In the early days of the new year, as Australia grappled with unprecedented COVID case numbers, widespread community anxiety and economic uncertainty, Labor faced a RAT test.
Home COVID tests were in short supply, causing widespread anger. Scott Morrison stubbornly refused to make them free, inflaming that anger. So shadow treasurer Jim Chalmers went on 2GB to announce Labor would… means-test RATs.
“We’ve said all along you shouldn’t miss out if you can’t afford one; that means free for a lot of people,” Chalmers said.
A day later, Chalmers joined Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese to announce that Labor had decided RATs should, in fact, be free… via Medicare.
“We have considered the options and it is clear that this is the simplest, most efficient, fairest and most responsible way to fix the mess that Scott Morrison has made of testing at this critical juncture of the pandemic,” their statement read.
It was a sharp contrast from NSW Labor Leader Chris Minns, who’d called for RATs to be free two weeks earlier. And it’s indicative of a caution which still characterises the Albanese opposition. While it is quick to highlight the many self-inflicted screw-ups and internal divisions of the Morrison government, there’s still a real hesitance when it comes to articulating what it would do differently.
So far, this approach has been enough to stay ahead in the polls — a Resolve survey released today found Labor leads the Coalition on the primary vote, and the gap between Albanese and Morrison as preferred prime minister has shrunk. Newspoll has consistently given Labor an election-winning lead for months.
But the doubts won’t go away. One respondent to the Resolve poll asked what was Albanese’s “vision”, another what “positive impact” had he made. There’s still some grumbling frustration within Labor ranks about how the party doesn’t really stand for anything, and fears that a timid approach won’t be enough to convince undecided voters to abandon the devil they know.
Instead, so much of the Albanese opposition still reads like an attempt to exorcise the ghosts of 2019, rather than provide something new and compelling. The last week has been no exception. Albanese returned to Queensland, one of several trips he’s made to the sunshine state in recent months, a deliberate attempt to try to regain the voters who so dramatically abandoned the party at the last election.
Whatever the wisdom of his approach, Albanese hasn’t been idle, and his presence out in the regions, wooing farmers and tourism operators, was intended to draw contrast with a prime minister who at times seemed uninterested in leading Australia through the Omicron crisis, lest he bring too much politics into people’s summer holidays.
On policy, too, there’s been a deliberate, cautious attempt to not to give Morrison any ammunition and neutralise scare campaigns. In an interview with the Nine newspapers, Albanese talked about “aspiration” and “wealth creation”. It’s language clearly intended to avoid the big tax narrative that scared off self-funded retirees and mortgage belt voters.
The tax reform-inequality stuff is deemed too risky for an election fight, so Shorten-era policies like overhauling negative gearing and capital gains tax are long gone. Climate is also too risky, so the party will head to the election with a 43% emissions reduction target less ambitious than both its last offering and what some big business groups who slammed Shorten’s target now want.
But scare campaigns don’t need policy substance to work. Morrison’s attempt to create a wedge narrative around COVID restrictions are a case in point. When Albanese accused the federal and NSW governments of “letting it rip” in response to the Omicron wave last week, Morrison quickly used it as an opportunity to cast Labor as the party of lockdowns.
“If Labor are for lockdowns, that’s for them,” he said. “My government is for keeping Australia open and pushing through.”
That Albanese said nothing about lockdowns is irrelevant. Plenty of progressive types vocally call for more COVID restrictions, just as some called for more radical climate policies in 2019. It won’t take much for Morrison to conflate the two and misrepresent Labor as the party that wants to take your freedom.
And if a timid opposition can’t provide disengaged voters with a meaningful vision for what their post-pandemic Australia looks like, amid all the white noise of an election campaign Morrison’s last scare campaign might just work.
Should Labor stay below the parapet? 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.
Why is it than no one who leads the alp is good enough for crikey?
Shaun, it is not only the leadership of the party the is not good enough for me (I cannot speak for Crikey), it is very much the party itself.
So Robert, how do you propose to vote to ensure the LNP get no further chances to shag the country to a standstill?
Fairmind, without meaning to appear to be rude, let me just say with the utmost respect, that your post reflects a degree of naivete. You are obviously a younger, less politically experienced person, or perhaps an older person who is a bit slow on the uptake. Your comment is just what the real ‘powers-that-be’ want to hear from those disenchanted with Capitalist Party A, that is, that a vote for Capitalist Party B will be the answer to all of our problems. Such gullibility!
I urge you to read a little more widely Fairmind. It took me many years to wake up to the confidence trick, posed by the ALP/LNP pretend choice.
