The debate about tax rorts in superannuation has hurried quickly into the all-too-predictable shambolic farce about politics that stands in for debate over public policy in Australia.
It’s not what we need. We need more reporting that focuses on the things governments do (you know, the stuff that affects our lives) than on the theatrics of the political interplay between the parliamentary players.
As ever, it’s less the political parties dictating the news than the press gallery doing what it’s long done: mincing policy up into the trivia of politics and stuffing the trimmings into the sausage skins of their news reporting.
By Sunday morning on Insiders the politics sausage is ready to be served. Despite the efforts of some panellists (often from the ABC’s rising generation) to steer for the deep waters of policy, the chatter is quickly tugged back into the safe both-sides imperative of the political framing, setting the “it’s all a game” news cycle up for the rest of the week.
It shows up, too, in the weekly interview. Where former host Barrie Cassidy would give space for policy explainers, teasing out contradictions and complexities, current host David Speers brings an eagerness to hurry the questioning on to banter about the political ramifications.
The all-politics-all-the-time journalism is quickly shifting modest changes to tax breaks for high-wealth individuals through superannuation accounts into one of the gallery’s most popular bangers: “superannuation upheaval”.
Modest, you say. Hold on: “Even modest change carries political risk,” warned Speers in his intro. “Super Stoush” splashed the chyron. “Tax changes always bring on a political fight,” he led with the panel before moderating through the “political consequences” of the (still unconfirmed) proposal.
As ever with policies that offer some hope of redistributive relief to the inequality crisis, it was over at the News Corp shambles — where good policy has long gone to be butchered — that the spiciest political sausages were being extruded.
Not enough policy meat? No problem. Pack it out with the rhetorical offcuts and sawdust left over from day-to-day outrage machining: “hypocrisy” over broken promises (and Albanese’s parliamentary pension), a “your super’s next” hysteria, and a head-shaking bewilderment about details.
As their best charcutiers know, the best casings for the mix is tripe.
Enter Friday’s tabloids with a sickly sweet rendering of comments by Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones on superannuation investments: “Honey, I’ll shrink your super” (Sydney’s The Daily Telegraph) and “Your money is our honey” (the Herald Sun). Rick Morton’s Substack, “Nervous Laughter”, goes deep on the making of that particular sausage under what will surely be the Walkley-winning headline of the year: “Super cagey fatalistic hex on cash that’s owed us”.
The sharpest knives were brought to the slaughtering in The Weekend Australian: “Super-sized hypocrisy over broken promises” punned Peter van Onselen’s headline. (Twenty pars down, he conceded that, yes, the policy might be a good one.)
Editor-at-large Paul Kelly turned the bread-stuffed hot dogs of a tax rort crackdown into the tastiest artisanal bratwurst of policy upheaval: “Australia now faces both an immediate and long-run policy struggle over the purposes, tax breaks and economic goals of our massive $3.3 trillion superannuation pool, with fresh battle lines drawn between the Albanese government and the Coalition.” That’s some sausage!
It was left to Sky’s Peta Credlin to wrap it all up, ready for delivery: “Labor tries for a socialist super grab by stealth.”
The opposition has been quick to fall into line, eager for the scraps of coverage they’re getting tossed from the media’s table. Teals from wealthy electorates have followed on. Next step? Watch the attempt to turn the “super upheaval” into an “acid test” at the Aston byelection.
Not everyone in the gallery is happy with the degustation on offer. Guardian Australia’s Katharine Murphy mourned “gotcha” culture as “performative accountability”. The problem isn’t new: in the 1980s, Kelly led an intellectual revolt in the gallery that, all too briefly, put policy in the centre of reporting about Bob Hawke’s government.
Maybe it’s not the journalists: Stanford’s James Hamilton argues it’s the inevitable result of the economics of mass media: policy is contentious, partisan; political by-play is, oddly, profoundly apolitical — and safe. It’s that safety that makes it so attractive to the ABC.
US media critic Margaret Sullivan says we need to rethink the job, suggesting retitling, say, “political correspondents” as “government reporters”.
At the weekend, The New Yorker’s Isaac Chotiner responded to The New York Times jemmying Ohio’s train crash into the favoured political frame: “People this naive should perhaps do something other than write about American politics for a living.”
It’s a willed naivete we could do with less of in Australia, too.
… current host [of Insiders] David Speers brings an eagerness to hurry the questioning on to banter about the political ramifications.
2023 and I have given up watching Insiders. I tune in for Mike Bowers and Talking Pictures and the panellists’ final comments.
I have long ago given up watching Q&A, no matter which night it is shown. Stan Grant and David Speers are both appallingly bad hosts and watching either program is a waste of my time. Pity really as I used to enjoy both programs.
Upside for me is that I am really powering through the stack of books that were piling up, unread.
Agree about Speers & the obvious shallow line he pursues. I, too, tune in solely for Mike Bowers & the final comments: this saves 52 minutes every Sunday.
I am surprised that Bowers is still there – the miserable 2 minutes they give him is an insult, and the triviality of the show diminishes his reputation.
I dropped out years before, when they began playing pop-songs loudly over the story with words or titles that had some – even tenuous – link to the topic. That is so childish and tatty and obviously another tool in the trivialisers’ toolbox.
I agree re Speers and Stan. These are not successors to Olle, Lyneham, Peach, Luck, O’Brien, Cassidy and even Carleton when he was at the ABC. The current crop couldn’t fill the little toe of the shoes of the giants who preceded them. Only Katharine Murphy, Laura Tingle and Amy Remeikis would be within Cooee but they are only allocated walk-on parts.
