Even with the long march of time, Scott Morrison’s compulsion for lying and utter shamelessness remains both unmoved and spectacularly obvious; there’s simply no escaping the poverty of the man’s essence.
And so it was unsurprising to watch the former prime minister emerge, embittered and self-consumed, from the miasma of his failed overseas job interviews and the robodebt report on Monday, to deliver yet another round of national gaslighting in what may or may not pass for primitive signs of sentient life.
Labor’s criticism of him over robodebt was, he told a sparsely populated Parliament, an attempt to “discredit” him and his “service to our country during one of the most difficult periods our country has faced since the Second World War” — apparently overlooking the fact the illegal scheme was discontinued before the onset of the pandemic.
But it didn’t matter. None of it did. Morrison’s always had a thorny relationship with the truth. Ceaseless lying is what he does; it was his will to power — the more brazen or lazy the lie, the better. After all, for all the “daggy dad, everybody’s bloke” swagger of the man, he’s never been one to content himself with the slippery, poll-tested patois and spin of garden-variety politicians. On the contrary, the default setting of this moral degenerate is to wallpaper the nation with lies and unreality at each and every opportunity, whatever the occasion.
To that extent, it was almost surprising his rambling monologue to Parliament didn’t go big and deploy his reputation for mendacity in answer to the royal commission’s chief finding against him that he misled cabinet. In what ways, he could have asked, can a known pathological liar be guilty of misleading anyone? Sadly, though, that winning argument wasn’t to be; partly because it would have involved some semblance of twisted honesty on his part, and partly because it would have summoned an earnest capacity for self-reflection where none exists.
Instead, Morrison opted for geysers of personal grievance and misdirection, relying on his proven aptitude to assault reality at every turn. He complained of “political lynching”, warning he’d fallen victim to a “transparently partisan campaign”. He spoke of “unintended consequences”, omitting any specific mention of suicides, financial ruin or trauma and stress, much less his knowing the illegality of the scheme. And he gravitated towards lines from The Australian, troubled at the “weaponisation of a quasi-legal process”.
But amid all the meandering and digression, he synthesised his central complaint with the deftness of a preacher’s cadence, painting himself as the persecuted martyr or the wrongly accused, someone who’d only ever followed the rules and conventions of cabinet to the letter. Contrary to the royal commission’s findings (or the cabinet handbook), he intoned, he was “constitutionally and legally entitled” to rely on the advice of his cadre of public servants, including all those he had so consciously pressed and bent into a “yes, minister” mould.
Naturally, the suggestion that this “menacing, controlling wallpaper” was anything but obsessively domineering as a minister, whatever his portfolio, is fanciful. It’s both removed from reality and at odds with Morrison’s character, as others have pointed out. And indeed, one of the most dangerous governing concepts to emerge from his disgraced period in office was the realisation that basic norms and conventions can be glossed over or ignored as optional extras.
Hence Morrison’s dishonest oral evidence to the commission that he’d been advised in “verbal briefings” that income averaging was “established practice”, his faith in the certainty of which had been downgraded to a “reasonable likelihood” by Monday afternoon. And so too his insistence that his involvement in the illegal scheme ceased the moment he was elevated from social services to treasurer and, later, the office of prime minister. Never mind the seniority of those positions arguably deepened, as opposed to lessened, the dead hand of his crushing failures as a minister.
That Morrison sees no wrong in his reckless norm-torching should, of course, surprise no one. He lives in a world devoid of moral rules, with no space for quaint emotions like shame or empathy but ample room for righteous self-delusion and crippling self-pity.
Bearing this out with precision was his haughty and utterly insensible complaint on Monday that the commission had effectively reversed the “onus of proof” against him, leaving Minister for Government Services Bill Shorten to proclaim the death of satire. None of the hundreds of thousands of robodebt victims were, after all, afforded access to taxpayer-funded lawyers, and much less were they spared the unfairness visited by a retrospectively fitted reverse onus of proof.
As Shorten spoke, Morrison was observed shaking his head and muttering “here we go”, to which Shorten said: “I can see the member for Cook lip-synching something. Well, let’s be very clear. The victims of robodebt never had their legal costs paid for, never had the chance to see the evidence that was put against them. The member for Cook is a bottomless well of self-pity with not a drop of mercy for the real victims of robodebt.”
The crowning pièce de resistance of Morrison’s “very Morrison” rendition of moral desolation on Monday, however, was his refusal to apologise. He expressed “regret”, yes, even “deep regret”, but much like his “I would apologise” statement in June 2020, this fell short of a true apology.
