“History on horseback” — Hegel’s famous description of Napoleon — can be adapted for exiting Victorian Premier Dan Andrews as “history with a bad back”. Even before he took a swan dive off three wooden steps, the man who has dominated the life and politics of Victoria for a decade had a stance that had people asking: “What’s up with that dude?”
For a decade, and long before COVID hit and the Dan press conference was a thing — with Dear Leader standing, in a black undertaker suit, oddly angled, about to introduce an expert to tell us which part of the city was next to be covered with an even layer of concrete — we wondered, what was going on? Was it something you don’t joke about? When he’d put on his jacket, had he left the coathanger in? It always seemed oddly appropriate to Victorian Labor’s complexly angled politics. Call it chiropraxis. It’s the air of a man underestimated for much of his early life.
Much of Victoria certainly did, when this gawky, geeky Labor fanboy shambled on stage after John Brumby’s 2010 defeat. Jesus, I thought, watching one of his first awkward appearances, honking and shambling and blinking, where’d they get this bloke? Ah yes, from the Socialist Left. The usual crap sandwich, the Left getting to take command when nothing was left to lead. Andrews, the new opposition leader, had the gravitas of a traffic cone, put there to mark the place the Right back themselves into after a 2014 loss, aiming for a chance in 2018. For a couple of years, Andrews struggled to get any sort of hearing at all. Inside the party, he was known, apparently, as a focused and efficient operator. From the outside, he looked pure Labor stooge, like an organiser from the old Misos climbing out of a Volkswagen at 7am to talk to nine workers at a chicken sexing facility.
It was an easy mistake to make — and the Victorian Liberals certainly did. They had never fully accepted Labor’s 1999 surprise victory as legitimate, still less the 200x consolidation with a majority win. Neither, to a degree, had Labor. Jeff Kennett’s 1992 victory had been taken as a laying of the foundation for another two decades in power, one which would have consigned the Cain-Kirner era to interregnum status within a two-generation Liberal rule.
Instead, with Andrews in the leadership slot, Labor’s Victorian factions maintained a stability pact that allowed them to turn the guns outwards for a few years. Strategy, polling and policymaking got more professional. The last vestiges of the old “social movement”, which Labor had hung around the Bracks-Brumby government, went. This was now an efficient machine, turned back to the suburbs, sweeping to victory. Coming in amid the mild global stagnation of the 2010s, it was tasked with building on the Bracks-Brumby refashioning of Victoria as a place that either taught shonky degrees to Indian students or sold coffee to the teachers of them, while rendering Melbourne as a boutique liveable city, all converted warehouses and queer puppet festivals.
Build on it the Andrews governments did, but it also changed approach. The global stagnation put the onus on the state to fill a demand gap, as Western capitalism began its long decline. The party swung into this with massive infrastructure programs, which kept the state — now really a city-state with a hinterland — ticking over while making concrete improvements. Concretely concrete. Level crossing removals were the start, and the middle, and the end; a program of initial utility long since overextended at the cost of other projects. There was resistance at first. Then people saw the long overpasses rising above old shopping streets, and the linear parks beneath, as actual change, movement, something. What was presented as a rail project was really a car project, smoothing flow. This was the first of what would become the characteristic Andrews government one-two, Labor putting itself in the service of facilitating capital, while presenting its policies as a continuation of the social democratic, or social market, project.
It was that. But it was material social reform as an add-on of an add-on. The Metro tunnel (an inheritance), the level crossings, the West Gate tunnel, the North East Link and that modern ghost train, the Suburban Rail Loop — each has been an intentional money pit, which has kept certain sectors ticking along while health and education suffered. When this debt-fuelled demand suffered the hit of inevitable interest rate rises, Dan said he had been misled by the money managers and was shocked — shocked — to find that money had a price, something not even little children believe. The truth was that COVID had caught the state short, and everything had to be thrown at what it and the lockdowns here had caused, which was a hole dug inside a hole.
