Why did he do it?
It’s a simple question but the answer is elusive, even to the experts. Scott Morrison says the ministerial powers he assumed were purely theoretical. His ultimate defence is that, except for once, he never used them.
The highly paid political commentator class — their entire professional lives dedicated to explaining federal politics — are by and large left scratching their heads as they attempt to come to terms with this apparent howitzer from the nation’s capital: why did he do it?
One of the more extraordinary features of this saga is that after Morrison’s 15 years in public life — and four as prime minister — we are now scrambling to understand what he is capable of and, by extension, who he really is. How is it that we can still be shocked by a man who goes out of his way to put himself in the public gaze?
In truth, there has never been anything normal about Scott Morrison. The signs have been there all along, from well before he entered Parliament via the 2007 election. His trick has been to bury his weirdness beneath layers of marketing and obfuscation.
And can you believe his luck? Mostly the media hasn’t wanted to go any deeper. It gets worse. Senior political commentators — and certainly most of News Corp — have in effect acted as a Praetorian Guard for Morrison. The evidence has never been good enough for the “Canberra bubble” people. Lies? All politicians do it. Stacking boards with mates? Both parties do it. Secrecy? The punters don’t care.
Whistleblowers emerged in the shape of Concetta Fierravanti-Wells, Julia Banks and Bridget Archer — all with converging stories of Morrison’s political turpitude. Yet their clear warnings about the oddest of oddballs went largely unheeded.
Even at the beginning of this year, as Morrison’s political life was unravelling, he could count on the support of the biggest names in the business. The doyen, Paul Kelly, hailed him for being “bold” on the world stage. Kelly cited Morrison’s “secret effort” to secure the nuclear-powered submarine decision as “a singular example of executive decision-making”, thereby turning Morrison’s greatest flaw into his greatest strength.
Like most scammers, Morrison has used the system which hosts him to his own advantage. Democracy got him into Parliament. Then he trashed it. He used the conventions of government when it suited him and abused them when it didn’t. He took the idea of national security and made it a cover for all pervasive secrecy.
Secrecy. There it is again. The one constant of Morrison’s professional life, before and after entering Parliament.
He was secretive working for Tourism Australia. He was secretive as a 30-year-old hot shot brought over to run New Zealand’s Office of Tourism and Sport. The secrets piled up once he was in government. “On water matters”. Highly paid appointments to government positions made without explanation. FOI nobbled. On and on it goes. We can all recite it in our sleep.
But in the end we are still left to ask: what sort of person sits in a cabinet room with colleagues and deliberately keeps from them that he has appointed himself to their job?
What sort of person can fail to tell a close friend and supporter that he has horned in on his job, as Morrison did with Josh Frydenberg? What sort of person then sits five paces behind the treasurer on budget night knowing, but not telling, that he too secretly holds the office of treasurer?
It’s not normal. But what is it? You could write a PhD trying to pick apart the psychology of Scott Morrison. The events of the past 48 hours have proved that once and for all.
To be the keeper of secrets gives you power over others. FBI director J Edgar Hoover knew that. But Hoover did it to his enemies. It is something else altogether to do it to your friends and allies.
Is there a paternalism about Morrison’s actions? Is Morrison judging that there are things he knows that you don’t need to know?
What joins the dots on Morrison’s character? At Crikey we have made the argument that the answer lies in Morrison’s faith. This is not to be anti-religion or to take the position of smart-arse secular lefties.
Oddly enough, we have seen that Morrison’s intense belief is hard evidence in discerning a pattern of behaviour. For decades there has been an international movement, born in the US, to blur the lines between religion and politics. It is no secret that this exists. Nor is it a secret that Morrison’s closest adviser over the years has been Pastor Brian Houston, a leading proponent of the move for the church to influence politics.
Morrison has been open about it in many ways. He has several times proclaimed his belief that God chose him to be prime minister. In government, he actively worked against secular accountability. He bared his soul at religious gatherings in his times of need and vulnerability. His religious community has lionised him in ways that aren’t well known in the outside world.
