The Yes campaign has the stink of death about it, and its supporters are pinching their noses and pretending otherwise. The polls have mysteriously reversed overnight (it seems to some), and a hint of panic trickles through the ranks of the politicians, advocates and commentariat who were so certain of a win not one year ago. Somehow a campaign designed to appear like a chess wunderkind launching a late-game play is instead reminiscent of a drunken, pot-bellied, elderly uncle struggling to rise from his armchair before his nightly laxative kicks in.
The only thing worse than a filled nappy is one that refuses to be changed.
Despite the shock of disappointment, there is an air of inevitability to the whole thing. The Voice has morphed into a reckoning for a certain strain of Australian liberalism, one that has spent the better part of the past decade reluctant to acknowledge its own decay. Anthony Albanese and the ALP are both the product of and proponents for this creeping rot, which spreads to all that it touches — the Voice being no exception.
The Voice is not a particularly radical or revolutionary piece of policy (if anything, it’s 30 years overdue) when considered beyond the bounds of culture war tribalism. But it has been boxed and marketed by Albo and co as a vague fix-all that will undo that which cannot be undone, a one-sip healing potion that can magic away the stoppages that make reform in this area difficult, while empowering those our nation’s very existence depends on disempowering.
From the start, Albanese has been intent on making this his trademarked Labor PM “light on the hill” moment. What he forgets is that his party privatised said hill and outsourced the lighting to contractors somewhere back in the 1980s. It is the dilemma that has faced every modern Labor prime minister since Rudd fumbled the ETS: how to reconcile the soapbox legendarium you love roleplaying with your reality as the consolidator of capital-friendly centrism.
The answer, deduced from an eternity of stage-managed nothingness, is to call for humanity while acting completely inhuman. The post-Howard years have seen the ALP bend towards an algorithmically steered semi-cognisant logic that has left its politicians as little more than bet-hedging androids, self-administering daily Voight-Kampff tests via consultancy firms who repeatedly play them for rubes.
We can see this play out in real time with a prime minister and government who appear detached from the reality of the referendum, especially the public’s perception of it. Decades of outsourcing difficult decision-making, ideology and even identity have meant that any nationally significant call to arms from a Labor government now feels defined by its removal from it. The ALP approaches its policies with a dog-poo bag already reversed over its hand like a glove. When it comes to something as significant as the Voice, the result of this approach is calamitous.
You get the sense with Albanese that he is playing to a base that hasn’t really existed since Howard’s first term. His and the ALP’s habit of self-mythologising has trapped them in a Whitlamian Neverland, a world where the apathy of our times is as graspable as fairy dust is in our own. That apathy, and the confusion it breeds, is the Voice’s biggest hurdle — and it’s a hurdle modern Labor is all but incapable of jumping because the party is as reliant on as it is terrified of it.
This is what opens Plibersek’s coal mines, keeps the dole below the poverty line, fuels the housing crisis, maintains our gulag archipelago, and pays off Qantas. Labor has come to depend on what it sees as the indifference of the average voter, an indifference that is actually closer to confusion, frustration and fatigue. It is terrified of this perceived indifference exploding into something less manageable, and so it makes every move with a baked-in timidity. It has paid a fortune to the bandit camps of focus groups and thought leaders who repackage the ALP’s cowardice on its behalf and sell it back to the party as courage.
And so we have an ALP in a perpetual crisis of self, incapable of doing little more than self-flagellating while blaming others for its sore back. Wearing Labor wonk goggles, this timidity is actually sensible apoliticism, a useful buffer between one’s ideology and one’s disappointment with the results it produces. This self-delusion is strained by something like the Voice, which requires a certain level of engaged, gloves-off proactiveness that tests the limits of neo-Labor’s ability to affect coolheadedness while desperately wanting things to get done.
This leads to an undeniable weirdness, made unremarkable only by its overwhelming presence across Australian politics. From Albo’s teary introduction of the Voice to a photo spot with Shaquille O’Neal that hummed with absurdist-comedy energy. The performance ends up looking like disengaged engagement, which has naturally rubbed off on the punters in the stands. And who can blame them?
Among what feels like five separate Yes campaigns tripping over each other on their way to a future parliamentary inquiry, Albo has positioned himself like an Ernst & Young Gandalf, appearing when needed to let off a few fireworks, before receding into some distance subplot in his government’s appendices. If the Voice fails, Albo will be able to dust his hands, shrug, and walk away whistling. If it succeeds, he’ll be like Leonard Nimoy at the end of the monorail episode of The Simpsons.
