Now, it’s like that movie — in The Croods, people wanted to stay in the cave … and that young girl, she wanted to go out and live again and deal with the challenges of living in a different world …
Scott Morrison, August 2021
[Mark McGowan and I] are both leaders of governments that have much to do and for a long time now … the best way to do that is to work together. And I mean, in Western Australia, I think we have a lot of commonality on the importance of having a strong economy which supports everything else.
Morrison, March 2022
Could Western Australia be the state to turn the election?
Since Bob Hawke left office, WA has proven uniquely unreceptive to anything federal Labor has pitched it. In that time, it’s never had more lower house MPs elected than the Coalition, and indeed it was the only state where Labor actually lost a seat in the Ruddslide of 2007. Yet a combination of factors threaten the conservative stranglehold in 2022.
First is the exodus of the highest-profile Liberals in the state. Former deputy leader Julie Bishop quit in 2019 and took her personal vote (not to mention her considerable fundraising abilities) with her. Former senator Mathias Cormann is gone. And of course, former attorney-general Christian Porter is retiring in decidedly messy and controversial circumstances. His seat, Pearce, is one of three that Labor feels is right back in the mix. The others are Swan, also losing long-time member Steve Irons, and Hasluck, held by Indigenous Affairs Minister Ken Wyatt. And Labor’s Anne Aly holds Cowan by a wafer-thin margin.
Second, and even more unpredictable, is the Mark McGowan of it all. The WA premier achieved an unprecedented majority in 2021’s state election, reducing the state’s lower house Liberal representation to a contingent that could arrive at work together on the same tandem bike. He did that, at the core, by locking the eastern half of the country out for nearly two years, thus sparing WA (and its faltering health system) from most of the worst effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Porter probably didn’t have WA’s status as a federal election battleground in mind when they decided to back Clive Palmer’s legal attempts to puncture that wall, and the sudden shift in rhetoric from Morrison this year — from comparing WA to the cave dwellers of The Croods to chummy pressers alongside McGowan was entirely predictable.
McGowan’s approval rating has, inevitably, waned slightly since it was clocking in at over 90% in 2020 — as Crikey contributor William Bowe put it, down from phenomenal to a merely “outstanding” 64% (The West Australian has it at 67%).
Whether this will translate to the federal election is uncertain; Roy Morgan polling last September had a 6.6% swing towards Labor, but there is some worry in that McGowan’s massive electoral advantage may work against the campaign, with voters choosing the Libs as a Senate-style check on Labor’s power.
But even if that’s true, McGowan’s obliteration of the Liberals still does federal Labor a lot of favours. As Gareth Parker points out in WAToday, it wiped out the party’s grassroots infrastructure, the “paying jobs for party loyalists in electorate offices, and the hubs around which volunteer efforts come election time are coordinated”, and lead to an internal party review so searing that it lead to defamation threats.
Regardless, the importance both parties are putting on the state is clear. The ALP is holding its campaign launch there on May 1 and former PM Kevin Rudd is reportedly going to be doorknocking on behalf of Labor leader Anthony Albanese — delaying his own visit on account of a cruelly timed bout of COVID — in the coming week. Morrison has already visited, as has John Howard, and Tony Abbott planned to visit to drum up funds for the election until he was also waylaid by COVID.
WA is sculpted by its scale and isolation and of course the sense that it has to give away too much of its resource wealth to the east, a cohort it feels excluded from on most other matters.
It’s no coincidence that Morrison chose WA as the place to attempt to reopen the climate wars, promising no mining tax under his government. Its immense scale is best illustrated by the two rural seats that take up its eastern half — Durack and O’Connor, two of the biggest single-member electorates in the world, essentially locked in for the Liberals.
WA will follow one of the currents of other states — the previously blue ribbon seat facing a serious challenge from an independent candidate. In this case, it’s Bishop’s far more conservative successor in Curtin, Celia Hammond, who suffered an 11% swing against her last time out, and this year has Kate Chaney challenging.
But in most other ways Western Australia will be an outlier. It usually is. This time the outlier might decide the whole show.
THE SCANDAL IN THE AGED HOME CARE SECTOR IS FINALLY COMING TO LIGHT WITH PROVIDERS POCKETING A LARGE SHARE OF THE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE FINALLY BEING EXPOSED TO THE PUBLIC GAZE, BUT THE IN-HOME CARE SECTOR NEEDS A VERY BRIGHT LIGHT TO BE SHONE ON THE SHONKY PRACTICES OF SOME FOR-PROFIT OPERATORS WHO TAKE 30%/40% OF THE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROVIDED TO THE ELDERLY FOR NECESSARY IN-HOME CARE, SOME OF THESE ARE RUN BY EX POLITICIANS NOT RENOWNED FOR COMPASSION OR CARE, SO WHY ARE THEY IN IT, COULD IT BE THE CUSHY HIGH PAID JOBS WITH FLASH CARS AND JUICY EXPENSE ACCOUNTS, HEAVEN, FORGIVE ME FOR EVEN THINKING THAT, BUT EVERY TIME I SEE OR HEAR MORRISON THAT THOUGHT JUST POPS INTO MY MIND .
Please don’t write to us in Capitals, we all have our Pen license now.
Thank you
Two issues only should be the only matters to vote on . Until the Liberal /NP crooks are removed from office and then subjected to scrutiny by the new ICAC, Climate Change will not be addressed
I’m pretty sure Ken Wyatt is the last man standing from the group of Abbott and his cohorts who posed in front of the ‘Ditch the Witch’ posters. Like the others, time for karma to catch up with him.
I’m in Wyatt’s electorate and much looking forward to voting for someone other than him.
And I am the Curtin electorate and for the first time ever my vote might be useful! I’m so looking forward to giving my first preference to Kate Chaney and hoping she gets in. Anything to keep the Libs out!
And although the incumbent Celia Hammond has been very quiet, she is right wing Catholic.
The way the women and men within the Coalition and their supporters treated Julia Gillard will never be forgotten and should never be forgotten. I only hope that their disgusting behaviour raises its ugly head during quiet reflection. I know myself, if I have wronged someone (never like that), it will haunt me until I’ve apologised and made peace.
The article has somehow omitted any mention of the ever-tightening grip evangelicals exert on the WA Liberals. It’s classic entryism, it’s been running for years and it’s well advanced. This played a part in the stuning results of the last state election and should be equally relevant this election.
I am unsure what Ms Aly is doing for Cowan.
The most I have heard from her in three years was her rant being critical he own party for the over parachuting Kristina Keneally into a safe seat on the eastern seaboard. Oh wait, we did have two very polite door knockers two week ago and she now believes she is ready for a ministerial role. Good luck Anne
We must remove the religious nut cases from parliament. There is no place in decision-making for people who believe some mythical person with a magic wand of their particular brand is guiding them to make the right decisions regarding Climate Change .
A magic wand will not help solve the problem of Climate Change and I believe the list of the believer’s commandments still says “thou shalt not lie “.Some top liberals believe that particular commandment has been changed to “thou must lie”
This inept, incompetent and corrupt coalition government has to go! the best way to ensure action on climate change, integrity and transparency in federal parliament, humane treatment of asylum seekers and many other failings is to have a minority government with the balance of power and progressive agenda driven by independents.