Perhaps apologising would have been one lie too many for Morrison. Perhaps there are, in spite of the weight of evidence to the contrary, limits to his implacable shamelessness, or hints of a moral compass, however deformed. But no, the better view is he feels no compunction to apologise because, as he’s previously said, he’s one of God’s chosen few. Apologising would mean forfeiting that stars-shot vibe you’d expect from anyone who courts the greatness of God. And besides, if this was anyone’s fault, surely it was God’s. Morrison was just doing what comes naturally.
It’s this hubris, this deranged blend of populism and mangled Christian faith that detests the poor and sees truth as malleable, which paints Morrison, in his eyes, as the real victim here. It’s for the same reasons no-one can take seriously his claim that the consequences of robodebt were “unintended”. Cruelty was, by design, made into a sacrament; misery among the poor and the vulnerable was the whole point of robodebt. All of which lends Morrison’s claims of hero-like status as the prime minister who oversaw the illegal scheme’s end an added layer of insult.
Robodebt was not, as he now claims, discontinued when the “issues and unintended consequences first arose”, but only following the solicitor-general’s advice in late 2019, and only after efforts to “double down” with the scheme — suicides, complaints, hundreds of adverse AAT ruling and thousands of media reports notwithstanding.
And so there it is: the dishonour of Morrison is, on any view, indelible; his narcissism, boundless. But for all that, he still continues to inspire loyalty in Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, who on Monday told 7.30 that Morrison has a “very strong case” and that he was “right to put it in Parliament and right to serve in Parliament”.
The reasons for this stance, of course, are obvious. For one, it’s difficult for the party to condemn Morrison for a policy they so vigorously and ideologically supported.
For another, Dutton is himself now seeking to rely on classic Morrisonian blame-shifting in response to the Department of Home Affairs scandal. Namely, that it was not incumbent upon him to act on information a Nauruan politician was suspected of corruption because, so he claims, he should have been able to rely on his public servants to ensure all procurement arrangements for offshore processing on the island were above board.
He also claimed, in further Morrisonian fashion, that the controversy was descending into a political witch-hunt, with “many commentators — particularly from the ABC and The Guardian”, in his view, ethically compromised or otherwise “frothy at the prospect of there being a way to attack offshore processing”.
It’s in such ways that “to do a Morrison” or “Morrisonian” will in time come to mean more than a pejorative translated into Hansard as “institutional arson”, “habitual lying”, or “blame-shifting”. It’s set to also become a shorthand for the ideology or strain of reactionary politics the Liberal Party continues to champion. One that attaches no value to norms and conventions, and one that summons the might of the state against the most vulnerable people in the community, including asylum seekers and Indigenous peoples.
And so even if Shorten does complete his “kill list” — even if the moving music finally soars and the credits roll on the worst prime minister in the nation’s history — Morrison’s stench will live on in all the colleagues he has recast in his image.
Morrisonism, in other words, will outlive Morrison. And it could prove one of the most consequential developments for Australian democracy this century.
What will be Scott Morrison’s legacy? Let us know your thoughts 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.
Maybe Morrison should stay in parliament for as long as the electors of Cook can stand him, so that he can serve as a dead cat fastened round the neck of the Liberal Party – a constant reminder of the party’s inexorable slide into a bottomless pit of moral filth since the days of the Howard government.
And once again, great stuff from Marve.
Maybe Labor should reserve one question for him at every question time……………..
……….just to trigger his automatic “It wasn’t me, Guv” response.
A continuous reminder of just how obnoxious his ilk remain.
Question Time is for the Opposition and cross benchers to ask the Government questions. The best we can have is Dorothy Dixers directed to Bill Shorten that give him the opportunity to put the boot into Morrison for Robodebt. Morrison can’t be questioned. That probably explains the smug look on his face.
its all marketing smirko
I have to say I’m enjoying that Shorten is now his tormentor.
That’s what Shorten effectively said to Dutton in Question Time the other day. Addressing Dutton, he said you need to get rid of this wretched man or he will drag you down with him.
Indeed. For the life of me, I can’t understand why Dutton so stubbornly keeps refusing to dump him.
Impunity for all, if they stand together.
I feel pretty certain they’ll keep electing him. They elected him despite knowing his involvement in the smear campaign against his rival for preselection, but it will all depend on Rupert.
Beautiful summation. Nice work Maeve!
I wish I could write like that. Not a word too long, not a word too short, and not a word out of place.
Despite his lie, there were no “unintended consequences”. When Morrison said he was the “tough cop on the welfare beat” and when Tudge said “you’ll go to prison”, and when Human Services put AFP logos on letters, their intent was clear and the consequences were clearly being spelt out.
