Has the Morrison era’s legacy of lies, secrecy and corruption utterly dissolved our capacity to separate truth from unreality? Or did it so lower standards of public debate — so erode public expectations of respect and transparency — that it breached that unholy point of no return, consigning us, unfathomably, to an eternity in Morrison’s depraved new world?
I raise this because if you’re someone who believes Prime Minister Anthony Albanese represents an obvious departure from the former government’s penchant to reject observable reality or lie and gaslight with abandon, you’ve been misled.
Nowhere, during Labor’s national conference in Brisbane last week, did this reality manifest more clearly than over the contentious issue of AUKUS, where — after much wrangling behind the scenes — a limited, though at times fierce debate ensued Friday afternoon on the conference floor.
His government’s unqualified support for AUKUS, thundered Albanese in a well-rehearsed speech, was “an act of clear-eyed pragmatism”, “the choice of a mature nation” — something that would pave the way for the country to “take its rightful place on the world stage”.
Rounding on those who oppose AUKUS, the prime minister then insisted that any scepticism over the military pact was necessarily coloured by a Panglossian worldview unhinged from the realities and weight of the current moment. Contrary to the naysayers, he said, AUKUS was and is the inevitable conclusion of “serious people who are seriously concerned about Australia’s national interest”. Those who don’t indulge in “sunny optimism” but “analyse the world as it is, rather than as we would want it to be”.
“I have come to the position based upon advice and analysis that nuclear-powered submarines are what Australia needs in the future,” he declared, adding that there’s “no security in isolation”.
Echoing Albanese’s screeds was Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, who told delegates that though AUKUS is a “hard choice”, it’s “actually a clear choice”, before going on to say — over jeers — that there’s no greater “Labor act” than supporting the defence pact. “Given what we face,” he said, in a reference to a deeply complex, uncertain and bifurcated world, the half-a-trillion-dollar-plus agreement is actually a “modest step”.
And running with Albanese’s bizarre theme of isolationism was Minister for Defence Industry Pat Conroy, who invoked some contrived and ugly polarisation with his suggestion that the ideal standard-bearers of those who oppose AUKUS — which includes the party’s vast rank-and-file membership — were Neville Chamberlain and Robert Menzies.
“When Menzies was arguing for appeasement and tried to cut defence funding, John Curtin was the one who argued for a massive increase in investment in our Air Force and Navy to deter aggressors in our region,” said Conroy. “So, delegates, do you want to be on the side of John Curtin or do you want to be on the side of Pig Iron Bob Menzies?”
“Strength deters war. Appeasement invites conflict.”
It was a slur labelled “ridiculous” by the lone Labor MP who spoke against AUKUS, backbencher Josh Wilson, and one that prompted party elder and newly appointed patron of Labor Against War Doug Cameron to tweet: “Branding those of us who oppose AUKUS as engaging in appeasement is a cheap shot far removed from reality.”
But it didn’t matter. The isolationist jibe was merely emblematic of the common threads animating the positions variously articulated by Albanese, Marles and Conroy: gaudy condescension and gaslighting on the one hand, and on the other that casual, reflexive certainty and arrogance so typical of politicians who’ve scarcely, if at all, held a job outside the halls of Parliament.
Consider, for instance, Albanese’s insistence that those who oppose AUKUS must, by definition, be unserious, immature people given to both “sunny optimism” and fringe notions of isolationism.
Consider, too, the sheer swagger of his rewriting of recent history, where his declared pride in having affirmed Labor’s support for AUKUS in “less than 24 hours” (without caucus consultation) has now vanished in favour of a narrative that presents AUKUS as something accepted after carefully considered expert advice. AUKUS is a necessity, he would now have us believe; not the product of preelection, small-target politics — never mind his refusal to share the contents and authorship of the “advice and analysis” he now says compelled him to that view.
The same holds for Marles, who referenced the military build-up in China but not the fact that the United States accounts for nearly 40% of global military expenditure and China 13%. And so too Conroy, whose highly selective quoting of Labor history and tradition finds reflection in the 32-paragraph statement on AUKUS he and Marles attached to the party’s national platform.
Indeed, the contents of the statement invoke an eerie symmetry with the Morrison government, which as a general rule was more given to grandstanding and spin than to governing.
