The following is an edited extract from The Teal Revolution: Inside the Movement Changing Australian Politics by Margot Saville, our latest Crikey Read.
In an existential sense, what does the rise of the teals mean for the future of mainstream political parties? What could the federal Parliament look like in three or four elections’ time?
At this election, the Coalition suffered its worst result in 70 years, losing an unprecedented 18 seats. According to journalist George Megalogenis, the Liberals (plus the Queensland LNP), which had previously held 34 of the country’s 84 urban electorates, lost half of them. There is only one Liberal MP in Adelaide and Perth, and none in Hobart, Canberra and Darwin.
But the Labor Party can’t afford to look smug; it only picked up nine of them — two went to the Greens, and the historically Labor-held seat of Fowler went to independent Dai Le.
In fact, the two major parties recorded their lowest-ever share of the vote in 2022: just under 70%. If this trend continues, it may only be a few elections before minority or hung parliaments become the norm and our parliament starts to look more like Germany’s — a patchwork of small parties and alliances.
The Coalition, in particular the Liberal Party, has been fundamentally reshaped by the latest ballot. At the time of the 2011 census, the Liberals held 16 out of the top 20 seats by average household income, according to political scientist William Bowe. But since the last election, the urban conservative has gone on the endangered list. The Coalition has ended up with just four inner-metropolitan seats (as defined by the AEC): the south-western Sydney seat of Banks, Bradfield in Sydney’s upper North Shore, Scott Morrison’s seat of Cook in the southern suburbs of Sydney and the Adelaide seat of Sturt formerly held by Christopher Pyne.
There’s a strong correlation between education, income and living in the inner city; electorates like Wentworth and Kooyong are prime examples of this. Election analyst Ben Raue has been charting this group’s voting patterns for a long time. Before the last election, the Coalition held 15 of the most highly educated seats (more than 25% of the voting population with a bachelor’s degree or higher), a figure which fell to four after the ballot, he said. It also went from 24 of the richest electorates (median weekly income of $800 to $1249) to nine, and as above, lost 12 of their previous total of 16 inner-metropolitan seats (well-established, built-up suburbs in capital cities).
In contrast, the Coalition now holds all 10 of the bottom-ranked seats by household income, which was not the case 10 years ago.
Bowe said that there was a fundamental realignment going on in the politics of the two-party, centre-right and centre-left political systems of the English-speaking world. What was once a socio-economic class-based division is now harder to categorise.
Some observers call it the “Nowheres v the Somewheres”, he told me. “Namely the cosmopolitan globalised knowledge class versus the people who have a lower level of education, a stronger sense of patriotism and of place, of a kind of communal identity with their country and to a certain extent their race.”
At the moment, there’s a war going on within the Liberal Party about whether or not they embrace this new division, the analyst said. Election post-mortems have focused on the deliberate attempt by Morrison to sacrifice the teal electorates in order to try to win Labor’s outer-suburban seats.
“They were really making a pitch for the high-vis-vest-wearing vote, the mining industry vote, which had once upon a time been a Labor vote, and they imagined that they weren’t in trouble in the seats that they ended up losing,” he said.
The Liberal losses at the last election have also led to a shift inside the Coalition. Because the National Party and the Queensland LNP now hold 31 of the 58 seats, Queensland is the new centre of power, reflected in the election of party leaders Peter Dutton and David Littleproud. It’s hard to see how these two men, based in outer-suburban Brisbane and rural Queensland respectively, will inspire voters in Kooyong and Wentworth to return their votes to the fold.
It’s not just in the federal sphere that the Coalition vote has declined. Canberra-based psephologist Ian McAuley has been maintaining a table of the Coalition’s fortunes in state and federal elections, from the Victorian state election in November 2014 to the present. He says that the 2022 federal election was the “19th of those elections in which the Coalition’s primary vote has gone backwards”.
Around the country, there are only two conservative state governments, in NSW and Tasmania. The NSW Coalition government of Dominic Perrottet, currently in minority, is pursuing a progressive economic and social agenda in advance of an election in March 2023, while the Tasmanian Liberal government of Jeremy Rockliff governs with a one-seat majority.
These poor electoral showings have led to speculation about the future of the Liberal Party — has it reached an electoral tipping point? There’s an intense debate inside the party about its future direction.
Someone with a more than passing interest in the future of political parties is Malcolm Turnbull. The former PM said that “it was a long road back for the Liberal Party because politics is very unpredictable. If Scott Morrison was a turn-off, which he clearly was, Dutton is worse. Matt Kean is the only thing that they’ve got going for them at the moment”.
ANU professor Frank Bongiorno has speculated that Australia’s major political parties are “broken, possibly beyond repair”. He highlighted the irony of the major parties accusing community independent candidates of being, in essence, a political party.
A more justified accusation might be that in important ways the major parties themselves have ceased to be mass democratic parties, he said. “Today, the parties conform to what political scientists call the ‘electoral-professional’ model. This is a worldwide phenomenon, whereby mass parties of the traditional kind give way to organisations that consist largely of their parliamentary representatives and paid functionaries — a melting iceberg with a small tip and not much below the waterline.”