He constantly sees signs of God at work in his daily life. He has spoken of comforting the victims of the 2019 fires by using the religious ritual of the laying on of hands. This, he said, was done without their knowledge. Is it a huge next step to secretly lay hands on his ministers’ portfolios?
In Crikey‘s view the simplest explanation for Morrison’s quiet accumulation of ministerial power lies in the doctrine of Christian dominionism: that God’s will shall be spread across the lands. No one, including Morrison, has offered another good explanation. Ultimately it would appear he gathered the power simply to have it, even if he didn’t use it.
The unwritten rules of journalism — where a person’s religion is private — have been a fabulous protection for Morrison. Like the conventions of Parliament he has used these to his own advantage, all the while leaving a trail of evidence in plain sight.
So, sorry to say it, guys, but you’ve been played off a break.
So this has all been a brilliant tactical game played by Morrison? Or is just a delusional idiot excused and defended by a biased media simply because he is in the ‘correct’ party? I’m going with the latter. And that exposes Paul Kelly as a pompous buffoon and others as idiots.
And that exposes Paul Kelly as a pompous buffoon…
He was a speaker at a session I attended on Sunday at the Canberra Writers Festival. Fair description of what I saw and heard.
Kelly has always been the most “ pompous buffoons” amongst The Moloch’s Minions, only matched by Greg Sheridan!
All those fans of Morrison in the Press Gallery must be feeling just a bit foolish that they couldn’t see what quite a few ordinary punters could see.
I doubt it. They are too wrapped up in themselves to notice what ordinary punters could see.
They were too contaminated. Who wouldn’t want a scoop?
Scrambling to know him? His behaviour at his preselection was what lost me, and I have been scrambling not to know him ever since. Why give the guy any oxygen at all? Let him open an Indian restaurant or sod off to Perth and join Margaret Court’s church – as long as we never hear of him again.
His preselection? You mean when he was defeated 82 votes to 8? And then the power plays began. A shocking piece of electoral history.
And that little pr!ck Howard was pushing for him all the way, even after his own Tourism Minister, Fran Bailey, sacked him for disloyalty and dishonesty.
Bailey sacked him for fraud and theft.
Nasty saga you nearly missed SMH By Paul Sheehan October 26, 2009
Towke is also a long-serving member of the Liberal Party. In July 2007 he won preselection for the then safe federal Liberal seat of Cook. He was set to replace the outgoing member, Bruce Baird. The contest attracted a large field, including Paul Fletcher, who recently won Liberal preselection for Bradfield (vacated by the former Liberal leader Brendan Nelson), and a former state director of the NSW Liberal party, Scott Morrison.
Towke won easily. On the first ballot, he polled 10 times as many votes as Morrison, 82 votes to 8, who was eliminated in the first round. His victory meant that a Lebanese Australian would represent the Liberal Party in the seat where the Cronulla riot and revenge raids had taken place 18 months earlier, in December 2005. “The campaign against me started four days after preselection,” Towke said.
Two senior people within the Liberal Party, whose identity is known to a widening circle within the party, went through Towke’s nomination papers to find every possible discrepancy and weakness. Then they started calling selected journalists to tell them Towke was a liar.
The first story appeared in The Daily Telegraph on July 18, 2007, under the headline, “Liberal ballot scandal in Howard’s backyard.” Three days later, on July 21, a second story appeared in the Telegraph: “Towke future on hold.” The next day, in The Sunday Telegraph, a third story: “Party split as Liberal candidate faces jail.”
“That was the story that sent my mother to hospital,” Towke told me.
Perth doesn’t want him. The beast was born in the East. Let the East deal with him.
“Scott Morrison says the ministerial powers he assumed were purely theoretical. His ultimate defence is that, except for once, he never used them.”
Yes, this point is being repeated often. Assuming it is true (there may be more revelations) it is still not a defence. At best it is a mitigation, by arguing that the consequences were not as bad as they might have been. It is like admitting to having robbed a bank, then claiming it’s all right because the loot was not spent. Except for a little bit.
My analogy is more accurate if it was the bank’s manager who cleared out much of the bank’s vault in instalments and took the loot to a secret location, but returned most of it when he left the job.
it’s classic Scomo spin, that line “I never used them, except once.”