But it worked, politically and party-politically. Andrews’ Labor success was dual, not only refashioning the state but securing, by those second and third election victories of such scope, a near-totalisation of his government’s legitimacy, and a consequent hollowing out of the Liberal Party.
We are now so used to this having happened that we forget what an extraordinary political achievement it is. It was accompanied by parallel internal victories, not only with the crushing of the Adem Somyurek and related groupings — less a faction than a crew of grotesques out of a Tim Burton movie — but with victories inside the Socialist Left. There was corner-cutting, to put it mildly — the Red Shirts, the money-funnelling revealed by IBAC’s Daintree investigation — and there will doubtless be more to come. How much and how deep it all went may ultimately discredit the memory of this government. At the same time power became vastly concentrated within the Premier’s Department — and then within the fixers’ bunker, the Premier’s personal office.
But it kept Andrews ahead of the game. All that occurred came with an accommodation with the SDA union, but that was not really important. Labor’s commitment to being the party of capital is now so comprehensive that the old left-right divisions don’t amount to much. And the SDA was now such a compromised and morally discredited organisation (its valiant anarcho-syndicalist-libertarian-communist faction aside) that it couldn’t even find the oomph to object to the militant left progressivism that Andrews twinned with service to capital.
So our future was not a boot stamping on a human face; it was Dan’s stupid face grinning at a performance of drag queen storytime, staged at Parliament, in solidarity with an event that had been chased out of a public library by threats. That was part of a comprehensive commitment, from assisted dying through gender affirmation, multiple treaties and much more. Most of it is not to my taste, as a socialist social conservative, and I suspect a future Labor government, or opposition, will have to part-retreat from much of it, as such social change hits the suburbs. But there’s no doubt it has claimed fierce loyalty from a core of progressives, happy to march behind the rainbow bulldozer as it ploughs on.
Rainbow, yes. But still a bulldozer. The communal concern will always yield to the demands of capital. The spirit of Treaty didn’t matter much when the Djab Wurrung trees stood in the way of that most bewildering of ambitions: making it easier to get to Ararat. The letter of Treaty could be mobilised by finding one group to agree to it, while dozens didn’t. The final act, as I noted yesterday, was to give us a comprehensive building program by destroying much of what remained of public possession of the city, a final act of neoliberalisation. Five days after bringing that in, he has resigned, and says he probably won’t be working in the public sector. Well, just fancy that!
There is a lot more to say, but deadline looms. If my assessments now and before sound churlish, that is partly for this forum. Elsewhere I have and will, for what it’s worth, defended the man and his government for strong and steady leadership of a type that Labor premiers often struggle to achieve, for achieving a progressive agenda that expresses the art of the possible under limited circumstances. But the possibilities have been very limited indeed in some respects.
To be honest, I don’t really understand what Labor people, who aren’t utterly amoral, think they are doing in what they have pursued: the relentless proliferation of a totalitarian capital — vast decentred underserviced suburbs, JB Hi-Fis to the horizon connected by freeways built by a privatised roads corporation, and the final destruction of the public housing system. This is what you all got into this game for? In your party for? The man who has led that here for a decade remains an enigma to me, an energetic agent of much of what the political tradition he joined tried to provide an alternative to.
No-one can deny his achievements, not least in remaking himself from goofy wonk to genuine leader, of a movement and a society. But as far as the “unquestionable present” went, the man with the funny stance has stooped to concur.
Were you happy to march behind Dan Andrews’ rainbow bulldozer? 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.
ANMF (Vic Branch) Secretary Lisa Fitzpatrick made a statement Premier Daniel Andrews’ achievements will long benefit Victorians – a statement from ANMF (Vic Branch) Secretary Lisa Fitzpatrick | The National Tribune
Points that I note:
In my time as Branch Secretary, I have worked with five Victorian premiers, both Labor and Liberal. None have been as willing to meet, listen, and to act on, the concerns and wishes of Victoria’s nurses and midwives.
