If you thought the population debate couldn’t get any worse, you were wrong – very wrong.
Yesterday degenerated into a sort of “I’m Spartacus!” debate in which Labor, the Coalition and Mark Latham all sought to claim that the others were pretenders to the throne of King (or Queen) of Sustainable Population.
“I don’t think this is a immigration debate,” the Prime Minister told an interviewer. “I think it’s bringing into play issues about water, about soil, about city planning, about infrastructure and services, about getting skilled people where we need them.”
This was indeed a strange thing to say, given we only make new Australians by the old-fashioned way or by importing them. Gillard naturally wants to avoid being pressed on the issue of exactly what immigration levels a Gillard Government would set.
Scott Morrison decided to wade into the issue, risking a repeat of previous embarrassments when he got basic numbers about immigration wrong. Bear in mind that the Coalition’s idea of a population debate includes graphics with red lines from Islamic countries invading Australia. Morrison attacked Gillard for delinking the issues. But what would the Coalition do?
Well, there’s the problem – both Labor and the Coalition have exactly the same policy. Labor’s is to have Tony Burke conduct a review, which he has already set in train, to consider the issue of sustainable population. The Coalition’s is to have a review as well, by what it will rename the “Productivity and Sustainability Commission”.
The Coalition’s plans for the PC, by the way, are a nice demonstration that in the Australian Public Service, success is invariably punished with more work and more responsibility. The PC is one of the great legacies of the Howard years, a fine institution that is an invaluable source of independent, sensible economic advice. Because of this, it will be nixed by the Coalition and replaced with a “Productivity and Sustainability” body with a mandate to frolic around in environmental, social and resource issues.
This, sadly, has gone below the media radar – understandable, I guess, but it’s a crying shame the PC will be wrecked in this way to suit this current anti-immigration fashion that has blown like a waft of foul air through Australian public policy.
So both sides will hit the ground reviewing on population issues after the election. That gives them a neat way out to duck the hard campaign question of what they really want to do with immigration, which based on their rhetoric is slash it, and Australia’s economic growth prospects along with it.
But as if to show there’s no debate that can’t be dragged lower, in walked Mark Latham. On Sky News – which in the old days he would have bagged as the Tory Network – the Campbelltown Poltergeist accused Gillard of a “con job” and “fraud of the worst order” on the good citizens of western Sydney. “I’m Spartacus,” he insisted, saying that neither side was prepared to admit Australia really needed to cut immigration.
For all of Latham’s behavioural issues, he at least always had a reputation as an innovative policy thinker. In retirement, it turns out he’s just another member of the Little Australia brigade, playing in the shallow end of the gene pool with the likes of Dick Smith and Bob Birrell.
There’s good news, though, because according to David Speers, Latham is thinking of getting on Twitter. Outstanding, because there’s not enough bile and snark in the Twitterverse.
What an absolute tragedy that this non-issue, this wretched red herring will not only dominate election coverage but will reward whoever gets nastier with victory at the poles. What the hell are we thinking??
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“The PC is one of the great legacies of the Howard years, a fine institution that is an invaluable source of independent, sensible economic advice”, says Bernard.
Spare me. Apart from the fact that the Productivity Commission was created in 1921 as the Tariff Board, the only thing remarkable about the PC is that Kevin07, despite his ghost-written anti-deregulation rant, tolerated its continued existence. Under Howard the Commission lurched further and further until it reached the extreme right, where it lingers on as the last bastion of neo-liberal economic ideology. From its tax-payer funded shelter, the PC continues to produce ever more unrealistic advice for a world too busy dealing with the economic, social and environmental fall-out of these very same ideas to be able to read their tripe. Follow the UK lead – abolish this damaging institution and create a Sustainable Development Commission instead.
By the way, did anyone else notice that Rudd’s supposed conversion to ‘social democrat’, desperately opposed to neo-liberal deregulatory fanaticism, was not so deep that he was moved to abolish, or even rename, his Department of Finance and Deregulation?
“The population debate just got a little bit worse” hmm, is that because another two “policy failures” cruised into Christmas Island last night. “Policy failures” being a Joolia Gooliard term – not mine!!!
Seems Sky are using loopy Latham a great deal more these days. Probably the i/v with Latham and Speers along with that long dreary 30min discourse with Barmybanana the coup boss from Fiji is Sky’s attack on the launch of the ABC 24/7 News Channel today. For all their self promotion Sky’s still a very small player in the scheme of things, probably more so from tonight.
Wouldn’t be surprised to see a couple of offers being made to Sky news personel, from Aunty.