For one thing, no fewer than five paragraphs were dedicated to the (untrue) claim that AUKUS and our “defence partnership” with the United States in no way erodes or runs contrary to our nation’s sovereignty. Notably, this sentiment wasn’t confined to the (also untrue) claim that the submarines will be under the sole “control of the Australian government”. It extended to the rather large claim that AUKUS and like initiatives enhance “Australian sovereignty and self-reliance”.
It’s obviously not easy to reconcile such statements with the sovereignty expressly ceded under Australia’s 2014 Force Posture Agreement with the United States, which among other things has allowed the “permanent rotation” of US forces and efflorescence of US military bases on the continent. And nor are they so easily squared with the parameters of AUKUS, which envisions permanent rotations of US bombers (which may or may not carry nuclear weapons) and US and British submarines beginning later this year.
In reality, the only way these paragraphs can be construed as even loosely true is if one accepts the government’s fraught reasoning that no loss of sovereignty can possibly have ensued if these arrangements both required our consent and improve our military capability.
It’s in such ways that the roots of the government’s obvious contempt for the intelligence and will of the people are thrown into sharp relief. After all, Marles himself has said that it is sovereignty (as he understands it) and not democratic consent which sits at the heart of the “compact between a government and its citizens”.
And if that is so, it becomes possible to see why the government attaches so little weight to debate, consultation, transparency — those usual considerations that condition democracy — or at least sees them as subordinate to the whims of those faceless spooks who putatively know better than the people.
Hence Labor’s dishonesty, in its 32 paragraphs, that it is diplomacy, and not militarism, that remains at the forefront of Australia’s foreign policy stance; that it will continue to “ensure” the country continues to meet its nuclear non-proliferation obligations, even as both AUKUS and the FPA directly undermine this stance; and, perhaps most tellingly of all, its “belief”, as opposed to assurance, that AUKUS will in no way draw the country into yet another dangerous US-led war.
Stepping back, the overriding reason Labor has adopted this stance was made clear in Albanese’s opening address to the conference. “Each of us understands that winning and holding government is not only true to our principles, it is essential to fulfilling them,” he told the party faithful. “We know that what we have begun can be undone unless we are there to protect it.”
So, taking the long view, this is ultimately all about power. Not so much its sovereign exercise, but power for power’s sake on the part of one man and his ponderous pride: Albanese. Presumably lost on him is the unadulterated irony of his words. After all, if Labor’s ready embrace of AUKUS, the stage three tax cuts, the carbon credits scam and other transparency-reducing mechanisms, such as national cabinet, are any guide, fears rooted in the erasure of one’s legacy would hardly be animating the Coalition from the opposition benches.
On the contrary, what we have before us is a Labor leadership bent on erasing its own party’s rich history. Not only its achievements with respect to China and, more broadly, Asia over recent decades, but so too its principled anti-nuclear and anti-war positions.
Albanese calls it supreme pragmatism. Others might call it a betrayal of time-honoured beliefs and values. What’s left is power unspooled from any purpose and overriding vision except to remain in office. It’s an empty vessel, as Laura Tingle says, but one with many of the barnacles of the former government.
Absent a fight on the part of the party faithful and movements like Labor Against War, the threat of war, deepening inequality and the accelerating climate crisis are all destined to last until doomsday if all that confronts them is the Albanese government.
Superb analysis McGregor.
The now ‘disappeared’ contributor to Crikey put it this way:
’So it has transpired, and ALP rusted-ons of the first order now face a choice that is barely a choice. They must either, with a metallic rending sound, tear themselves away from the party and launch criticism against it from a broader social democratic that the party was meant to stand for. Or they must become the opposite…sell Labor to increasingly sceptical members and supporters, who are watching as the country is handed the the USA….’
*from a broader social democratic position
Guy was talking about people like me, and I have chosen the first path. Albanese adopted a small target policy as Opposition Leader and has brought it into Govt with him. All the achievements he listed over the weekend were low-hanging fruit. Not for him the bold reform that would be seized on by the big media company owned by an American, or the leftovers sitting in Opposition.
Pragmatism for Albanese means if he worries he might not win a fight then he won’t start it. He argues that it is necessary to be in govt to make changes but there is no point in being in govt if you just want to carry on what the other mob started. Sean Kelly’s article in today’s Nine SMH/Age papers makes the same argument. Given the state of the Opposition, all I see is Albanese quivering at their shadows and wasting time.
Hear, hear DF. You said it so much better than I did yesterday.
How would the Greens handle AUKUS?
Straight into the garbage, where it belongs.