Other significant milestones under the Andrews Government was the introduction of 150m ‘safe zones’ around women’s health and family planning clinics, for the physical and mental safety of women and health workers.
I think the world is actually changing. Small changes maybe, but not insignificant for (some) of those who do matter.
Democratic socialist governments in Australian once had ambitions to legislate for basic human dignity and workplace fairness for men and women whose only natural-born privilege (and politically meaningful identity marker) was a human brain and a pair of human hands. A Labor government wrenched Australia away from the patronising oppression of Empire – at the urgent height of wartime existential crisis. (And now in peacetime another has toddled us abjectly back, nappy loaded and sooking in terror.) Labor politicians faced down thousands of years of accumulated feudal power, without shedding a drop of anyone’s blood save their own. They muscled our mid sized country onto seats of modest but insistent significance in all sorts of forums all over the international stage. They supplied working Australians with access to a house, weekends off with their kids, a holiday, an income when they got sick. Socialist parties of governance gave us universal health care, pensions for beaten single mothers, free education through to post-graduate elite aspiration and even access to all comrades to the multiplying potential of capital itself, for those who wanted it. For a brief moment they opened the door on an independent world outlook and a place among nations of grown-up peoples where we might actually look superpowers in the eye as geopolitical systemic equals. ‘Laboratory of social democracy’ wasn’t just a Tik Tok hashtag for a ten second internet cycle. Once.
To describe, as a politically ‘significant milestone’ for a Labor government, the imposition of a public administrative-tic that a third tier local Council bureaucrat could have installed at 2.30 pm on a Tuesday afternoon with the stroke of pencil stub before taking a flex afternoon for an early pilates class, is to set in flashing neon just how self-effacing and self-abasing the allegedly ‘progressive’ inhabitants of Australia’s public polity have become. To be anything but politely disdainful of the political life and times and work of a tyre-kicking lightweight like Daniel Andrews – at heart, simply Australia’s first Social Media Influencer high office holder, a middle class cubicle surfer and social climber who like all professional Labor politicians these days regarded the summit of his political career as just another transactional waypoint on his Linked In journey to a real job on the big coin – is to advertise the shallowness of what ‘left material politics’ now is. Andrews smirks away from the Victorian Premiership, toting his poke of narcissistically hoarded and unspent political capital like a CV to slap down on the KPMG HR desk, leaving yet another conveniently competent and keen but soon-to-be hapless fall girl to deal with the mess of his making that will unfold over the next half decade. Anyone can spend taxpayer money, pimp-featherbed for his union medicis and groom soft pap progs into Rohipnoled compliance with sparkly rainbow trinkets. Especially when you have no political opposition to speak of. But it’s not – it never really is – the Liberal Party the new Premier will have to stop from feasting on the wriggling native critters left wholly-exposed and wholly-unchampioned in all the expensive upturned sod. It’s raw capital. You can get a preview of the glint now in its eye in Jeff Kennett’s smirking invitation to Andrews to come around and have a whiskey in his man cave some time. Enjoy your glennfiddich. And f**k you both.
When did Australia’s thinking lefties become so p*ss-weak? So distracted by trivialities like…FFS, harnessing the Might of The State to the supreme political Category Error of…bulwarking the ’emotional safety’ of having an abortion? So politically witless? So gormless and dupable by the superficial sleight-of-handery of contemporary media narrative shaping? When your average net worth poked through $1M? Or just when they invented Teh Interwebz? Good grief, if that’s all it was ever going to take to quell the revolution Humanity could have saved an awful lot of bloodshed since 1870.
Vale, the political ‘achievements’ of Daniel Andrews. You will not be missed, because you never showed up in the first place. Just the way the preening impostorhood known as ‘the progressive left’ likes it, these days, of course. You love an Andrews for doing nothing politically, because the doing of nothing politically demands of you…nothing, too.
More soft pap progs. I’m beginning to think they exist.
Jack’s got me coming round – if you squint a bit, the fish hooks and spikes blur away…
Yeah. Well. Tell that to the nurses, midwives and personal care workers.