It’s a reminder of the Scriptural quote that to those who show mercy will be given- no mercy for this unforgiving servant. He will be thrown into hellfire. All metaphorical of course – but this is the legacy and now entrenched culture in the Liberal Party. Dutton re emphasised this recently by dismissing compassion as a desirable virtue of government. There is no future for the Liberal Party until this culture changes. It won’t be done by the members there now
Totally agree. We’re lucky to have her.
Maeve’s comment that ‘cruelty was, by design, made into a sacrament’ with robodebt is a devastating judgment of Morrison and the federal LNP. Breathtaking, Maeve. Another grand piece of writing.
Not, however, a completely original observation. Adam Serwer wrote a much-quoted piece in The Atlantic in 2018: ‘The Cruelty Is the Point: President Trump and his supporters find community by rejoicing in the suffering of those they hate and fear.
SRS, I’m not sure if that’s a profound or accurate insight on your part. The royal commission report itself literally described robodebt as “cruel”. Trump, Morrison et al don’t have a monopoly on cruelty.
It’s neither profound nor an insight. It is though accurate, as an observation intended to give credit where it is due, noting the suggestion that cruelty is the point of the right-wing assault on the more vulnerable sections of the public was made some time ago and has been frequently quoted since.
Cruelty, SRS, in this country predates 2018, as our treatment of refugees and indigenous people shows. Many, many commentators far and wide have described right wing government’s populist attacks on minorities as cruel and sadistic, and many well before 2018.
Yes, cruelty has without doubt been part of human experience and action since forever, but that does not have any relevance to the current popularity of arguing that the cruelty is the point of various notorious right-wing policies.
But it’s not novel to the current moment, that’s the point. As I said, Howard’s treatment of refugees evoked the same commentary at the time. The “current popularity” of the notion in the United States opposed to Australia owes to Trump and Trump alone.
Think too much credit is being given to Morrison individually when the political media tactics and ideology merely replicate what has gone on in the US or UK; corrupt Anglosphere nativist Christian authoritarianism of the 19thC.
The ‘nihilism’ comes with empathy bypasses, kicking down, intimidation, inducing disgust towards the ‘other’ etc., is it simply eugenics?
Thanks Maeve well said.
It is interesting how his type of follower of ‘Christ’ interprets the words of Jesus to suit themselves, or, more likely, just ignore those words. I can’t remember him ever embodying the Beatitudes from the Sermon on the Mount. ‘Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth’ – something that he did in earnest to stop for how would he and his ilk prosper – wealth, power and control. In his victimhood statement to parliament, he clearly thought ‘he was ye’ – ‘blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake’.
Aah! To be so right(eous)! On occasion, some may hear a muffled voice ‘OMG I’m coming!’ followed by a sigh.
As lights on the hill go, ScoMo mainly serves a a flashing siren warning people to stay away.
I haven’t been a Christian for many years but those I knew personally at the time were largely cheerful, helpful and humble. It’s painful to see the corruption and self-serving self-righteousness of those such as ScoMo (and Abbott, and… way too many on the Conservative side of politics) tarnish the reputation of a faith which, at its root, is supposed to be about compassion and self-sacrifice.
Another one to pin on Little Johnny Eyebrows………………
…………..check out his favourite band, the “Exclusive Brethren”, to see where it kicked off.
Mmmm.
You cannot be a conservative and a Christian, the ideologies are polar opposites , christ would never join the LNP or sit alongside the Morrison, Abbott and Howard’s of today
Such is the contradictory nature of Prosperity Theology that Scummo and his mates ascribe to…
Ironic innit? Prosperity Gospel rings the oxymoron alarm bell. Personally, I found the revelations that started emanating before and after the election together with the actions and policies of the Liberals from Howard’s time as PM very un-Christian.
Im still a believer in Jesus the man. He put out some good stuff. Just not a believer in the robber industrial religions that operate in his name pushing their poison in the form of a heavily curated message that is designed to groom their followers into submission so the can be robbed clean by the staus quo.
If JC came back today he would immediately apply for an injunction against every religion/sect/scam currently purporting to operate in his name.
No such “Jesus the man” ever existed. The leaders of the early breakaway church may have created a single “Jesus” out of the many messianic prophets of various ancient beliefs to justify their message as having come from God, but there is simply no evidence that such a person ever existed.
You are correct. There are no primary sources to provide proof to the existence of Jesus. I say this as a former altar boy, or “server” as we were called, and loved every minute of it. It was my love for the idea of Jesus that made me into lifelong socialist and supporter of egalitarian ideals
Me too. I’m an ex-chaplain. Cheers.