Any party suggesting that would get my first preference no questions asked.
I philosopher whose name I forget said the only fights worth fighting for were those that you might lose. Albanese should read up on that. The time is coming when I will label him The Saccharine Prime Minister.
Considering that the contributor in question supported Russia over Ukraine in the current European war (for confected and conspiratorial reasons), the choice can be more accurately articulated as between autocracy or western liberalism. We have chosen correctly.
Doesn’t mean he was wrong about New Labor.
I’m pretty confident in saying he is wrong.
Being confident doesn’t necessarily mean being right.
Your confidence is exceeded only by your credulity.
Yes, and it happens locally when writers, influencers and opinionistas can create opinion essays masquerading as informed content that avoids credible sources on serious topics, especially European in favour of parroting Anglo/US faux anti-imperialist left (& astroturfing) right ‘tankies’; include Keating too.
Fact is, the former PM and enablers created an almighty mine system with trip wires etc., i.e. AUKUS, to occupy the ALP government, including fending off friendly fire; yet there is still much wriggle room via branches etc. over a very long time line….
You’ve been watching too many John Wayne and Rambo movies, with their simplistic goodies-and-baddies take on the multi-factorial causes of geopolitical conficts. I suggest you stick to the MSM.
Albanese’s speech would have been worthy of Morrison…………………..
……..full of lies, half-truths, glib assertations with no foundation in fact, condescending, didactic, pedantic.
The full spectrum.
The sole objective being his continued tenancy of the big chair.
The choices at the next election are just as clear as those at the last.
Greens, Independents, Teals……………………
……………..whoever is prepared to lay out a set of ideals and stick with them.
Albanese simply has neither ideals nor ideas.
As the Donald would say……………. sad.
Rex Patrick dismantles the AUKUS words of betrayal inserted by force by Machine Gun Marles and Appeasement Pat Conroy into the Labor “platform” – a platform that reminds me of the empty beer cans I stood on 60 years ago to watch the footy.
https://michaelwest.com.au/marles-mauled-rex-patrick-demolishes-defence-sophistry-on-aukus-submarines-nuclear/
The onoy surprise is that anyone is surprised by AA’s perfidy, pusillanimity & mendacity hasn’t been paying attention.
As a born’n’bred Grayndler resident when it had a REAL Labor man, Fred Daly, the gutless little toad lost me when he betrayed the Sydney airport Customs w/b after wasgiven the security report when he was Shadow Transport.
Even after his behaviour became public knowledge, following a leaked Customs-AFP letter he has never said a single word.
Oddly (sic!) NOjourno. has ever asked him for an explanation.
I have fond memories of Fred. His media persona and real life personality were the same. Always entertaining and a delight to speak to. Maybe he should have called his dog Albo but the the dog was more faithful to the master than Albo.
As Allan Patience put it in P&I:
Albanese’s politics are morally hollow. He is an apparatchik, not a statesman. His monotone vocal delivery only amplified the confected passion in his Labor conference speech. At the end of the day he is nothing more than a Labor machine man, ensuring the numbers are sorted before he takes to centre stage. He pretends to tolerate those who oppose his stand on AUKUS, but is prepared to dispense with them in order to pursue his politics of appeasement. It’s his (and Marles’) way or no way, end of story.
We now know the real reason why the parliamentery party put Bill Shorten on top instead of Albanese back in 2013.
Exactly. From all his overblown rhetoric over the years, we might have expected a lion like Whitlam or Keating, but all we got was a mouse.
The most disappointing Labor PM in my 70 years. He couldn’t sell water in the desert.
Kowtowing to the seppos has been going on for some time. Hawke did, but the champion groveller was Howard followed by the vile Morrison. But maybe that’s what is required to stay in power. If you offend the yanks, they will punish you. Remember Whitlam and his betrayal by the contemptible John Kerr ‘our man in Australia’. The Labor Party must feel they are walking on eggshells with the Americans….but what to do if staying in power is the priority? ‘Not with a bang, but with a whimper’.
“If you offend the yanks, they will punish you. “
Ain’t that the truth. Supposedly, some documents have been leaked recently that show that current events in Pakistan are the result of that.
The CIA link in The Dismissal of the Whitlam Government in 1975 is very clear, for Governor General Kerr, was not only the Queen’s representative, but part of the Anglo American intelligence establishment.