Now, to answer your question. I live in an electorate (a Blue-Ribbon Liberal seat, as a matter of fact) that is fortunate enough to have a competent “Voices” candidate challenging the sitting Liberal member. Even though I am a member of the Sustainable Australia Party, I will be voting for the Voices candidate as she has the most chance of unseating the sitting Liberal member. I am not suggesting that the Voices candidate will be the answer to all of our problems if she is elected. Her election though (if we are lucky enough to achieve that outcome) will be a small step in the right direction. The (so-called) Labor Party has no hope in this electorate.
a Knobocrat…
Sustainable Australia Party is not a centrist alternative = US Tanton Network of which many in the Party may not be aware.
This is the network of the deceased white nationalist John ‘passive eugenics’ Tanton who like his colleague at ’70s fossil fuel supported ZPG Paul ‘Population Bomb’ Ehrlich was described as ‘progressive’, he’d visited Australia and admired the white Australia policy.
Tanton’s ‘research’ and network of think tanks informs ‘the great replacement’, deflects from fossil fuels/auto, his groups informed Trump White House on ‘(hostile)immigration’ policies (informed by eugenics) and he is the muse of Steve Bannon; to be fair quite a good fit for too many Australians?
Drew, thanks for your response.
I feel that I should inform you that in the 2 or 3 years that I have been a member of the Sustainable Australia Party I have not read, seen or heard anything from the party or any of its members, that could even be remotely interpreted as supporting you allegations.
As you are probably aware, the main goal of Sustainable Australia is to reduce the unsustainable and outrageous immigration numbers that we have seen in recent decades, to a more reasonable level. Of course, this has happened over the last two years by default because of COVID. I noticed that during this time, Sustainable Australia has concentrated on fighting ‘inappropriate development’ in our capital cities; a policy that I totally support.
Just to be very clear too Drew, I support zero-population growth,not only at a national level, but also on a global scale. Unlike Sustainable Australia which argued for immigration to be reduced from something in the order of 200 000 per annum, down to about 70 000 per annum, I would be pleased to see it reduced to zero. This country is already overpopulated.Drew. We also have too many people here who have brought with them religious beliefs and cultural practices that are inimical to a modern society. (And let me get in first – don’t bother with the ‘racist’ guff with me Drew, if that is you are that way inclined, because it fails to register.,)
Anyway Drew, if you have any credible evidence to support your claims then please to not hesitate to provide a link to the source.
Cheers.
Drew’s only response will be the usual memes, clcihes, tropes & boilerplate as always.
Sometimes the paragraphs are rearranged but it’s always the same stuff, presumably on hotkey/F7, not thought involved – Koch, Ehrlich, racism, etc ad nauseam.
Way to go! Yes, really.
I would just like to reassure those 20 (at the time of writing) people who have given me the red down ticks, that I have not changed my views one iota as a result of your negative responses. If you want to change my mind then please present me with logical argument.
Have a great day.
Cheers,
Rob
Don’t hold your breath waiting for any coherent reasoning.
There is clearly a subset here whose sole function is to admonish wrongthink about ‘Labor’.
A couple of rather pertinent observations in your two latest posts.
Thanks Phryne.
Apart from bias and the number of exMoloch hacks on staff, probably for the same reason as the electorate – distrust, disappointment & disgust at the me-tooism of the Invisible Man.
At least the tiny target tactic no longer exists – having become so microscopic as to be lost in navel fluff.
Indeed, with the many man made policy disasters, lies and corruption inflicting Australia, Crikey has found the real cause for concern… the opposition.
What a joke.
Surely the soi disant ‘Opposition’ IS “…real cause for concern…” because it is so utterly useless and unable to deal with this worst of all governments?
Even were it willing, which is not certain – opposition is comfy indoor work, no heavy lifting and attracts a far higher salary than most of the time servers, seat polishers and vat bred apparatchiks could earn in the real world.
So true. It’s their contrarian spirit – it makes them feel suitably cynical and jaded but it’s actually tedious and lacking intellectual rigour.
They are the hipsters of Journalists.
Contrarian for the sake of it.
What intellectuals.
Because they can’t win elections?
Can we be sure, given that they do not appear to have even tried?
Just the usual Labor-bashing from Crikey…DON’T read it. That way they will get over themselves quicker!!
CML it worries me to think what might happen to your heart-rate if you ever take off those rose-colored glasses and you see the real horrors of the ALP! Better to keep them on I suppose in the current climate where it can be very problematic calling an ambulance.
You shoudn’t worry about my heart rate…in my mid-eighties, my heart is just fine! But…I have lived through more Oz politics, of both varieties, than you can only READ about And if you think this putrid government is okay, it is YOU who should take off the ‘rose-coloured glasses’!!
CML I am 74 years old so I am only a few years behind you. If you have been following politics for all your life then no-one should know better than you just what a sham the Labor Party is. You were around when Hawke and Keating pulled their neo-liberal stunt. Surely you remember that.