JR, I reckon I must’ve run into you, back in the day, when the blokes of Trades Hall used to snuggle up with the blokes of the Hospital Employers Association; they had a purpose, which was to
a) take control of the (mostly female) nurse workforce and
b) take control of the (mostly female) nurse workforce
Purpose also shared by just about every leader of every political party in Australia.
So, do not be lecturing me about “geopolitical” “class” or other BS. I AM that underclass so beloved of true revolutionaries.
Would they be all those care workers struggling away with no end to their misery in sight, in a chronically underfunded sector?
Yes. And absolutely no one bothers until it affects them personally. Does anyone contact local member? Does a voter worry about care workers etc when casting a vote?
So, it is left to nurses etc to do the heavy lifting. Which they do. And will keep on doing.
I AM a care worker. I’ve spent the best part of thirty years engaged in a multitude material political vehicles, increasingly futile because of people like Daniel Andrews. And Eric Beecher. A few years ago even reaching a nadir with a pathetic run for my local council as an Indepedent. And I spend much of my spare time writing angry comments for this site. Most of them censored now.
I AM a care worker. The nurses are doing fine. So are the unioned tradies digging tunnels for capital at $150 an hour. It’s the untenured academics, retail workers and casual pieceworkers who are f**ked. And the increasinbg numbers who will never own a house.
And, on reflection, you probably are a personal care worker, just not the sort of PCW who is employed to look after strangers. Everyone, at some time in their lives, is a recipient or receiver of care. Unpaid carers are the unacknowledged backbone of our social care system.
As for the nurses, they are slowly helping care workers move up the ladder. It is slow, because professional care work is gendered and not valued.
And then there are the loud screaming voices who think the idiotic old trope “nurses are born and not made” is somehow a solution to the problem created by oppression of the rights of others.
Not much different to how No to Voice is excluding certain groups of Australians from a seat at the table.
Thing is, if you post a comment, sometimes you can expect a reply.
I AM a personal care worker, fwiw.
PS: I am getting truly fed up with being selectively censored in these conversations.
In your Walter Mitty.
Elsewhere you claim to be a pilot. And an air traffic controler, if I am not mistaken.
great. now I get to be verballed as a fantasist.
i have supplied crikey with a link to my bona fides. whether or not they publish it is out of my control. google ‘jack robertson sydney youtube’ if they don’t. then maybe feel slightly stupid for stooping to such a shabby discursive presumption. it says more about you than me if that’s the best you can do.
No one says that you cannot post. Disputation is NOT censorship.
All my comments are automatically modded. About maybe a third get through now. Crikey’s site, Crikey’s call.
Not whining, just pointing out I’m getting a bit jack of it. As for ‘dispute’…that’s why I post here.
Um, HELL yeah, Jack. Minus leaving people seeking abortions to the tender mercies of fundamentalist whackos, of course – why do you always have to throw in a bum note or three?
There is no actual left operating in our polity. All the progress you could ask for in the social sphere isn’t worth a tinker’s cuss while everyone within cooee has their hands firmly around their ankles for capital; the future is consequently absent.
I think that, in years to come, Dan Andrews and his government will serve as excellent examples to future Liberal leaders of what a good Liberal government should look like.
Here here.
Andrew’s great success has been wedging the liberals and likely keeping them out of politics for the foreseeable future. It’s clearly a model Albanese is trying to mimic.
You can see that it has worked as the liberals continue to be a non-entity in this state. They’re nominally the opposition but the real threat to Labor’s hegemony are various left-wing and centrist independents.
True, but now he’s gone it would be nice to be able to say, “Good job for a Lib, Dan, but now it’s time to elect a Labor government.”
I dunno. Maybe lefties should vote Socialist next time? But which breed of socialist? There’s the rub.
Given the extent of his public works it seems mean spirited to label him as a lib. what do you possibly get from these assertions? He’s as left as Victorians are going to get. Were he a fellow traveller, I doubt the lengths taken to demonise this former politician. Miniature gallows featuring Dan in effigy? Not the hallmarks of an angered left voter.
