With News Corp openly backing Scott Morrison being replaced by either Peter Dutton or Josh Frydenberg, it’s worth reflecting on the kind of political party a successor would inherit.
Although Morrison is now a serious burden on the Coalition’s electoral hopes and shows no competence or policy substance, the government’s problems don’t end with him.
There are more minor problems such as the loss of talent in the three years since Malcolm Turnbull was ousted, and poor quality ministerial staff. But the overwhelming problem is serious divisions over fundamental issues.
Consider the policies over which the government is deeply conflicted:
- On climate and energy, it remains paralysed, incapable of any meaningful policy, having come close to ripping itself apart even over a meaningless 2050 target. A rump of extremist Nationals and Liberals who enjoy a flow of fossil fuel donations and employment opportunities from fossil fuel companies block any effort by a ineffectual and mostly cowed self-described moderates to support even more ambitious goals — let alone effective action
- On fiscal policy, there’s a more fundamental, but less-acknowledged, tension: this is postwar Australian history’s biggest spending government, running eye-watering deficits years before the pandemic in complete defiance of the Liberal Party’s small-government, low-taxing mantra. Like most politicians, Liberal MPs are adept at basic hypocrisy, but for many in the wider party, Morrison and his commitment to massive spending and a trillion-dollar deficit is the very antithesis of a Liberal and a blot on the fiscal record of John Howard and Petr Costello, Tony Abbott and Turnbull
- On integrity, there’s a similar dynamic to that of climate and energy: Nationals MPs who regard pork-barrelling and rorting of public money as a core part of their political life, and Liberals who engage in the soft corruption of trading donations for policy influence deeply oppose an independent anti-corruption commission, while a small number of Liberals who know the Coalition’s tolerance of corruption is hurting it in traditional Liberal seats
- On basic rights, there’s a serious division between right-wing MPs — mostly senators who don’t have to deal with electoral realities — who share the conspiracy theories, anti-lockdown sentiment and anti-vaccination mentality of extremist protesters outside Parliament versus the leadership of the government and adherents of mainstream science and evidence-based policy
- On discrimination, there’s a critical ideological divide between religious and right-wing MPs who claim religion is under attack and moderate MPs, more firmly in the pre-Howard Liberal tradition, who are prepared to oppose efforts to enable religious institutions to discriminate on the basis of sexuality or gender
- On Indigenous recognition, there’s another divide as well, between MPs and senators who genuinely support recognition and a Voice to Parliament, and those who oppose both, including outright racists who reject any special status for our First Peoples, and those eager to portray a Voice to Parliament as a “third chamber”.
While there’s a vague liberal/right-wing split in a number of these areas, they stretch from the economy to social issues to pandemic response, and MPs are increasingly willing to not only threaten to cross the floor but to do so. This is exacerbated by Morrison’s low and diminishing authority and the growing belief he can’t win the election so it’s every woman and man for themselves.
But more important is Morrison’s lack of substance.
The Liberals and the Coalition have always had ideological divisions but authoritative leaders with a track record of winning elections — Malcolm Fraser, Howard — or leaders with a strong personal brand like Abbott and Turnbull set the direction for the governments they led.
Morrison might be demonised by critics as too religious or too neoliberal or too conservative, but in fact he is incoherent and lacks any interest in a broader agenda. Morrison can tell you how to market your ideology, but not what ideology should be pursued — such issues of policy substance are well outside his wheelhouse and area of interest.
Other Liberal governments contain similar divisions far more successfully: the NSW Liberals have even formalised their ideological divisions, but function highly effectively in partnership with the Nationals, turning problems like climate and energy into policy wins and successfully navigating tensions over social policy.
Unlike the federal government, the NSW government has managed to avoid the kinds of tensions created by the pandemic on civil liberties and fiscal policy. But in Canberra the pandemic has simply added to an already long list of issues over which the Coalition can’t hope to resolve its internal fractures.
Scott Morrison might be on the nose, but how would you feel about Peter Dutton as PM? 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.
How can any country afford to have as a leader a happy-clapper religious nut-job who believes the entire universe is 5,000 and was created just for him and his followers? How does such a fool have any vision worth pursuing? He has nothing in common with the vast preponderance of Australians who frankly would be amazed if they knew half of what this idiot believes.