Kerr was leading light in the Australian Association for Cultural Freedom, described by Jonathan Kwitny of the Wall Street Journal in his book, The Crimes of Patriots, as “an elite, invitation-only group … exposed in Congress as being founded, funded and generally run by the CIA”. The CIA “paid for Kerr’s travel, built his prestige … Kerr continued to go to the CIA for money.”(1)
Whitlam had enabled a royal commission into intelligence agencies, headed by Justice Robert Hope in 1974. In the US, the Watergate scandal and hearings had shown CIA involvement in domestic politics, and a further investigative committee, the Church Committee, exposed this and much more.
The so called “security agencies” were not happy and were clearly opposed to democratically elected governments.
This as well as the actions taken by the CIA itself in regard to Pine Gap which allowed global surveillance and also domestic Australian surveillance, even allowing it to monitor anti- Viet Nam Farrago and anti US political activity, within Australia all revealed at the trial of “falcon/snowman” spy Christopher Boyce in 1977(2)
The CIA extended its domestic subversive activities, including the establishment of the Sydney-based Nugan Hand Bank, as a focus for channelling money sourced from drug and arms sales into its campaign of subversion around the world.(3)(4)
The Hope Royal Commission in one of its outcomes made ASIO accountable to the government and thus the Australian people and upset the ASIO applecart to a certain extent that’d to the removal of a democratically elected government by initiating the dismissal of the Whitlam Government in 1975 with help from Governor General Kerr, who was not only the Queen’s representative, but part of the Anglo American intelligence establishment.
(1)The Crimes of Patriots: A True Tale of Dope, Dirty Money, and the CIA/Jonathan Kwitny W. W. Norton & Company: New York, NY; 1987
ISBN:9780393336658 LC: HG3448.N846 K95 1987
(2)Boyce claims that he began getting misrouted cables from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) discussing the agency’s desire to depose the government of Prime Minister Gough Whitlam in Australia. Boyce claimed the CIA wanted Whitlam removed from office because he wanted to close U.S. military bases in Australia, including the vital Pine Gap secure communications facility, and withdraw Australian troops from Vietnam.
For these reasons some claim that U.S. government pressure was a major factor in the dismissal of Whitlam as Prime Minister by the Governor General, Sir John Kerr, who according to Boyce, was referred to as “our man Kerr” by CIA officers. Through the cable traffic Boyce saw that the CIA was involving itself in such a manner, not just with Australia but with other democratic, industrialized allies. Boyce considered going to the press, but believed the media’s earlier disclosure of CIA involvement in the 1973 Chilean coup d’état had not changed anything for the better….grâce à wikipedia
(3)The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade/ Alfred W. McCoy, with Cathleen B. Read and Leonard P. Adams II.
New York, NY: Harper & Row:1972
ISBN:0060129018
LC: HV5822.H4 M33 1972
Cocaine politics : drugs, armies, and the CIA in Central America: Peter Dale Scott ; Jonathan Marshall
Berkeley : University of California Press, c1991
ISBN: 0520073126
LC:HV 5840 .C45 S36 1991
Whiteout : the CIA, drugs and the press Alexander Cockburn ; Jeffrey St. Clair
Paperback ed., London ; New York : Verso, 1999
ISBN:1859841392
LC:HV 5825 .C59 1999
Dark Alliance:The CIA, the Contra, and the crcak cocaine explosion
Gary Webb
Seven Stories Press, New York, NY: 2014
ISBN: 9781609806217
LC: HV5833.L67 W43 2014
In 2004, Webb was found dead with two gunshots to the head, the verdict was suicide?
(4)Killing Hope: US and CIA Interventions since WWII/ William Blum/2004
Common Courage Press;. MNE. USA: ISBN: 9781567512526 LC JK468.I6 B5
An A-Z of the countries that the USA has interfered with in the name of “freedom” by assassinations, coups, meddling in internal politics, supporting dictators, jihadis, terrorists or just plain straight out invasion…
It has also been recently revealed that the then chief of CIA Counterintelligence from 1954 to 1975, James Jesus Angleton, a strange name and a strange name, in the year before the Dismissal had already wanted to have the Whitlam Government removed from power…as Brian Toohey relates in his new publication, SECRET*… he obtained such information from John Walker the CIA chief of station in Australia during the Whitlam years
Confirmed… asJ J Angleton said so in an interview with the ABC’s Correspondant’s Report in 1977 an interview in which Angleton discussed how CIA funding in Australian politics and unions was handled.