In addition, the major parties have failed “to conform to even the basic standards that most Australians would associate with democratic governance”, he wrote. “Factional warlords and party officers exercise overwhelming power.
“Still, the independents, and especially those generated by the ‘Voices Of’ movement that began with Cathy McGowan in the Victorian regional seat of Indi … are offering a form of public leadership that, with some exceptions, has not flourished recently in the major parties.
“It is notable that their favourite causes — climate change, political integrity, gender equity — are among those that the major parties have managed most poorly. These are issues where there has often been a radical mismatch between public opinion and party action.”
What lessons should the major parties take from the rise of the teals? 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.
Much of the comment about the independents and Labor’ primary vote ignores a reality. In the seats the Teals the Labor vote was significantly lower than it usually is. Clearly a lot of Labor voters voted tactically. They knew their candidates couldn’t win but wanted the Libs to lose. Probably this will secure the independents re-election next time round. It is true the major parties as suffering declines but while two party preferential voting and significant demographic change in formerly safe Liberal seats continues the Liberals will remain in deep trouble. Their hope that all will be well because of growing support in urban fringe areas will not be enough to rescue them. A political strategist would suggest Labor and Independents will be in a strong position until there is fundamental change in the Liberal Party. Why after all would a woman or an atheist or agnostic would want to sit in a branch meeting with misogynists and fundamentalist Christians waiting for the apocalypse?
Do we have any reliable evidence on the proportion of “teal” votes that was tactical Labor voting?
Reliable? Check Labor vote in 2019 and 2022 as noted in the comment.
The Coalition (federal) are superfluous. Labor, Greens and Independent’s have achieved more in 6 months than the ATM governments did in 9 years.
The Coalition stand in the way of progress (as always), need I go further than Michaelia Cash’s embarrassing filibuster in the Senate yesterday. They knew they didn’t have the numbers but decided to grandstand anyway. The Liberal party is a mini-me of the US Republican Party. They have become extremists who represent a minority.
All the coalition yap about woke, trans, freedom, public lavatories and cancel culture is purile Republican dross. These talking points are not in the top hundred of most Australians con cerns.
Yeah, I think you’re right about Labor and Greens voters voters strategically for Teals in safe Lib seats. I certainly did that as did a lot of people I know.
Still, the independents, and especially those generated by the ‘Voices Of’ movement that began with Cathy McGowan in the Victorian regional seat of Indi … are offering a form of public leadership that, with some exceptions, has not flourished recently in the major parties.
An apt observation, in my view. Independents are offering a voice to people who feel excluded by the major parties’ machines (steam rollers?) Plus independent Members and Senators seem more willing to discuss individual issues separately whereas the major parties seem to prefer bundling everything together and you either accept the entire bundle or be excluded.
However I do hold out some hope for the ALP as this week we have seen them reach agreement with different independent individuals over the passage of several bills on quite disparate issues – IR, NACC, self-determination for people in the ACT and NT. There is a way to go but at least it is a start.
Folks do overstate the role of independents. Labor moving the anti-corruption bills is seen as some sort of unwilling act forced on them. Seriously? Labor got the integrity bill through the House no teal votes required. Their chief role was to whinge about public hearings.
This article doesn’t address the wonderful work done by the ALP in the last six months. Go PM AA and all your wonderful hard working intelligent colleagues. As you say, all the Coalition has going for it is Matt Kean. Second asset to the breath-taking quality of the ALP MPs is NewsCorpse…..Herald Sun and Daily Telegraph – may nothing stop your suicidal destruction of the Coalition.
The book stops at election night, which was in May.
It had Bridget Archer going for it then. She was brilliant in voting to debate Haines’ integrity bill and she kept standing tall despite the bullying dished out to her up to the election.
And, she hasn’t let us down since.
Hmmmm. Ms Archer maybe took one look at the chances of Bulldozer doing it again and looked at the success of Tassie battlers like Harradine, Lambie who built pretty cushy careers out of getting attention and “standing up” to the big guys. It’s a job. And working pretty well.
Don’t forget the valiant efforts of the gang who choose panels for the ABC The Drum: the stunning bias in panels is remarkable. An endless stream of ex Nat/Lib pollies. Their boast of “no pollies” includes the odd definition of local govt sitting members being, app’ly, not “pollies”. Natch the culture warriors who hate the ABC never mention this show’s patterns of bias. Endless small business types and almost never a unionist. Regular News Corp “journos”.
Hopefully the LNP are almost out the door to oblivion. Good riddance to bad rubbish. The Labor party should be given the benefit of the doubt for the moment to see if the professional politicians can do something for the country instead of just for themselves.
Any analysis of the Australian political landscape needs to take account of the baleful influence of NewsCorp. While most Australian mainstream media tilts to the Right, NewsCorp actively campaigns for the Coalition and against Labor, not just in its opinion pieces but in its “News” pages as well. It attacks Labor and misrepresents its policies while boosting the Coalition and pushing it ever further to the Right.
Why aren’t Labor doing something about this yet? I signed the biggest petition in Oz history and expected some action.Has Albo done a deal with the Murdoch devil? If he has he’ll be sorry.