It was once cynically said that democracy means the “bludgeoning of the people by the people for the people”. And so it was for Alan Tudge, whose political legacy has seemingly few points of distinction when cast against the record of the worst government in Australian history.
The Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison era was, after all, one marked by repeated attempts to leave in its wake a new Australia: one in which truth is denigrated and corruption venerated, where any semblance of ministerial responsibility has been swept away, and where calculated assaults on the most vulnerable and marginalised are reduced to the natural order of things.
In this blended sense, the signal quality of Tudge’s political legacy is not how anomalous it was, with its legion of controversies, but how emblematic it was. Writing in The Age last week, Matthew Knott appeared to pick up a variation of this theme when he suggested it was ultimately Tudge’s “tumultuous personal life” inside the Canberra bubble that “caused [him] the most damage”.
Others, however, might say the bare facts of Tudge’s political career aren’t so easily pressed into the service of that narrative. Tudge was not, and never was, merely a bit player in the myriad failings of the former government. And much less was his affair with his former media adviser, Rachelle Miller, his most conspicuous contribution to Coalition scandal, notwithstanding Miller’s subsequent allegations of emotional and physical abuse (which Tudge denied).
On the contrary, he’s a man who at 39 entered Parliament as the member for Aston in Melbourne’s outer east, professing a singular desire to emulate those who had championed the cause of the “less fortunate” and the “majestic possibility” of all lives. And he’s a man who at 51 resigned from Parliament, having given lie to those sentiments while in government.
As the junior welfare minister in 2016-17, for instance, Tudge presided over the introduction of a series of punitive and degrading reforms, including the cashless welfare card, random drug testing for welfare recipients in certain areas, and, not least, the unlawful and now disgraced robodebt scheme.
Tudge, for his part, never pretended to be anything other than a jealous guardian of the scheme. When confronted with media reports regarding the legality of robodebt in early 2017, he responded by launching what appeared to be an undisguised campaign of intimidation against the thousands who had and would in time fall victim to it by leaking to “friendly” media the private data of those who’d complained. Among those ensnared in this ugly tactic was the family of a dead man — 28-year-old Rhys Cauzzo — whose suicide after being menaced by Centrelink debt collectors was known to Tudge when his office forwarded Cauzzo’s private information to The Australian.
It was a familiar cadence, given that just weeks earlier, in December, Tudge had already taken it upon himself to both sheet home and elevate the brutality of the welfare crackdown on A Current Affair. There, he invoked the language of welfare cheats by deliberately conflating non-compliance with welfare fraud in a bid — as counsel assisting the royal commission suggested — to cloud the mental faculties of those targeted by the scheme and coerce them into paying.
“We’ll find you,” Tudge memorably warned. “We’ll track you down and you will have to repay those debts and you may end up in prison.”
During his testimony at the royal commission, Tudge denied he’d ever engaged in any kind of strategy of intimidation against welfare recipients. In the same breath, he also refused to take responsibility for the illegality of the scheme, preferring to lay blame with others while downplaying the significance of his failure to make inquiries about its legality, despite holding a law degree.
Courtesy of the royal commission hearings, however, we now know that high-ranking public servants within the department and some members of government, such as Morrison, were aware of the scheme’s illegality before its inception but pressed on regardless. Although it’s true seven Coalition ministers other than Tudge also carried responsibility for robodebt at some point, what distinguished Tudge was his ability to introduce new depths to the government’s utter disdain for the vulnerable, many of whom were poor, and some desperately so.
By the time robodebt was finally abandoned in late 2019, Tudge had long since moved on to different policy areas, all of which sustained the cleft between his pre-politics concern for the dignity of all lives and his actions as a minister of the Crown.
Under the citizenship and multicultural affairs portfolio in early 2018, for instance, Tudge spoke of the “integration challenge” to Australian multiculturalism, and the threats to social cohesion posed by certain ethnic groups. To this end, he singled out the suburb of Dandenong as an example, which incidentally is home to a high proportion of Sudanese communities. Merely months later, as the Victorian election approached, the storm clouds of Coalition rhetoric around the dangers of “African gangs” in the state gathered force.
In the same year, Tudge echoed then home affairs minister Peter Dutton’s call to welcome to Australia white farmers from South Africa allegedly fearing persecution, telling journalists Australia is a “very generous country”. But the precise limits of such generosity proved elusive. It did not, for instance, extend to non-citizens who found themselves scrambling for income as the pandemic descended in early 2020, whom Tudge instructed to “go home” if they were worried they’d be unable to support themselves. It did, however, extend to more than 10,000 wealthy foreign investors later that year, whose travels to Australia Tudge prioritised over the thousands of Australians still stranded overseas.
There were yet other political controversies that should have spelled the end of Tudge’s political career. Among them was his decision in 2020, as acting immigration minister, to leave a Hazara Afghan asylum seeker in detention, despite a ruling by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal that the man be granted a visa.
His unsuccessful push, in the same year, to have mobile phones banned from immigration detention centres, on the (unfounded) footing that “disgusting, disgraceful” detainees were using them to access child pornography, marked another low point. As did his decision to send unsolicited criticisms of the sentencing practices of the Victorian Supreme Court to The Australian in 2017, which almost resulted in his prosecution for contempt of court.
Beyond these, there was also his direct involvement in the Coalition’s notorious car park rorts, which the auditor-general likened to “sports rorts on steroids”, and finally his crusade, as education minister in 2021, against the national curriculum, which he derided for teaching students a “negative, miserable view of Australia”.