And just for the record CML, I have never voted for the putrid Liberal Party in my life. The party that would have been quite happy to have conscripted me into the army as cannon fodder to kill innocent Vietnamese who committed no greater crime than that of wanting an independent country; or to be killed or injured myself.
My ‘rose-colored glasses’ came off around 40 years ago when I resigned from the Labor Party.
So what are your realistic options under our voting system?
I am 68 but I can see the need for change.
I will not waste my vote.
You should, given your age and, presumably, experience, know that it doesn’t matter for whom one votes, government always wins.
If voting could change anything it would be illegal.
Peril, the only ‘realistic option’ available for people seeking real and meaningful change, under our current voting system is to put the ALP second last and the LNP at the bottom of the ballot paper.
By voting for the ALP you are only encouraging the this party to follow its limp-wristed pseudo progressive policies.
Peril, at your age you should realize that the ALP is nothing more than a pale imitation of the LNP. It is ‘Liberal Party Lite’. Wake up!!
I am absolutely gobsmacked by the fact that people of your vintage and that of CML’s actually still believe that the ALP has anything of substance to offer.
Perhaps in some people, despair induces cerebral shutdown rather than appropriate rage?
Half a century ago, when it was the common to set off, with a couple of hundred bucks and a backpack O/S, the first thing realised, in the words of the Immortal Sainted Fred Daggs, was “we don’t know how lucky we are!”.
I’ve long advocated that, before even thinking of university, every young person be given a year’s dole & a one way ticket to Europe or, for the really courageous, Asia.
Once they see how the rest of the world lives/survives or, often, doesn’t, they’d be so grateful to come back – especially if they had to earn the return fare in the local economy.
Robert, Individual support is most times directed at one’s ultimate goal.
For me, it is the removal of the LNP from State and Federal government benches for a long time.
While I support your thoughts on rampant immigration I will not be supporting Sustainable Australia by way of a primary vote.
It’s likely they will be around #3 on my ballot. I prefer them the greens.
It’s not usual. Kishor always plays the Devil’s advocate.
Well, I hope he does.
I read it differently – as focused on the issue of trying to dodge LNP scare tactics rather than as a a slam on the ALP per se.
Lets not get trivial and pedantic about Albo. He may well be a “dud”, he may be dull and missing in action, but for gods sake, anyone, even a drover’s dog, is better than the current Prime Minister and his fellow travelers.
Absolutely!
That’s quite a recommendation – “Not quite as appalling as the other bloke“!
So inspiring, it ought to be on the corflutes.
Labor appears to have adopted the same strategy that won the last election for Morrison. All initiatives must be motherhood policies, eg child care, Medicare, secure employment, and then focus on how the country can not prosper under another three years of Morrison by highlighting his lies and failures.
What exactly did Morrison promise last time? Low taxes and not Shorten.
Don’t forget Morrison was expecting to lose.
So was Trump but Moloch had their backs.
Never interrupt your opponent when he is making a mistake.
The Labour Party remind me of Wiley E Coyote. Every now and then Wiley comes up with a plan that should succeed but due to some event of Force Majeure (usually an impossibility of physics) it fails. Instead of trying it again, he discards it and comes up with a new plan destined to fail.
In my opinion this is reminiscent of the Labour party between last election and now. Shorten and Co came up with fantastic policies that were beaten via the lies of the Coalition and Palmer United (recall the death tax and franking credits scare campaigns). Instead of having faith in the electorate’s ability to learn from mistakes, the Labour party has chosen to throw the baby out with the bath water and come up with a Neoliberal lite version of the neoliberal policies of the Coalition.
The Labour party is still shell shocked from its last federal defeat and that shell shock is preventing it from being a real party for change.
Or maybe just part of the trend to never offending anyone?
The latte set mantra is evolution not revolution.
They seem to have missed that’s it’s revolution that drives evolution. Think revolving planet for a start.
Revolution is offensive. That mean’s who ever is responsible for the status quo isn’t doing the job properly. There’s a lot of people getting a lot of hurt feelings in this scenario of constant change, er, I mean evolution, no revolution.
Are you as confused as me?
Who wants a revolution when time-serving is so much easier. Just kiss arse and all your dreams will come true.
Yes indeed. just what I tried to say above. Their attack on negative gearing was the proverbial straw, so they dump everything- STUPID. All they had to do was dump that and keep all the rest. And SELL them to the rlectorate – have the courage to call out Morrison / LNP lies. So I think they will struggle to get in.
Abbott also went to an election with a campaign led by several tenets including no cuts to the ABC, no new taxes, etc.
With the LNP benefiting from conservative editors across the country it would be unwise for any opposition to reveal too much too soon.
There are already examples of how the media has ignored LNP incompetence.
Forget the obvious example of their Covid response.
How about a net zero carbon emissions policy that depends on yet to be invented technology for 25% of their carbon emissions?
The choice this time is serious. If the LNP get back in we’re all lost.