Back when he became Liberal leader, Peter Dutton claimed that the Liberal Party and big business had become “estranged in recent years”, a particularly risible claim given the Morrison government had operated as a cash-for-policy scam for large corporations.
Dutton said that in response to a question about the growing gulf between the business community’s call for energy policy certainty and real climate action, and the Coalition’s continuing climate denialism and support for fossil fuels.
That gulf has widened still further since then, with virtually every major business group supporting Labor’s climate bill and its inadequate 43% 2030 reduction target.
There’s business support, and then there’s business support — the Business Council (BCA) “supported” climate action for many years but actively worked to sabotage any meaningful climate action. It was only after the BCA’s partisan attacks on Labor’s 45% target during the 2019 election that its membership jacked up and pushed the executive to ditch its denialism.
Now the BCA is backing the government’s bill, along with the Australian Industry Group (which has long been far more responsible and constructive on climate action) and the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, along with the Australian Institute of Company Directors. Even the Minerals Council has been shamed into backing the bill.
Significantly, one of Australia’s biggest climate criminals, Origin Energy, is also calling for the opposition to support the bill, on the basis that it will give further certainty to business investment in renewable energy. Fossil fuel lobby group APPEA also backs the bill, as does another climate criminal, Shell. Even the country’s worst climate criminal, Woodside, says the 43% target is “largely aligned” with its own.
That just leaves Woodside’s rival as Australia’s worst environmental crook, Santos, on the outer.
Origin, APPEA, Santos and Woodside are part of the fossil fuel clique that has used political donations, jobs for politicians and staffers, and close links with political strategists to capture the major political parties, and particularly the Coalition, on energy and tax policy. Now, a number of them are aligned with Labor on its emission reduction targets.
Dutton, who took a unilateral decision to oppose Labor’s climate bill, thereby dealing himself out of any efforts to amend it, is now “estranged” not merely from big business but from key fossil fuel donors with whom the Coalition has closely worked for over a decade to stymie climate action.
Without big fossil fuels, who does Dutton have left in his corner? Only the denialist rump of the Liberal and National parties, and News Corp. His opposition to climate action will make the already difficult task of winning back “teal” seats even harder — imagine a Liberal candidate running in a metropolitan Sydney or Melbourne seat on a climate policy that even our biggest fossil fuel companies don’t support? All the News Corp cheerleading in the world won’t be able to get them over the line.
When your political business model is to generate money and support to get into power by offering the opportunity to dictate policy, you have to be able to offer donors a realistic suite of policies. Not merely is Dutton failing to do that, he’s pushing a policy many of them actually dislike for its impact on their investment environment. The support of some Nationals MPs and a few News Corp editorials isn’t going to make up for that.
Is Dutton’s opposition to Labor’s climate plan a loser’s strategy? Let us know by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
What’s the chance of Mutton actually leading the Libs to the next election, eh? If he was an ex-Qld policeman’s horse, rather than an ex Qld policeman, he would have been sent to the knacker’s yard years ago.
I wonder how long it will be before Rupert’s Urgers realise they’ve bet on a dead horse – and want to lay off bets, along with their Spud.
I suspect The Urgers believe they can reinvent the Liberal Party
Why wouldn’t they? They’ve done it before.
Monique Ryan and the voters of Kooyong did us all a favour, by leaving the LNP bereft of any fig leaves.
Mutton dressed up as Spam?
Dutton dressed up as a scam!
As smart as a Qld copper.
Bill Hayden, former Qld copper, Dr Jim Cairns Vic copper. Many more
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Australian_police_officers
I’m guessing Paul is referring here to a Maley column in the Sun Herald a couple of months ago praising Dutton to the skies with a car crash nonsensical references. I haven’t been able to read her since.
Not just much harder winning back the seats lost to the Teals, but also harder to save the next tranche of seats to be targeted by Teals. Including, possibly, his own.
the Teals seem to rich kids indulging in their hobbies and if not rich enough ,another trust fund kid financing them. Their aim is to make one point as. the mood takes them.
Look at the electorates they represent – they are the corollary of the Greens – it amazes me the Greens don’t represent any electorate with actual vegetation- the only green they see is green painted roads reserved for their bicycles which stuff up the traffic and impede workers trying to get to work and earn a living for their families.
Des you dummo- this is a really stupid comment, Pls re read and reflect before you switch over to SKY!
I think you should quit right there, Des. The Teals were voted in by the constituents they now represent. They are all modern and intelligent individuals and their electorates are fortunate to have them. Living in a heavily National Party seat, I just wish that we had similar representation.
Thanks for that cheering and very positive thought for the end of the first sitting of a new Parliament, Jackson
I repeat, when you are an opposition of 60 members in a house of 151, with 90 members against you, and News Corpse, your PR department, has been comprehensively also humiliated on 21 May, the coalition and News Corpse are irrelevant. Then when you double down on the issues that made so repugnant to the electorate, you are committed to entrenched, perhaps permanent irrelevancy. So why is the media still treating Spud Dutton as if he has something relevant to contribute?
He’s still the leader of the Opposition and we live in a democracy so the media can’t just ignore him. Anyway, all it does is demonstrate their irrelevancy even further.
I expect that’s why they are running the risk of the line that the size of power bills can be brought down immediately even though it constantly reminds us that they are the biggest contributors to the current mess by a very long way. They are hoping that constantly saying “$275” will make us forget that this is largely a problem they created AND they’re not prepared to join almost everyone who’s trying to fix it.
I thought their PR department was a guy called Morrison.
That’s a good question. It’s as if the Greens and Teals don’t exist and the ALP was an also ran on 21st May. It was this year, wasn’t it?