Sunday morning, my turn to cook poached eggs and bacon for the family. I used to have a rule – before 9 or after 10. Not any more – Insiders has become an irrelevance. My mate calls the show The Inciters, because it arouses my regret for what we have lost.
Olle?! There’s a blast from the past. He died too young. I thought he above all was the best. Amy Remeikis is the best of the female bunch when she is not crying poor me. I’ll agree that Laura Tingle has merit (unlike her father) but Katherine Murphy and Fran Kelly are a bit unbearable. Where’s Virginia Trioli? Australia’s best female journos are usually in print and this is where women usually shine. The former SMH, the current SMH had and have very creditable female journos. MyClymont over corruption, Misha Schubert over at the Age on politics, Elizabeth Knight in Business. Annabelle Crabb was far better at the SMH than she ever was on ABC TV.
Let’s say at the moment we are being shortchanged on good political analysis and presenters across the board.
Yes, yes and yes.
Ita at the ABC is like dry rot in wood. The damage is hard to see at the surface but the material is very weakened. We have been fooled by Ita and her dumbing down of the ABC.
I agree. Speers and Grant should be sacked. I find Stan Grant better on radio when he is interviewed. He mentions some unpalatable economic truths about our indebtedness as a nation which I like. But as a host on TV he is ordinary and interrupts his guests like the former Mr Sky News. Bring back Kerry O’Brien and Barry Cassidy. Quentin Dempster was brilliant as well. I find it also depends on the media outlet and the editorial control and policy input from the team. Even Phillip Coorey was terrific at the SMH but at the AFR, he sounds like another NewsCorp hack.
Insiders is a shadow of its former self. Speers is an obvious LNP stooge. The show is banal, just a rehash with no insights and no analysis of actual policies just the political ramifications. The ABC is in a dreadful state, gutless, timid, and except for La Tingle mostly pointless.
Agree, and have observed similar happening at Radio National (LNL, Sat’y & Sunday Extra) over past years with ‘szalami tactics’ slice by slice, replacing presenters &/or becoming anodyne, no longer any comments, no transcripts (precluding easy analysis), no presenter/producer Tweets, no app offshore but available onshore (no pod downloads), hence, suboptimal streaming via website; reaction of ABC Audience personnel complaints is to claim ‘copyright’…..BS.
Radio National ditto.
To all the liberals barking “Broken election promise!”, I would offer two comments……………………..
Little Johnny Eyebrows (who brought us the progenitor of Trump’s “Alternate Facts” – “Core and non-core promises…..”)
&
Tony (“Trust me ,I’m a Jesuit”) Abbott (of “No cuts to the ABC” amongst a myriad others)
With form like theirs, I really wouldn’t go anywhere near the “Breaking Election Promise” red herring.
Just explain how they justify the guy with a $435 Million dollar Superannuation fund…………………………..
Abbott talked about “fundamental commitments”.
All it takes for someone to suggest reforming one of the rolled-gold rorts that provide tax breaks to wealthy property-owners and John Howard emerges Gollum-like from a cave to raise the alarm that everyday Aussies’ piggy-banks are about to be plundered. Self-managed super funds of over $5 million have nothing to do with saving for a dignified retirement and everything to do with tax shelters and estate planning to increase social inequality.
A $5 million super fund would easily generate $250k a year without touching the capital…………….
………….now that’s a lifestyle I wouldn’t mind.
Presumably the guy with $544 MILLION (it’s gone up dramatically since I last looked) is planning to live to 1,000………….
…………..meanwhile costing tax-payers a fortune.
https://www.afr.com/policy/tax-and-super/australia-s-biggest-smsf-is-worth-544m-20210714-p589l1
How the next 27 funds with over $100 MILLION in them are justified, who knows?………………….
Even a fund limit of ONE million would be generous. Most people will never get anywhere near it.
Just curious…the reported funds with balances of $3m – is that Mom & Pop, or Mom.Pop& adult kiddos? Just curious!
Most multi-million dollar funds have more than mum and dad in them. Some also have Reserves.
My own policy proposal:
No-one should get a greater annual tax benefit than the amount paid for the base rate age pension.
Mind you, I don’t know how it’d work, but the idea that in Australia we subsidise the retirement of the wealthy by more than we pay age pensioners is just obscene.
Why does stuff this obviously fair get received as so radically beyond the pale?
Because He Who Must Not Be Named and his imported American lunacy deems it so………………….
I think there was a case in the UK where a media organisations (I forget which one) illegally hacked the phones of MPs, detectives, celebrities, members of the public, murdered school-children, and even their own colleagues,
What the episode hinted at, if I remember correctly, is this:
If somebody has information that you would rather not be made public, you may do anything the holder of that information wants you to do.
In some places, this might be called extortion. I’m not sure what it’s called in the UK. Tabloid journalism, maybe? Business-as-usual? Who knows?
In one case, the parents of a child who went missing while on holiday, refused to talk to the tabloids. The tabloids then published front-page stories blaming the parents for the child’s disappearance, even accusing them or being co-conspirators in the kidnap of their own child.
The lesson from this would be a sort of: Do what we say, or we’ll do the worst thing you can imagine . . . and get away with it. We can destroy you.
The media organisation involved in the UK phone hacking was accused by those appearing in the Leveson Inquiry of acting like a mafia, using its power and influence to essentially extort and silence pretty much anybody it saw fit to extort and/or silence.
As a business model, there would be a lot of money to be made by making stuff (public policy, etc) that is so obviously fair and reasonable seem beyond the pale.
News Corpse certainly extrudes something that resembles a sausage.