Well, as Albo gave the victory speech on stage, tired but vindicated, one’s dominant thought was “Hmmm”. I mean, first it was “YES YES YES”, then “Don’t say sweetest victory of all”, then “Hmmm, what exactly happened?”
Your correspondent’s view of the nation, developing throughout the campaign, had been that the most exuberant and energetic forces in the country were developing among the knowledge class and the broader liberal middle classes.
These were people angered by climate change inaction, corruption, lying and rorting, as well as the lack of any sense of a future plan, with no place for them in the Liberals, no sense of connection to a post-Whitlamite Labor, and the Greens too left on multiple fronts. The new social self-confidence of these sub-classes, the changes made by social media, a lot of organising by the movement springing from Indi, supercharged by money from Climate 200, had made a new supercharged force whose networked form mimicked the work/life arrangements they were accustomed to, floated on their discursive skills and abilities, in what became a virtuous circle.
The more such people heard each other, the more the movement recruited itself. This worked in both liberal urban areas and in country places where volunteer community networks remained strong.
Against this it seemed to me was, at the other end, about 10% of the populace oriented to UAP, One Nation, etc — certain types of Anglo “ordinary” middle class, together with some of the excluded and other blocs. They grooved on the “concrete” stories these parties told, of vaccine conspiracies connecting to larger conspiracies about thwarted lives and lost culture.
But in between these two vocal groups, there was about a quarter to a third of the electorate who had gone silent rather than quiet. Their sense of atomisation and disengagement was now total; they did not even identify with the self-declared populists who by the very fact of being within the system had become part of it, not their representatives within it.
Once they might have found their place within a rank-and-file. Now, often with lower-level educational skills, isolation and disconnection, they found that the only way of preserving their identity and sense of self — among all that blah blah blah, all that discourse — was to withdraw so entirely that their feelings were difficult to gauge by any method whatsoever.
My guess was that the energy propelling Labor forward would meet this force, which tilted strongly towards the Coalition — though with no admiration for Scott Morrison — and would reduce Labor’s forward march to a majority, stalling it in the no-one’s land of a hung parliament.
So, uh, *checks notes*. This is a complex result, with that surge of progressivism occurring and giving a sense of a landslide, delivering Labor several seats in these prog heartlands, and some swings that came very close to delivering it another five or six. Yet Labor’s result will sit on the border of majority government, with between 75 and 78 seats.
Though a Labor majority looks more likely than not, it’s a bare one, without much wiggle room in the months and years ahead. The progressive surge was even more so in the areas won, or almost won, by the Greens — Ryan and Griffith, a maybe in Macnamara, close in Richmond. It delivered exactly what it promised in half a dozen teal seats. There was also the “rust” surge — I’m going to keep calling rural teals rusts until it takes — who hollowed out National safe majorities across the land.
But Labor couldn’t really surge in some of the “middle-middle” seats — places where UAP and One Nation have no more than their 8% or so hard-right aggregate, but where a degree of resistance to the new progressive package is expressed by refusal. Thus Labor could not take Longman in the Brisbane exurbs, and has only a small chance of getting Casey in Melbourne’s outer north-east.
In Tasmania, the last region where there’s a thorough working-class dominance of political culture, it could not take Bass or Braddon (even with Lambie preferences in the latter), and has gone backwards in Lyons. It’s true the Coalition did not get the great revolt in these ‘burban lands it was hoping for.
So that suggests to me that while the, or a, great progressive moment has occurred in Australian politics and which represents the broadening of the “progressive class”, it was not the victory of a grand coalition.
Power and ideological hegemony have shifted decisively, and progressives should be bold in asserting their agenda. But in the places where people still feel excluded, unserved, unable to connect with power or the means to get it, where there’s no point talking about coming up from public housing because there is none, there remains a resistance to the narrative and the whole progressive worldview.
Anthony Albanese, if he is any sort of Labor leader, will need to find a way not only to deliver both the progressive vision and for the needs of the silent and excluded — he and Labor will need to honour their view of what the world is, and what matters, to build and consolidate government in this term and a triumph in the next.
Still, go Albo, go Labor, go Green, go teal, go all. In the words of our wide, every-coloured country: mate, sweet.
“ But in the places where people still feel excluded, unserved, unable to connect with power or the means to get it, where there’s no point talking about coming up from public housing because there is none, there remains a resistance to the narrative and the whole progressive worldview.”
Nailed it, Guy.