*SECRET The Making of Australia’s Security State/Brian Toohey
Melbourne University Press. 2019
ISBN 9780522872804 LC:JQ4029.S4 T66 2019
https://theintercept.com/2023/08/16/imran-khan-cable-pakistan-us/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=The%20Intercept%20Newsletter
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/oct/23/gough-whitlam-1975-coup-ended-australian-independence?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email
“Not with a bang, but with a whimper”.
Superb.
It’s the ending of TS Eliot’s “The Hollowmen” (1925) – a perfect description of the abject, emptiness of the current shower in power.
Not a lion, certainly. Maybe not a mouse either. Perhaps it comes down to his vision, if that’s the right word for what Albo has. It looks like his objective all along was to somehow join ‘the establishment’, personally. Do whatever would best serve that objective, regardless of whether or not it was good policy, in the sense of making society better. I thought his promotion of ‘the voice’ was a really positive thing, but now it’s looking like window dressing. Talk about an empty vessel. A sad reflection on the ALP that so far they’ve mostly fallen into line.
I reckon all he’s got is a sales pitch. He’s a slurring, matey, low rent, middle brow booster that instead of flogging magarine ended up PM. Onya Albo, you orta be congratulated. Schlip, schlop, schlap
We always known the it was a choice between the evil of two lessers.
The only ‘difference’ is one wasRight machineminder, the other the Left(HA!)
Anyone remember when Gillard was the soi-disant leader of the Left who allied with the faction spurning Rudd in 2007?
Didn’t that workout well when the Machine offered its support to roll him?
One wouldn’t put too much credence on P&I contributors nowadays.
Why does P&I’s as (former) subscribers complain, platform so much ageing faux left, i.e. RWNJ opinions based on the 20thC cold war prism, but avoid scrutinising more recent events e.g. PRC’s colonisation of islands, reefs etc.; includes Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, justified as a provocation by US, NATO, EU, ‘the west’ etc.
Everything about AUKUS in media and narratives seems to detour around the LNP etc. and ‘traps’ left in favour of kicking the new ALP govt., or are we just not very clever?
Those leaving the censorious, milquetosti zine would be well advised to subscribe to P&I which is written by adults, for adults and has no need of official approval for comments because subscribers use their real names.
Sadly, I can only agree! He has had time to settle into the job and should now be able to project the true ‘Albo”- ‘fighting Tories” That is now a sick joke. However, there is nothing there!! He is a fraud. The young radical Albo was all a sham; and now he is PM!
His main strength is that he is not Peter Dutton. Even this will not help when the Voice is lost!! The ALP needs to look for a true leader for the future-any contenders????
here is one long-term supporter who will never vote ALP again and for one reason – the gifting of our sovereignty to the American military/industrial complex. Morrison and ‘Machine Gun’ Marles and ‘Pentagon’ Penny are a bloody disgrace and might as well join the Opposition’s rabble
Albanese not Morrison – my horrible mistake
Sorry I meant ‘Arms Race’ Albanese
I’m with you Terry. And never mind .. you can mix the names up as much as you want .. all the same rabble.
An interesting and revealing confusion, that brings to mind the ending of Animal Farm:
Not that it matters, when sees what they do.
Surely Missile Marles after this morning’s shocking news?
Not forgetting Pentagon Penny, who took over the gig from Hawke.
It’s ok, it’s a mistake that is getting easier to make with every passing day.
Quite accurate nevertheless, in a Freudian kind of way.
I think you meant ‘Arms Race Albo’, not the worst PM in living memory.
Are we as electors and the generally speaking silent majority subject to and destined to be hoodwinked by successive governments into believing their spin and obfuscation for each term; and only learning of the “truth” as a postscript? I want (no I insist) on truth and expect openness. When will we vote for those that are interested in those they represent? Am I too idealistic?
I am old enough to remember the NSW politician Mr Ted Mack.
Me too, re Ted mack.
Is it not a sad fact that someone as honourable as Ted Mack should stand out by virtue of that fact?…………
Probably the last NSW politician deserving of the title “The Honourable”.
Tony Windsor, perhaps?
Rob Oakeshott also..
Peter Andren, long term Member for Calare, was a pillar of principle and integrity until the seat was expanded to one of the largest in the nation, from Orange to the SA/NT/Qld border – which an Independent physically could not cover when cancer forced him to retire.