In normal language that would be “Yes, I used them once.”
Hard for them to be theoretical after he’s used them!
Oh that Morrison, he can’t lie straight in bed.
Was that ‘once’ on the Resources matter?
Or was it ‘once’ on the day of the May election in revealing Home Affairs information re a refugee boat?
“I use them once, twice. I can’t be any clearer than that. On both occasions, they were used once. And i stand by that statement.”
Theologically speaking more like it. I suppose He didn’t need Defence – he can Fly/Lie and walk on Water. His whole explanation is fishy.
Fishy as in ichthys ?
ΧΘΥΣ “Ἰησοῦς Χρῑστός Θεοῦ Υἱός Σωτήρ”,
Iēsoûs Khrīstós, Theoû Huiós, Sōtḗr;
‘Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour’.
Now, now, you are just being naughty – of all posters here you know full well that it was originally a Roman pun based on the symbol of two arcs, at one end meeting at the ‘nose’, the other crossing at the ‘tail’.
I don’t think it was his religion. People who share his faith don’t behave like that. I always thought he had a personality disorder of one sort or another. Everything was always and only about him. I couldn’t decide whether he was a narcissist, a sociopath or a psychopath. Perhaps a psychologist can enlighten us.
And completely delusional.
Messiah complex
For quite a while, I’ve thought that psychopath was the best explanation. And it’s there that I differ a bit with the author’s explanation. In that I suspect Morrison’s religiosity, is more of a curated image, than the real Morrison. That is, by mouthing the platitudes of his church, he can present himself as someone who’s concerned with moral issues and who has a strong moral personal core. Which is a handy mask, for someone whose behaviour suggests that they’re essentially amoral.
Agree
Agree +1
Fierravanti-Wells said it was a marketing ploy – a similar idea.
Yes, my thoughts. Don’t say it to the age blog moderators though, they have a different view when it comes to Morrison’s lies and consequently won’t publish it. I wonder why it is so difficult for them.
I think you are on the money.
Your second sentence doesn’t ring true considering his best mate Houston!
Religion is a good cover.
Happy Clappies are different to most Christians
Only in that they not only make no secret of their cupidity but extol it as a virtue.
A lot of the rich and powerful evangelical right most certainly do behave like that. Witness what they’ve done and are continuing to do to the USA.
It is definitely his religion. But what people do is confuse his religion with christianity – Morrison and his ilk would be abjured by the christ as Pharisees, unworthy of his vision of god.
Such are but Christianist, a neologism created by Andrew Sullivan a conservative, gay, Catholic author and blogger in 2003 concerning the then President, Dubya, The Faux Texan and his push concerning a “Faith Based Administration”, as we saw recently here in Australia with Smirko The Happy Clapper and his Brethren
“I have a new term for those on the fringes of the religious right who have used the Gospels to perpetuate their own aspirations for power, control and oppression: Christianists.”
Sullivan was first to use the word “Christianist” in 2003 to describe Eric Rudolph, the US Christianist religious terrorist, convicted for a series of anti-abortion and anti-gay-motivated bombings across the southern United States between 1996 and 1998, which killed three people and injured 150 others.
It was Rudolph who planted the bomb at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games.
Sullivan extends the argument, with such being akin to Islamism viz. al Qua’eda, Taliban
“Christianism is an ideology, politics, an ism. The distinction between Christian and Christianist echoes the distinction we make between Muslim and Islamist. Muslims are those who follow Islam. Islamists are those who want to wield Islam as a political force and conflate state and mosque. …It is the belief that religion dictates politics and that politics should dictate the laws for everyone, Christian and non-Christian alike.”
“But any pretense of a religious foundation for Christianism breaks down on many of the issues Christianists now consider their highest priority — cutting social services, blocking access to health care, lowering taxes, undermining public education, repealing restrictions on the ownership and use of firearms, endorsing harsh law enforcement methods and restrictions on the right to vote in communities of color, defending the Mexican border, and closing the door to refugees, to name a few.”
Sociopath covers his behaviours.
“.. except for once, he never used them…”
This rings true. We heard the same excuse with hoses.