In his valedictory speech last week, no reference was made to his failings as a minister or the scandals that coloured his time in office. Nor was any remorse expressed for the pain and anguish his conduct visited on robodebt victims and other welfare recipients.
Most tellingly of all, Tudge didn’t care to reflect on whether he had, as promised in his maiden speech to Parliament, embodied the values of “opportunity”, “generosity” and the “majestic possibility of each life”.
But perhaps that’s unsurprising for a man who readily embraced division, railed against the vulnerable and the marginalised, undermined the rule of law, reignited the history wars, and presided over one of the most shameful public policy failures in living memory.
What do you make of Alan Tudge’s legacy? 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.
This utterly disgraceful litany makes me literally nauseous. How many other ideological, self-sering, ruthless Tudges are behind the scenes poisoning the well?
A former Attorney-General for starters.
Others can add more ex-Office holders of recent times.
You can answer your question by asking if there’s such a thing as a decentCoalition politician.
It shows how easy it is for ideological, self-serving, ruthless individuals to enter politics. I witnessed it when I was at Uni in the late 70’s. A small group of loathsome characters banding together, despised by 95% of the student population, went on to become State, or National political leaders. Out in the electorate, Australia basically has a 2 party system, and no one wants to be in one of them apart from these type of individuals, and they know it all too well and take full advantage of it.
Bring on the Teals!
I was at Sydney Uni when Albanese, Abbott and Hockey were there.
Only one of these men has since proven other than self-serving and ruthless. Unlike the other two, nor is he delusional.
The article says Tudge began by proclaiming he would champion
Then the article illustrates an apparently profound disconnect between these lofty sentiments and the reality of Tudge’s career. But it is easy enough to show that Tudge has kept his word if you accept that for Tudge, and his colleagues, only Liberals are people. Everyone else is less than human. The “less fortunate” are those Liberal hacks, failures and rejects who are helped to sinecures on the AAT, overseas trade posts and so on. The “majestic possibilities” include giving contracts worth hundreds of millions to your Liberal mates. Everyone else can and should go to hell.
I am sure he would have subscribed to the “Ubermensch” doctrine……………………
Hi fellow swimmer,
Yes, the only way Tudge could consider that he had succeeded in his lofty aspirations was if as you have identified, everyone not a Liberal was also not human.
Strangely enough Goebbels used the same technique to weld the Germans together in the hatred of the Jews and we know how that ended.
Despicable behaviour and easily done when you have a willing and compliant group of journalists led by a friend, Simon Benson.
May all of you reflect upon your behaviour and how it reflects upon you character.
I wonder how Rachelle Miller failed to notice just how scummy he was before embarking on an affair with him.
And I wonder what his wife and kids think of his public record….
Miller did not notice because she has the same views and beliefs. She emerged from the same swamp. Her performance defending Tudge and the government during the Robodebt years proves it. She saw media articles and interviews about Robodebt and the damage being done to ordinary Australians. Not one word of it registered with her except anything unfavourable to the Liberals, which wounded and enraged her. It perfectly illustrates my thesis. Reading about welfare claimants driven to despair and suicide when subjected to wholly unjustified debt collection procedures went straight over her head: welfare claimants are not human. But saying something mean about Alan Tudge! – the horror, the horror… And so she would wheel out all the big guns to counter attack, with Tudge’s full approval.
My thoughts prezactly. Miller only turned when Tudge’s deplorable egotism affected her.
Liberals and their fellow travellers have never been good judges of character. They’ve never needed to be as others here have noted.
On the contrary. I think they are really good at spotting and nurturing the fellow pond slime that inhabit all their positions of power.
Great article! This Tudge creep is even more nasty, hypocritical and deceitful than I had suspected! Should have known really; he is/was a ‘modern Liberal’- say no more!! As for R Miller, why did she receive a $650,000 pay out????? And, yes, she seems as despicable as her former boss/lover!!
There’s something particularly wonderful about Tudge and Miller putting so much effort into their merciless hunting down of, and extortion from, the blameless and innocent for taking money from taxpayers, and at the same concocting a scheme to put $650k of taxpayers’ money in their pockets, on top of all the salary, expenses and other benefits taxpayers had already given them. How they must laugh!
Her world view and ethics are just as toxic as his.
The above summation of Trudge’s political career provides a dreadful assessment. The thing is, all the things he did were acceptable or praise worthy in the eyes of the rest of the coalition. They still have no idea that it is wrong to rort public money or attack the vulnerable. That is why they are still on the nose and may even be getting worse.
All true. It remains to add that the Coalition demonstrated their total and profound contempt for the education system and all who work and learn in it by appointing this individual Minister for Education.
His appointment as Education Minister is stated in the fourth paragraph from the end.
Yes, it’s mentioned there – I was just elaborating on what it means. And remember Tudge was going to make sure values were taught in our schools.
OMG!
The Coalition in government has often demonstrated a malign genius for making ministerial appointments who are profoundly opposed to the ostensible purpose of the department they are given. Politicians on that side of politics often talk about their belief in ‘small government’ but instead of that they practice deliberately bad government, often with huge expediture, so long as it is wasteful and does no good. So far as there is a strategy in this, beyond merely getting snouts in the trough, it is presumably intended to destroy any faith in government of any sort. It is, at its root, nihilistic.
SSR, this paragraph is well worthy of inclusion in the fine article itself…bravo..!!
Not just ministerial appointments, Abbott as special envoy for indigenous affairs had more than a touch of irony..hmm more sarcasm than irony im thinking.
And women’s issues…
But.. But.. Abbott knows all about women in their right place – doing the ironing while contemplating the wonders of conservative oversight.
Excellent article Maeve.