SA/NSW and NSW/QLD borders.
At every point of the pandemic, Morrison & his coterie of vastly incompetent ministers & secret privatised advisers have made the wrong decisions & then lied about them. Every time this has been exposed, there has been an opportunity to change the priority from Emperor Scotty’s image management to actually looking after the population, and every single time the opportunity has been ignored. There has been no indication that now, even after eighteen months of the proof of Morrison’s ineptitude & hubris, that anything has changed. He continues to lie & propagandise every time he opens his mouth or steers policies.
It’s not changing. He’s not getting any better at this Prime Ministering game. He just keeps getting his hair fixed so that he looks good in the mirror while he practices his unintelligible Prime Minister Noises.
The few positive elements, such as the components of Jobseeker/Jobkeeper that didn’t benefit party donors have been the result of others managing to introduce them against Morrison’s wishes when he had choice taken from him.
Nothing is changing.
Not only that, but the pandemic has given cover to historic levels of corruption, crony capitalism & creeping fascism that continue apace.
Eight years of the Murdoch government have been a disaster for this country, with precious few signs that anything will ever get better. We’re past the point of no return, I fear. If anything does improve, it will be by accident, or because Morrison/Murdoch lose their grip somehow.
Fortunately Murdoch has not done as much damage here as he did in the USA and UK, but he is still working on it.
I seriously hope the old turd dies broke, and his evil son gets a bad dose of covid or something debilitating.
How do we know which is the evil son?
Just remember that the choice of the lesser evil is still an evil
“…his unintelligible Prime Minister Noises.”
Love it!
Thanks Bernard, you’ve nailed it.
Yes he is powering along at the moment his analysis spot on and excellent as is this; I urge all to view it
https://www.thejuicemedia.com/honest-government-ad-hotel-quarantine-vaccines/
Whaddya mean, lack of leadership?? We’re all following his personal example and waiting
for Pfizer.
“In Sydney, home of the Damascene conversion to the virtues of confining people to their homes,”
A broad brush, and a little unfair. In the week prior to Gladys announcing a lockdown the letters pages of the SMH (ostensibly a centre-right readership) were pleading with Gladys to get serious and lock all of Sydney down. Nobody I speak agreed that the lockdown-lite was the way to go, certainly not from the eastern suburbs where it first spread. Plus the eastern suburbs responded quickly, as citizens, by getting tested at (then) record levels. It wasn’t the citizens that were reluctant to embrace a lockdown.
The Saturday Paper reported Morrison taking little interest in the national cabinet hook up, at one point getting up to stoke the fire, while the meeting was going! Seriously. Don’t they employ a fire stoker?
Nobody I speak TO …
Less Damascene than Gadarene.
Out of the trough and over the cliff.
Worse than Abbott. At least he wasn’t lazy just stupid.
Abbott was pretty good with the porkies (pies, not barrels), though probably not in the same league as Captain Crapper.