There are five stages of grief, they say. Most members of the Federal Liberal Party are still at various points on that journey, some well-advanced down the road to acceptance, some still angry about being turfed out, most, still raw and hurting, somewhere in between. But nearly everyone has moved on from denial. Even Julie Bishop has been dragged away from the corpse of the previous government. Yes, her fingernails may be leaving Warner Bros cartoon-like tracks in the ground as she goes, but she has finally figured out that her plan to revive Work Choices was never going to work.
Which leaves Dennis Shanahan. Judging by today’s effort in The Australian, “Treasury slams Labor’s IR plan”, Dennis not merely hasn’t accepted the death of the previous Government, he’s sitting by the corpse and reckons he can feel a pulse.
Admittedly it’s something of a triumph to have extracted a document under FOI from Treasury. For all this Government’s rhetoric about greater transparency, so far they seem almost as obsessed with information management as the last lot – witness the rumour we ran yesterday (which has been confirmed to us) that the Prime Minister’s media handlers don’t want him being filmed while on radio.
But you can’t help but wonder if the Government was more than happy to let such an obviously useless document go out to The Oz, knowing full well they could demolish it, as Julia Gillard did last night, by pointing out Treasury’s “economic assessment” was prepared before the ALP actually released its industrial relations policy.
It was also slightly embarrassing timing given that Institute of Public Affairs IR hardliner Ken Phillips devoted an AFR article yesterday to describing how the Government’s reforms were consistent with both the Keating and Howard individualist models of workplace bargaining.
On ABC Radio this morning, Michelle Grattan suggested that the document obtained by Shanahan might’ve reflected Treasury’s willingness to offer the then-Government advice it wanted to hear. Possibly. But you don’t even have to go that far. The provenance of the briefing almost certainly lay in a request from Costello’s office for a minute on the impact of an identified set of hypothetical Labor party reforms which may — or more likely may not – have had much to do with the IR policy the Opposition eventually produced.
It’s not merely that public servants only gave the previous Government the advice it wanted to hear – Ministers were not exactly in the habit of asking for advice they didn’t want, either.
As a result, the Government got what it sought – a brief explaining how centralised wage-fixing, unfair dismissal laws and wage-price spirals were bad, and individual contracts and minimal protections were good. Not exactly the damning Treasury indictment of Labor being waved round by Shanahan.
Also problematic is that the Coalition failed to oppose the Government’s rollback of Work Choices and has repeatedly declared it dead. This is the one giant problem with their efforts to conjure up some drama about the wage-inflation consequences of the Government’s reforms.
Still, credit to Shanahan for keeping the faith and maintaining his lonely vigil beside the corpse of the Coalition Government. Perhaps it’s not too late for one more “Newspoll shows Howard preferred economic manager” story.
The suggestion that Costello leaked it is a very serious one and not lightly made. There is a legal requirement – and a tradition – that outgoing Government Ministers and staffers do not retain documents from their period in Government. Easy to suggest they carried a few out the door with them, but it would be illegal to have done so and a breach of the basic rules of governmental transition – sufficient for Labor to take the gloves off and start breaking a few rules of its own.
Haha, delightful composition Bernard. I have wondered often how it is for one supposedly as intelligent as Mr Shanahan, he cannot grasp the obvious fact, Rudd and Gillard are 2 very clever, bright politicians. They are right up with the play and on hearing Ms Gillard interviewed on midday report about the document, she was having a ball, revelling in the Oppositions disappointment that what they had was nothing. A big fat nothing. When will they and Shanahan learn, they will need to be the brightest of the light bulbs to keep up with the PM and his deputy. Thus far there is not one in Coalition ranks who have turned the switch on, there is nothing there. There is more noise coming from the likes of Andrew Bolt, its not intelligable but its a noise. Bless his right wing whinging, someone has to stick up for the Liberal rabble, and his mate Shana isnt any help.
By the by, it would be one good way to build interest in the Costello memoirs too. A leak here, a leak there. Could turn into quite a crescendo. Mark Latham set the bar quite high with his Diaries. Let er rip I say.
Here is the Laurie Oakes story reference surrounded by some of moi some micro news blog comment at the time: “Costello as former treasurer has apparently leaked a similar ‘reform’ previously considered by the Howard Govt to veteran Laurie Oakes writing Bulletin style stories out of place in the Daily Telegraph cartoon book:
[offline] Howard plotted to scuttle the states April 26 2008 p26
Maybe a leak so Costello can shore up his dormant leadership ambition? Or to sell his memoirs? Or even to distract from FoI expert Peter Timmins (SMH today) who implies that Costello’s Govt deliberately squibbed criminal sanctions for cartel behaviour (like big Liberal Party donors and a certain cardboard box king).”
Call me stupid but my quick reading of Dennis is that the document was “obtained” but doesn’t say from whom. It is “subject ” of an FOI request but it doesn’t say that was the source. Last week Laurie Oakes wrote a story as per Sydney Daily Telegraph Saturday edition that was clearly based on on Howard regime cabinet or cabinet related document. ….What I’m saying is – how do you know Costello isn’t the source? And good luck to him too. Who could begrudge the guy some consolation prizes. I mean Dennis virtually gives away that he got it from Costello given the ABCTV were refused the document “last week”. Call it dumb intuition but methinks the old Peter Costello is getting a whiff of the old battle smoke in his nostrils.