Scotland Island, in Sydney’s wealthy northern beaches, is an exclusive community accessible only by ferry. It’s where Labor Senator Kristina Keneally lives, and it’s a world away from Fowler, the south-west Sydney electorate that is one of the most multicultural in the country.
This morning Keneally confirmed the rumours were true: she is running in Fowler, replacing retiring MP Chris Hayes. For Labor it’s a quick fix, endorsed by NSW factional heavies that solves a messy battle over Senate ticket order, and puts Keneally, one of its strongest parliamentary performers this term, in the lower house.
But to those outside the party machine (and even some within), her appointment is a huge missed opportunity to improve diversity in federal Parliament, and an insult to the people of south-west Sydney.
Star power v factions
Labor has always wanted Keneally in the House of Representatives. As NSW premier, Keneally took the fall for a deeply rotten Labor government at the 2011 election. Years of smart television punditry were enough to wash away the stench of Eddie Obeid and Joe Tripodi, as Labor made her its star candidate to run in the safe Liberal seat of Bennelong at a 2017 byelection.
Despite an energetic campaign, Keneally fell well short. As luck would have it, former senator Sam Dastyari had fallen from grace over China ties around the same time, and within a month Keneally replaced him in the Senate.
Since then, her rise through the ranks in federal politics has been swift. But that rise has often upset the delicate factional balancing act that runs the ALP, where personal favours and arcane alliances are so often prioritised over talent and merit.
Keneally’s emergence as one of Bill Shorten’s go-to attack dogs in the 2019 election was a rare positive takeaway from that doomed campaign. It meant Opposition Leader Albanese wanted her on his frontbench from the outset. That demand was, rather absurdly, opposed by her own NSW right faction because a promotion would have come at the cost of demoting one of its current frontbenchers. Eventually it was resolved by Ed Husic, a well-liked western Sydney MP and Australia’s first Muslim parliamentarian who stepped aside for Keneally.
As Labor’s home affairs spokeswoman, Keneally has been a strong Senate performer for the party. She’s got a keen eye for turning an estimates soundbite viral. But once again, her future came up against factions. She didn’t have the numbers to budge Deborah O’Neill (exactly the point if you don’t know who that is), also from the right, from the top position on the NSW Senate ticket. O’Neill has the backing of the powerful Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association. Number two on the ticket is kept for the left, in this case Jenny McAllister. The third spot hasn’t won since 2007.
Diversity takes the fall
In a statement Keneally said she was there to fight for the community of south-west Sydney: “I want to step up and fight for Fowler in the House of Representatives, for every suburb, every faith community, every small business, every family.”
But parachuting in a favoured candidate could alienate many. Labor’s solving its factional bunfight means Tu Le, a young Vietnamese-Australian backed by Hayes to run in the seat that includes Cabramatta, could miss out.
“She has no connection at all to the community,” Le said of Keneally yesterday.
Just last year, Keneally courted controversy by calling for Australia to reduce its temporary migration intake after the pandemic, arguing Australians “should get a fair go and a first go at jobs”.
Osmond Chiu, a research fellow at progressive think tank Per Capita, says the angst wasn’t so much about whether Keneally would be a good MP, but that it symbolised how pursuing diversity in Australian politics is always sacrificed.
“If diversity doesn’t even matter in the most diverse seat in Australia, when is it going to matter?” he said.
Some of Chiu’s recent research found state parliaments are lagging behind on racial and cultural diversity compared with their counterparts in the UK, US and Canada. So far, Australia’s 47th Parliament is unlikely to bring a significant improvement on cultural diversity.
Fowler is just the kind of seat where the party of multiculturalism could try to reflect the community. Instead, as Le said, Labor’s diverse voters continue to be taken for granted.
But this kind of short-termism could seriously hurt the party: Labor’s vote went backwards in the multicultural Sydney suburbs at the last state and federal elections. The Liberals are watching closely, and are starting to preselect more culturally diverse candidates in that old heartland.