What we’re seeing is another brilliant example of the thinktankitisation of modern Labor, and the glue-sniffer’s strain of enlightenment dubbed “radical centrism”. By committing to this schtick of market-tested neutrality, the ALP has hamstrung its ability to make even the measliest bit of progress here or anywhere else. As we’ve seen again and again, this empowers the Duttons and co of this world to knock Labor arse-flat over even the mildest policy contention, let alone one with as much blood in the water as the Voice. If the ALP should have learned anything from the embarrassment of the Abbott years, it’s that a loud and rabid “NO!” will always trump a self-assured and smirking “Well, actually …”
But it’s a lesson the ALP can’t learn because learning it requires a lot of hard work — hard work being anathema to this middlebrow, middle management, middle road it’s dedicated to driving 20 kilometres under the limit on.
Those left pissing in their tepid tailwind will be those with the most to lose — those who put their necks on the chopping block under the darkly comical belief that Albo had their back. The repercussions of this wholly avoidable failure will be an intergenerational echo that the ALP will wave off as tinnitus.
There’s still time to change the nappy, but only if Labor admits things stink.
Labor: sensible and steady or timid and terrified? 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.
This is presumably why Labor hates the Greens so much, much more than the Coalition who they see as cozy bed-mates whenever possible. The Greens try to get them to do better, and they don’t like that.
Totally.
when ya have a poor 2 oarty duoploy? Ya giving a leg up to blame a few fear driven labor soft cocks for the Dunces brigade that caused all the mess ?
Pretty accurate analysis, and, remarkably, makes its case without needing to even mention once Labor’s commitment to the full Stage Three tax cuts. The only doubt I have is whether Labor is being timid. Labor has shifted completely the centre right, but it has not yet quite fully adjusted or adapted. It still occasionally says mildly progressive things and even makes half-hearted gestures towards them, but these are like the sensations in a phantom limb after an amputation. The social democrat or progressive part of Labor is long gone.
I thought this was a good analysis too and it explains the inability or unwillingness for this government to develop much of a sense of influence or engagement – it feels like they generally don’t give a rats about much and don’t even have their act together when they do. The article explains this quite well, though I cannot begin to describe how much I didn’t enjoy the poo metaphors.
Not sure of that, significant demographic change in electoral rolls is yet to happen, which explains the haste and the rage of many in or around the LNP, before the ‘great replacement’, while Labor still looks and sounds like the LNP…..
One sees this as generational from the ’80s as ALP moved/dragged to the centre, while our MSM became a right wing cartel, seemingly designed or adapted to become PR for the LNP while promoting ‘think tank’ talking points, to ‘wedge’ not just Labor, but also the moderates or ‘wets’ in the Liberal Party (vs. Gina’s IPA Nats); Labor too has to disentangle itself from old ideology.
Before anyone of the right gets too excited, the Voice ‘No’ campaign is a sign of weakness for the (silent?) Liberal Party, as it morphs into the QLD LNP, which will create even more problems in SE Australia for the Liberal Party that is near extinction, but kept on life support by donors and RW media cartel.
Yes I wonder if Dutton would have said no if that idiot little to be proud of hadn’t wedged him by (not in so many words) threatened the diminishing LNP by shouting no before the proposition was even put!
The internal wedging in the LNP between the now faux ‘rural’ party the Nats and the faux ‘liberal’ party the Libs is encouraged by imported US modus operandi applied to the GOP & Tories by their radical or far right rumps i.e. Freedom Caucus & ERG respectively; with those fossil fueled Koch think tanks, like IPA, in the background to ensure the ‘right ‘ policies emerge.
Looking past the florid and excessively verbose language, there is an undeniable point hiding in there……………..
Labor are afraid of their own shadow, and having fallen into power by virtue of NOT being Morrison & The Incompetents, have not a clue as to what they should be doing…………
……hence their propensity for just continuing with the previous “government’s” disastrous follies.
It’s so much easier than actually thinking.
Agree.I started being critical of Albanese before he was elected PM. It started with the stage 3 tax cuts (there, I’ve said it) and his misunderstanding of why Shorten lost the unloseable election. I concluded he was timid for no good reason until I saw a better explanation. He genuinely believes he was elected on the back of disappointed conservatives who still want Morrison’s policies followed. That is why he and his Government have failed to reverse them.
Albanese can save the referendum by releasing the proposed legislation to counter the conspiracy theories and those genuinely concerned about voting in the dark. He could save his Government by doing the things we thought he would do when he was in opposition. It is rapidly becoming too late for both.
He did nothing to oppose them when Leader of the “Opposition”, that’s for sure, so we shouldn’t be surprised that he’s Morrison-lite now. He went out of his way to lock Labor into supporting the pernicious tax cuts.
Rubbish! He is not even close to be Morrison-lite. I am constantly astounded how quickly people forget the past 9 wasted years of LNP government. It’s like people have transitioned their previous rage for Morrison onto Albo without seeing the achievements made in just 15 short months of government. Do we have a short-term memory crisis in Australia, or are we just addicted to rage?
Sorry Cooper, but by the time of the next election the relevant figure will be “over 11 wasted years”.
