The shit sandwich is a beloved political metaphor.
And the golden rule is, if you have to eat one, then wolf it down and enthusiastically declare that it’s delicious. At least you’ll get points for gumption.
The government’s stupid decision to bring forward its tax reform advertising campaign is not just a shit sandwich, it’s a sub with the works, but at least yesterday the Prime Minister bit into it with something near relish. Having called his first Parliament House press conference in what seemed like months, he must have known the assembled hacks — nearly all of whom work for outlets that will carry the mining industry’s and the Government’s ads — would hop into him on the decision. Once you filter out the Ruddspeak, you end up with a fairly forthright justification for the government’s campaign.
“The contrast here is pretty clear. It’s a big debate. That is why we will join that debate using this form of public advertising. We can have this debate about the manner in which decisions were taken to launch into a public advertising campaign. It’s proper entirely, to be the subject of that level of scrutiny.
“On the question, however, on the question however, of joining this debate and dealing with the sheer volume of misinformation out there from a bunch of mining companies who don’t want the Australian people to get their fair share of the resources which they themselves own, well frankly, we’re not just going to declare the field vacant. We’re going to join the battle. That’s what we’re doing.”
The merits of the decision to avoid the government’s own guidelines aside — well, there aren’t any merits, anyway — Rudd has a point. Confronted with systematic lying from the mining industry, which has deep pockets, and a concerted media campaign every bit as deceitful, no government worth its salt can afford to simply not respond. It can’t afford it politically, and can’t afford it as a credible advocate of economic reform.
Despite how badly it has botched its handling of the RSPT, the government is showing some welcome spine on a reform that is, if not exactly major, then certainly in the public interest. If you’re going to go down, go down fighting. Don’t go down like the government did on the CPRS, cravenly acquiescing to its critics and still losing.
At least, then, Rudd can say he actually displayed some ticker in standing up for something he believed in, even if he had to break his own rules to do so. Voters might actually give him some credit for it, a scenario that after the past few weeks would be unusual indeed.
Bernard,
Rudd’s fight with the miners is a bit like Israel’s fight with the flotilla of activists trying to break the Gaza blockade. To quote from Crikey’s editorial today, “the age old question of who started it applies”. Rudd deliberately picked the fight with the miners thinking he could win it but now that he’s copped some punches in return, he’s claiming the victims are the bullies.
As for Rudd standing up for something he believes in, all he believes in is big government funded by big taxes.
Why on earth though do you whine about frigging advertising when we are jailing fucking babies and spending $143 million to rebuild illegal concentration camps to do it?
Who the hell gives a flying fuck about the multi-billionaires and their whining?
GDP figures out today show that only government spending has stopped growth going backwards and that with the balance of trade figures blowing out there simply has not been a bloody boom.
Honestly Bernard sometimes you sound just like Dennis Shanahan with these hysterical rants.
[Moderator- this comment has been moderated. Please stop the personal attacks.]
Rio proudly announced today that they pay 35 per cent tax. That’s less than I do and less than my wife. Yes, yes, I know there are all sorts of qualificatons on that, but they don’t cut through to us plebs.
The wisdom among the political officianados on here seems to be the government has the PR battle wrong. I am not so sure. The Libs seem to think Australians don’t like foreigners much, so perhaps Mr Abbot and Co should ponder how people feel when heavily accented mining bosses lecture them on how grateful we should be to the for doing business here.
The ad spend is a neutral issue – a plague on both their houses.
What serves as politics in Aus has really got to get a lot more palatable to stop people mentally divorcing themselves the press through lack of thorough inquiry of the issues.
Three quick questions –
1. who do think best represents Australia’s brightest future?
a/ These Guys
(photo of Clive Palmer, Tom Albanese, Marious Kloppers, Twiggy Forest)
b/ or These Guys
(Older gens and Youngers generations working on clubhouses, young scientists, Nurses, Doctors, community aid etc)
2. And which of these 2 groups has strings attached to which political party?
3. Which party do you think should eat the shit sandwich?
I disagree that the government’s advertising campaign should not be brought forward.
The longer the mining companies’ propaganda is allowed to flourish uncontested the more effectively those notions will make their mark with the public. To refute this vested interest nonsense promptly is vital for the government to make a more effective case.