Chiu says there’s a misconception that preselection issues like this only anger party insiders. Instead, it does longer- term harm to the party’s reputation among a generation of non-white voters: “There’s a failure to understand the message it sends, especially to a new generation of younger people from those backgrounds, that organised politics isn’t for them.”
What do you think of Kristina Keneally being given an easy ride into the lower house? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name if you would like to be considered for publication in Crikey’s Your Say column. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
The NSW ALP has a bloody death wish. With a fool of a premier, a hazardous health minister and a massive bungle of the whole COVID shebang, they cannot put by far their most effective state senator at the top of the ticket, or even second, but they must parachute her into a safe seat at the expense of potentially a very fine candidate. Fair dinkum you idiots.
The reason why is because of the Shoppies union and their insistence on O’Brien being top of the ticket.
The shoppies (aka the DLP/Catholic Church) are an absolute blight. Does anyone know what happened to the other retail workers union that set up in opposition to them and their cosy deals with the major retailers?
Sidney
I think it only fair that if you are referring to the Shoppies Catholic association it is appropriate to mention Krinstina is a practicing Catholic, educated at Notre Dame College and the Australian Catholic University. She is also conservative in relation to a number of women’s social issues and extremely ambitious.
Having been married to a feminist of the finest order (now deceased and much loved) I would not put Kristina into that catagory – more self promotion than support for the sisterhood. Willing to be manipulated by conservative males as a token achiever like many of the women in the LNP.
Just my observations.
Interesting as the Shoppies prefer O’Brien not your version of a female practising Catholic
O’Neill, not O’Brien, I think.
Cannot agree with your assessment of Kristina. Did she not say in the NSW parliament “I’m nobody’s girl”
That was when she was trying to disclaim ownership, and installation as premier, by Obeid – when in fact she was/is a creature of the Machine, of which Obeid was merely a disposable,and about to be incarcerated, functionary.
There is no other reason for her having risen, so high so quickly, without trace except SussexSt preferment – certainly nothing to do with ability or noteworthy performance.
Just be glad it is not centipede – it can shoot itself only in two feet.
As the Invisible Man said this morning of “nobody’s girrrl“, “she has been a friend of mine for many years“.
So, that’s alright then.
I’m glad Keneally is going to the lower house. It would have been much better if they had tapped on the shoulder some old white male who’s never going to contribute much. Would have been really good to see Tu Le in parliament.
So many to choose from – Grayndler would be favourite with its useless lifer, a time server who embarrasses even friends and would be supporters.
Agree. She’s a good operator, but why just take the ‘easy’ path instead of some house cleaning….
O’Neill has the backing of the Shoppies, the Catholic women hating union.
The union that sold out its mostly female membership when it supported the removal of penalty rates.
The union with predominantly female membership whose male leaders oppose abortion and are the staunch right wing Catholic factional leaders.
The union that was expelled from the AWU and brought back in by Hawk Julie to improve his chances of election.
Give me Kristina Keneally any day
Quite like Kristina, but this stinks.
All good points, but a storm in a tea cup. Keneally is required in the lower house and some cultural bruises to achieve that is apparently necessary.
I’m with you, KK is needed there when Labor takes government from this mob of useless, no talent, below average IQ, joke of a government.
The KK hubbub might all be a bit premature. I saw Albo on TV last night talking on Covid for a lot longer than the usual 2 second cameo that he is usually allowed by the news networks – whilst that prima facie might be thought a good thing, at the end of his segment I had the overwhelming feeling that this guy is just not convincing and is not going to cut it as a potential PM with the majority of the electorate. And I desperately want them to win.
The more exposure he receives, the worse it is for Labor – it’s just amazing that it has taken Moloch to realise that AA is Labor’s worst enemy.
It’s only human to despise Scummo & his uglies but an angel could find nothing to commend AA.