In terms of competence, Albanese is no Morrison. He is much smarter than Scott. But when it comes to policy the two are practically in lockstep with different approaches to achieve the same ends. The biggest difference between the two is that while Morrison was eager to discuss his wicked plans and monologue over them, Albanese and co. are doing the equivalent of gazing at their shoes and muttering something about how sorry they are but they’re forced to do evil things. “If only somebody could do something…”
terrible at campsigning and cleaning out lobbyland, media cartels – giving us promised clean jobs and sovereign manufacturing – nationalise our assets and tell the corps killing us to bugger off
The labor softly softly nice guy do nothin approach will backfire – they need to clean up the joint – the worst at instigating this voice via the right wing ABC – run by neo libs aka David promoting hiw its failing … what about polls being biased – now its the vibe abd we havent even voted ! Negative perception breed fail !
Not great thinkers any of em arr they ? Crikey intellects ?!
Tries too hard, flushes his message.
If Patrick thinks his scatological references are new and shocking, he should listen to Derek and Clive.
P.S. what a ‘rube’?
“Rube” is an Americanism for a country bumpkin………….
what a ‘rube’? – an uninformed, unsophisticated, or unintelligent person – from, an unsophisticated country person; a yokel
– an easily manipulated tool
It’s a typo for rubber. Another Americanism.
sadly ( for me, coz I still want some action on climate change, poverty, et cetera) I didn’t think the writingwas florid or excessive in choice of language. I thought it was pretty accurate. sigh.
indeed
The fact they won Govt by not being Morrison was always going to be a negative in the sense that it allowed them to simply put forward no real plan or agenda for change, which is exactly what we have seen. Too scared to advocate something bold like “It’s Time” and engage in some positive social reforms, they instead opted for a pissy little “we’re not ScoMo” but otherwise everything stays pretty much the same. I don’t know how they sleep…
a disgrace but at least Max C Mather has grown some balls … cause he was workin in a real job in the last 5 years !
Morrison and the Incompetents sounds like an interesting band. I’m guessing their genre might be something like a heavy metal country rap gospel band.
Their first album was a cracker………….
“Jesus wants me for a Billionaire!”
Features some fantastic work by “Baseload” Barnaby on Electric Banjo and “Nosferatu” Roberts on brown paper bag.
Fronted by Scott “The Eagle” Morrison on vocals (although rumour had it he was secretly understudy to all the band members)……….
Respectfully disagreeing with your opinion Patrick.
IF the majority of voters in the majority of states vote YES, who needs any “leaders” to tell us how to vote. It is really starting to get on my goat, this postmodern (or whatever) spirit of australia (aka blame everyone or anyone else for one’s decision).
Are we a pack of wishy washy f**ckw*ts, when did we completely turn into a pack of idiotic followers.
Time to just tell it like it is: it is your vote, own it. Blaming Albo or Dutts or anyone else is just giving a free pass and allowing anyone to absolve themselves of responsibility for not voting YES.
The scene in Life of Brian got there before you — where the eponymous hero tells the crowd following him they are all individuals, they should think for themselves and not follow leaders. It fairly accurately sums up how effective such a demand is, no matter how desirable it might appear or how theoretically justified.
Not so much as demand as reiterating the advice to think for oneself.
Anyway I reckon the Pythons were having a go at religion, authority and old farts..things that probably need questioning every generation.
Maybe it was also just very funny.
26 years of Ming might be a good starting point..or are you one of those forgetting people..
You mean back when, for most of Australia, there were no indigenous?
When did we completely turn into a pack of idiotic followers? The Tampa election – not much has changed since.
Credit where it’s due, Howard certainly recognised something many others failed to see.
Well said, thoroughly agree.
The point is not blame it is factually about propagandist media luv … Cross media ownership – why i have to fork out to get another forum due to dumbed down lobby run with yes and young echo chambers- divide and conquer dictatorship
Bypass them and Vote Yes, is what I say.
“It’s not what happens to you, but how you react to it that matters.”
Agree. If Australia voted for aboriginal recognition in the 1967 referendum and our country was big enough to support landrights, as heralded by the Wik and Mabo decisions, then how is it that our community cannot support a constitutionally ensconced voice for aboriginal and torres strait islander peoples. This constitutional amendment is so modest, in my view. And it is 30 years overdue.
Yes, we do have to own our vote. As a non-aboriginal person, I will proudly vote yes to support the recognition and aspirations of the aboriginal and torres strait islander peoples.
Brilliant piece Patrick!
I love the quip about driving 20 km under the limit – that line really captures Labor today.
Agreed.
Love the writing – thank you, Patrick. The scatological references are entirely appropriate for a party which repudiates virtually everything that Labor parties once stood for.
And the description of what happened to Chifley’s light on the hill is masterful.
Agreed .. a piece well worth writing. A Voice to Labor.
I wish the article was not quite so brilliant – a bitter pill for a diehard Labor supporter, on his way to his local branch meeting this evening and seriously considering reading the article aloud to our little gathering..