The Roman church, from the time of Constantine, has been strictly “pay, pray, obey” for the masses
Should read pray pay pray pay and keep on paying that’s what religion is really about their god is gammon always has and always will be
braddybear, I think you mean Mammon, not bacon.
The blurb on the cover of Charles Freeman’s book AD 381 (Pimlico 2009) sums up much of where we are now: “In AD 381, Theodosius, emperor of the eastern Roman empire, issued a decree in which all of his subjects were required to subscribe to a belief in the Trinity of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. This edict defined Christian orthodoxy and brought to an end a lively and wide ranging debate about the nature of the Godhead, all other interpretations were now declared heretical. Moreover, for the first time in a thousand years of Greco-Roman civilisation, free thought was unambiguously suppressed.” Another of his books arising from the research for this book Closing of the Western Mind.
I understand that Theodosius was a direct ancestor of Little Johnny Eyebrows……………….
And there are probably some who have descended from an ‘illegitimate’ branch. His name probably shouldn’t be used, although in his Maiden Speech, ironically (considering the content) on 14th Feb 2008, he said this:
“From my faith I derive the values of loving-kindness, justice and righteousness, to act with compassion and kindness, acknowledging our common humanity and to consider the welfare of others; ….” He then followed this paragraph with a quote from Desmond Tutu “… we expect Christians … to be those who stand up for the truth, to stand up for justice, to stand on the side of the poor and the hungry, the homeless and the naked, and when that happens, then Christians will be trustworthy believable witnesses.”
I can’t think of too many who have lived a life as a parody of themselves and causing so much damage to so many people.
LJE may have inadvertently proved that “God” does not exist………………
……….if He did, then He would have surely blasted LJE with a thunderbolt on the spot.
What a terrible thing to say about Theodosius. I feel certain he couldn’t have been that bad.
He wouldn’t get the chance. He’d be arrested and probably have an ‘accident’ while in solitary confinement.
I have a hunch Satan’s had the upper hand for a while. Arguably he’s managed to get his best people to the top of many countries or organisations that claim to be christian. Most satisfyingly, the sect is being brought low through the unquestioning faith of its adherents.
Supposedly, Satan’s greatest trick is convince you he doesn’t exist. I think he hides behind those you mention.
how bout the gods of corporation neo conservative Greed? Thats also a fervent belief system infested in false truths and coneptual manipulation
conceptual
Yeah its an old model : Jesus yelled and threw out the thieves in the temple! Its in The Bible
I think they were money changers so people could buy things to turn into burnt sacrifices to offer to God but Jesus didn’t approve of commercial goings on in the Temple.
Pentecostalists are NOT christians – they follow the old testament, where it was perfectly acceptable to have slaves and accumulate wealth by conquest or any other means.
They hide behind the banner of christianity, but did not Jesus throw the money-changers out of the temple, and did he not say “render unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s and unto god, that which is god’s ?
I am no follower of organised religion, in fact I believe that organised religion is a manipulative lie and disguises spiritual truth from their followers, but I believe i am closer philosophically to the teachings of the christ than any self-proclaimed christian.
Morrison does seem to be an unusual man, just as is Trump. I think most of us, most normal people, would be incapable of such brazenly self-serving behaviour. Trump is now commonly described/diagnozed as a ‘malignant narcissist’. It seems that they are hard for normal people to resist, which means that they push through with deals and preselections. It would clearly be a good idea, particularly in the political sphere, if we were on our guard against such people, and blocked their progress early.
If only we the people had the power to do that, Don, but alas! we don’t, our politicians do, and they will push for the pre selection of the charismatic narcissist with the gift of the gab who has no ethics whatsoever and can be and reflect what ever the base wants of them from moment to moment because these are the types who win government.
……..and there are less than 50,000 members of the Liberal Party NATIONWIDE who determine who is pre-selected.
0.20% of the population.
Ain’t “Democracy” grand!!
I believe this is sliding lower as we read. This will probably mean we get even wackier LNP pollies than before and will hasten the eventual demise of the fossil outfit. They need to join the dinosaurs in the dust of history.
If only we could dig them out of the ground to power the nation in future years
‘determine’ could also mean being told as a stacked Christian branch bloc who to vote for…
The number who actually get to have a meaningful say in Liberal pre selections wold be much lower! In Morrisons case there was no democracy: it was dodgy stitch up! This is a common feature of both the LNP and the ALP.
This is why New Scorp exists; to do exactly the opposite. Someone once said that the price of freedom was eternal vigilance, but was before clickbait, page three tits, social media, and scoops on the Royals took away the attention span.
One of the things I warned my sons about was to believe those with absolute certainty and conviction. Usually they’re the nut cases.