The options are limited in Libs, who would want Dutton running the Party
Hamburger ( Frydenberg) would be just as bad, did he not just allocate funds to his electorate for a car park to be built?
Not a lot of choices tbere, and as far as Nats go Barnaby is lije a cow pat on a hot day ” on the nose”
Four car parks. One to a now non-existent station which has been combined with another close by and moved to the midway point between the two.
It is suspicious that the other three are being pushed by the local council right now (objections etc close on Thursday), so if they go ahead Joshie can point to them as an achievement in his election campaign. One is completely unnecessary as there is already a high rise cark on the site and adding another storey wouldn’t withstand a proper cost-benefit analysis. The other two will just add to congestion in the local area.
As woeful as he is Frydenberg would be infinitely preferable to straight-up fascist Dutton.
And that’s saying something, given Friedburger only last year sang praises for – wait for it –
Thatcher and Reagan. FFS, isn’t the trickle-down con thoroughly bankrupt yet? Piketty, you supply-side dumbarses.
People of integrity cannot make it up the LNP greasy pole, and contenders with a decency gene do not join that party in the first place….so no surprise that no one better than Psychomo is available.
And apparently, the amount reallocated to the ABC/SBS is the exact amount allocated for that carpork. Interesting what the budget papers will show on where the money(s) are coming and going.
that’s a pretty comprehensive accurate and damning list of LNP policy failings, enough to get any government booted out you’d reckon.
But will there be enough voters taking notice of policy issues? Or will the election turn on the votes of those who decide the nation’s future based on “he’s down-to-earth” or “he likes footy” and stuff like that? And if that is the case, does that seal the fate of Oz politics for the foreseeable future?
Listening to some of the muddled thinking of the so called “undecided “ on Four Corners last night one has to wonder what planet they have been living on to give this current mob of failures a second thought when it comes to voting.Unfortunately our future is these undecided’s hands.
i haven’t watched the 4 corners ep, but have read others’ comments and it sounds depressing.
on the other hand, i think a lot of people who would like to see this lot gone – me included – are still so fragile after the last election, that it only takes the slightest negative thing…even in the face of fifty times the evidence showing that the odds are in favour of a change….to make the morale buckle like an empty coke can.
is there such a thing as post-election stress disorder? Because there’s a lot of people who’ve got it, i reckon.
Unlike the US, where they can galvanise a cohort of people who normally don’t vote, everyone in Oz already votes….and so we know that the 2 party support always hovers around the 50/50 mark, and it’s a small group of swing voters deciding the fate of the country. But are those swing voters engaged? Are they looking for the party that’s offering them the most personally? or are they deciding to vote for someone because they like the colour of their eyes? Or do they care about bigger issues shaping the future of the country?
my faith in the average aussie voter is not great atm, so i’m thinking the first two guesses.
The ‘support’ for B1 & B2 does not “…always hover(s) around the 50/50 mark…” – neither really come close to 40% First Preference en masse.
The Greens regularly garner far more than the 10+% which previously lodged with the Dems before they self destructed on the GST.
The remaining ≈10% consists of 5% no-shows & 5% who spoil their ballots which hasn’t changed greatly since WWII.
Sorry Epimenides i should have specified 2PP, after prefs distributed.
I reckon donkey votes may be more like 1%, rather than 10%, also.
Sorry, you are incorrect – it isas I said, approx 5% No Show & 5% informal ± 0.1-0.3%.
Check the stats – .
RATE96.8% 15.08M TURNOUT (91.89%)
FORMALITY: HOUSE – 94.46%
FORMALITY: SENATE – 96.19%
https://www.aec.gov.au/elections/federal_elections/2019/files/19-1201-fe19-fastfacts-A3-poster.pdf
wow, that’s high! thanks for correcting me 🙂
What I find most intriguing is that the No Show/Informal ratio has barely shifted since WWII whereas party votes go up, down and in the Lady’s chamber.
If B1 & B2 snaffle <70% of the rusted-ons, Greens/Indies 10-15% and the aforementioned non-participants account for 10%, it is the remaining cohort, up to 10%, of ‘swingers‘ who often decide elections, especially if they are in certain seats.