I wish he were operating in NSW as Minns is not nearly left enough for my liking.
The Libs lost Victoria post Hamer govt. of the ’70s via Howard’s strong antipathy towards Victoria, emergence of US influence on Lib policies and to an extent Kennett’s, imported war on ‘wets’ or small ‘l’ LIbs dividing the Liberal Party; Labor slipped into the space and have held it since.
You seem a bit out of sorts today,Mr Rundle. Of course there are pros and cons re legacy of the Andrews’ term of government,but I for one am so glad we had him rather than the alternatives on offer. He goes down as a master at reading the Victorian electorate ,far better than many of his peers .I am in my mid 80’s and can remember all those years of all the level crossings everywhere.I also appreciate his stance re the Pandemic.
I agree that categorising the Level Crossing Removal project as a cars-only affair is not accurate. The truth is that the private transport and public transport (trains) network have been in gridlock for many years: increased services of the latter would only tie up the former for longer times at level crossings, while increased numbers of cars prevented increases in train services. Now that the two have been decoupled, they can grow independently, and if the public wants funding directed towards one rather than the other, they can express this desire through the ballot box.
I didnt say it was cars-only. But it was car led. I also said that the early part of the programme was necessary. The later ones are misallications. More trains more tram track d be better but less spectacular….
Yep and i said id defend him and his legacy in other forums against right wing attacks. But crikey is a space for debate with a bit of elbow room, for those on the left…
“Most of it is not to my taste, as a socialist social conservative, and I suspect a future Labor government, or opposition, will have to part-retreat from much of it, as such social change hits the suburbs.”
Pardon my ignorance, but what exactly is a “socialist social conservative”?
It doesn’t seem too complicated – a socialist believes in some form of communal ownership of the means of production, and a social conservative believes that social institutions have evolved to their present form for good reasons and change to those institutions should be slow and measured. There is clearly an awful lot of variation to both sets of beliefs, and equally clearly there are very many who call themselves “socialists” or “conservatives” while having no idea of the history or nuance of these concepts, but there’s no obvious reason the two can’t coexist in the same brain in a reasonably principled way.
To a degree. A social conservative is almost always an authoritarian, and socialism is inherently democratic. Authoritarianism and democracy are fundamentally at odds.
a ‘social conservative is almost always an authoritarian…’
politically illiterate nonsense. if anything the opposite obtains. social ‘progressivism’ tends/lends itself much more readily towards authoritarianism. especially of the moral kind.
good grief we live in politically thick times.
LOL.
Bullying someone into acting the way you want is authoritarian.
Trying to prevent the bullying because it harms the victim is not.
Think Bob Katter.
Communism with Chinese characteristics
68c138b5409df22d1eba4ea9f4b78e3d
Good to read a summation of the Andrews era written by a proper Melbourne journalist. Not perfect but better than most, so far.
It has been amusing to read, see & hear so much commentary of the last few days has been journalists interviewing jourmalists (Baxendale on the ABC, Mitchell on Today , etc, etc) . What the commenterati don’t realise is that the Victorian electorate decoupled from the mainstream media several years ago. Nothing expempified this more than the usual suspects (eg Speers, Mitchell, Kavarlas, Campbell, etc ) all predicting a close call with a possible LNP victory at the last state election. When in fact the electorate served Dan his biggest majority yet.
Years of misunderstanding from Sydney headquartered media outlets, driven by anti Melbourne Prime Ministers for Sydney have lead to this antipathy. Josh Freudenberg said it so well when he stood up , in the safety of the parliament house, and excoriated Dan for his stance over lockdowns, compeletely misundertsanding how Victorians might see that action. Well they showed him what they thought in May 2022. And he won’t be back to do it again.
Dan Andrews is not perfect, but he is going out after a record stint, and on his own terms. History will eventually judge his legacy, but unless it is rewritten by an enemy, it will more probably judge him well.