Every time Albo told his log cabin tale, I wanted to yell at him “ Today’s young Albo and his Mum are couch surfing or worse, because there aren’t any council flats and they can’t afford private rentals. Today’s young Albo’s Mum is on Jobseeker. The Sole Parent Pension stopped when he was 8 and she was told she didn’t qualify for a disability support pension because she could work 8 hours a week, spread over 5 or 6 days. Wake up, Albo! DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!”
Could someone remind him which ‘Labor’ PM did that to the Sole Parent Pension?
If only he, as Leader of the House, had been in a position to counsel against it…
I’m waiting for the reminder that it was legislated by the previous LNP government and there was nothing Gillard could do about it, aren’t you, Loki?
So true. I’m sick of Albo’s hokum about his housing commission upbringing. He did have it tough sure. Father not around to provide support and mum a partial invalid. I’d like to see how they would go today and quite frankly I doubt Albo cares. He survived and prospered with an adequate social safety net for those times and Albo being the bookish type flourished in that environment. And private schools like St Marys Sydney do offer scholarships for assistance to those more disadvantaged. Just as well he didn’t go to Marrickville High. Things may have been different, and he probably did his uni free. Didn’t mention that.
I doubt that there are many in his position now where once he turns 8 or 9 the parent has to go to a lower dole payment and look for work, not stay on the Sole Parent Pension, an allowance where you don’t have to work and is at a higher rate. Thanks Julia Gillard, Kevin Rudd and Nicola Roxon. There is a longer waiting list for housing commission and a distinct lack of emergency accommodation now or cheap rent.
So tru Kathy
Hopefully a Labor government will remember the three million living in poverty, increase Jobseeker and take other measures that address growing inequality. The post-materialist teals in wealthy seats are most unlikely to, this not being their constituency. A hung Parliament with strong Greens representation is our best chance for poverty and inequality to receive the attention it deserves as well as pushing Labor to properly address the climate crisis.
The teals may not vote for a rise in the minimum wage, but they might be prepared to trade for a stronger ICAC and a more aggressive climate change response. Even if Labor gets a majority, you get the impression that the elected teals will win multiple terms, and it’s in Albanese’s interest to work closely with them to insulate him from a potential loss of a majority at the next election. And given his work under Gillard when Labor could only act with cooperation from the Greens, he knows how to do it.
Yes Guy, mate sweet, and how sweet it is. As a volunteer at a booth yesterday handing out how to vote cards the obvious thorns were those from the “freedom parties”. Aggresive, nasty, difficult to engage with, spoke only to like minded. Always ready to promote the latest scare campaign (WHO takeover), the ballot papers will be changed!, etc. No reasoning with them, no hope for them. Australia must resist the coming storm from the Sky Spews stable, perhaps by refusing to publish their stupidity and denying them any oxygen.
In the meantime we look at Albo and his team, and see what can be achieved working together.
The UAP volunteers where I voted were, as you say, nasty and aggressive, demanding people take the HTVs, complaining that pencils were being used to mark ballot papers so “they” could change them later – I suppose the fact that they received virtually no votes will only be taken by them as evidence they were correct.
So were you only speaking to the like minded? Or did you engage with others from disparate points of view?
And BTW you couldn’t PAY me to vote UAP,
Not far right enough?
Crikey, Guy, well done.
Overcoming the onslaught of misinformation is no small job. Independent media deserve to claim this as a BIG win. I hope the playing field is substantially levelled as just reward for all your wonderful efforts.
Time for a quick nap now.
For the first time since 1972 I feel a sense of possibility as the curtain finally falls upon the Howard era. Howard purged the so-called “wets” from the Liberal Party, and last night we saw the “wets” purge the Liberal Party. The Menzian settlement is, to quote the Howard glove puppet, “dead, buried, and cremated”. We are no longer relaxed and comfortable.
Whether the ALP has the vision and the courage to take advantage of the amazing opportunities that stare them in the face remains to be seen. In 2013 they had the opportunity to listen to their rank and file and give the leadership to Albanese, but the Parliamentary party insisted they knew better and gave the gig to Shorten instead. (Perhaps Albo needed more time to ripen; perhaps they wasted six years.)
This is a very different world in all sorts of ways. Maybe these are the maunderings of a stupid, sentimental old person, but in Albanese I sense an echo of Curtin.
Well said.
What’s that expression – from your mouth to god’s ear? There is at least a lack of arrogance in him that will stand him in good stead.