Data harvesting has made it possible to microtarget those grasping, greedy & foolish* individuals where they live, physically & psychically.
*Greedy to think the promises worth a punch of the proverbial & foolish to think they’d be fulfilled if they were.
You mean informal votes, donkey votes can’t be easily measured.
yes, sorry, informal votes
It’s always a great mystery to me why both major parties enjoy almost equal support. Why is it that about half the people side with one party and the other half sides with the other?
our preferential voting system means that in the long run, it becomes a two horse race. Clive Palmer and Pauline fans usually end up with their votes going to the LNP, while Green votes end up in the ALP camp ( that’s in the case where those groups don’t win in their own right of course).
that race ends up being between the two biggest parties, just because they are the two biggest parties. they’ve evolved over time to have the public profile and the power and money to dominate the political landscape.
as to why the two opposing camps of voters, left v right, hover around that middle 50/50 ground, i think is due to compulsory voting.
In countries where voting is not compulsory, it is easier to get results skewed to the extremes, because the voters tend to be highly motivated and partisan.
In Oz, it is the “meh” group who dilute the extremes back towards the centre. Even in “landslides”, like Hawke v Fraser and Howard v Keating, the winning parties only got around 53% two party preferred, which doesn’t sound very landslidey.
They were an earnestly ignorant lot on 4Corners, but not Morris…he is evil and should not have been given a voice on the show
Just so depressing…. But I will continue to live in hope!
>But will there be enough voters taking notice of policy issues?
There are never enough voters taking notice of policy issues, never. And when many do, they’re noticing jumped-up straw men of Labor’s policies. LNP policies all get waved through without a goddamn thought.
The passage of time has revealed we have got
a PM now famous as Slippery Scott,
an expert at climbing the old greasy pole
to get to the point of achieving a goal
beyond his ability, through any means,
by yanking the levers of party machines.
A sultan of secrecy, guru of guile,
he’ll sell you a pup with a wink and a smile
while picking your pocket with “Look over there!”,
then wandering off with a nonchalant air
to chat to reporters and dole out some spin,
a media smokescreen, a news Mickey Finn.
His words are a blanket of blah-blahdy-blah,
a spinmeister’s soufflé to sell the bizarre
while busily putting the flim into flam,
then happily rorting with any old scam
and large porkie pies, as the evidence shows,
for now the world sees his Pinnochio nose.
Gazza, you bloody champ! Great to see you here 🙂
Gazza, you are a wizard….your work should be on billboards, and read out on the nightly news..!!
Regards to Grong-Grong.
while busily putting the flim into flam, he he he brilliant work!
Achieving a net zero target requires commitment to immediate momentum. Any announcement to that target should include the words, “starting with…”. Reducing our emissions to 1% by 2050 requires a compound interest reduction of 15% per annum. (Check it out!) Because the Government has not initiated any reducing momentum at all, it is quite clear they intend to cheat on the target. We have been deceived.
We have certainly been misled – by B1 & B2 – but I doubt that anyone with double digit IQ has been deceived.
Carny barkers know they cannot cheat an honest man because they are not attracted by what is proffered.
Which is why our Carny barker PM has done so well – the lumpen want to be played for fools as it removes the unfamiliar effort of thinking.
That’s pretty optimistic – judging from the last election and the polls since, a triple digit IQ seems to be necessary to see through these toxic scum. Probably 115 or so, sadly enough.
That should be a threshold of like 90, but MSM.
The tabloid press is written up to age 14 reading level.
If one takes note of Johann Hari’s latest potboiler, Stolen Focus, the average screen dwell is under 60secs and decreases with each switch.
Most iPhone addicts touch their device of the Devil 2,000 times pd.
The White Clown of Fahrenheit 451(1953) presaged a dread combo of SKY’s SAD & MAFS.
Only those not really paying attention were ‘deceived’, after all:
allsome of the new coal, gas, and oil they propose to extract (not that the easiest, most economical, and required to get a saleable product form of CCS actually works, as the Barrow Island fiasco has shown)If only these people realised that coal and oil is already sequestered carbon. No further capture required.