With a minority CLP Government still possible up in the Northern Territory, Saturday’s election was terrible for Paul Henderson’s ALP — but even worse for the pundits. We’re not quite in “Dewey Defeats Truman” territory — everyone knew Labor couldn’t sustain its 2005 election result — but no one picked the extent of the swing.
The bookies came off worst. So much for the notion that betting markets somehow tap into a greater electoral wisdom than mere polling. The CLP’s odds lengthened during the campaign and on Friday morning Centrebet had the CLP at 7-1 and the ALP at 10-1 on.
By Saturday morning CLP had widened to $8 and Labor shortened to $1.07 and Centrebet’s Neil Evans was claiming the “death knell” had sounded for the CLP: “there’ll have to be a full moon … and some bizarre turnaround, for this to become a political contest. It’s rather embarrassing. In fact, it’s a punting ambush.” Embarrassing indeed.
The experts did better, but not by much. A circumspect Antony Green previewed the election by declaring that Paul Henderson had “given his Labor government its best chance of securing a third term in office.” . Crikey’s Charles Richardson thought Labor was a certainty.
ANU’s Norm Kelly in The Canberra Times declared Labor “long odds-on”. Malcolm Mackerras — coming off a brilliant early call about the federal election last year — did best, predicting “a Labor win — but close one” with the Government reduced to 14 seats.
The commentariat had Labor pegged as certainties. The Oz’s man in Darwin, Paul Toohey, thought “Hendo’s” Government would be returned to power “at a gentle canter” . The Oz offered a lachrymose editorial on Saturday about how the “pressing issues” had not been tackled in the election campaign (are they ever?) and lamented “given Clare Martin’s landslide win in 2005, when Labor captured 19 seats, the CLP four and independents two, only a cataclysmic shift will dislodge her successor, Paul Henderson, and his team today.” The Age’s Darwin correspondent Lindsay Murdoch thought a CLP win was a “herculean” task. Adjective inflation was setting in.
The only one really on the money was Paul Henderson himself, who said “a handful of votes in a handful of seats” would decide the election. But then again, he would probably have said that if there’d been 25 uncontested elections.
Now, of course, we’re all wise after the event.
The Federal Opposition says it shows Australians are tired of incompetent Labor Governments. Warren Snowdon blamed Henderson for calling an early election, and The Australian agreed with him. Trish Crossin said the ALP put too much emphasis on the Inpex gas deal. A Territory Labor insider reckons August is party month and it’s not a good idea to hold an election during a party. Others say the early election led to a low voter turnout, which maximised the protest vote effect.
Really, it was an inevitable result. “For the Country Liberal Party,” the Oz editorialised today, “Saturday’s result means it is back in business after some commentators were predicting its possible demise.” Some commentators?
Meanwhile, Possum Comitatus writes:
If you were to look at the betting markets for the NT election last week, you’d be forgiven for thinking that the ALP had a greater chance of being abducted by the latest outbreak of NT UFO’s than they had of being beaten by the CLP. Yet, with no major pollster running pre-election surveys in the Territory, should we be at all surprised that the markets got it so wrong in terms of the chance of Labor retaining government?
As much as political polling is scorned as reducing important political issues down to little more than horse race commentary, it fulfills one fundamentally important role — it stops people talking sh-t.
From politicians to columnists, from reporters to your average Joe – political polling encourages all but the learned types at The Australian to keep it in their pants.
With no major polls in the Territory election, information about the election itself was dominated by party propaganda on the one hand and political commentators staring deeply into their navels on the other – usually finding little more than lint as a result, but lint dressed up as profundity none the less. Without polling information, election campaign analysis becomes an exercise in either wishful thinking or what ought to happen — and as we’ve seen in the Territory, theories on what ought to happen were well formed, plentiful, but mostly wrong. There is no substitute for the type of empirical reality that only polling can provide.
It’s a pretty simple rule — you can’t really analyse what you don’t really know.
What makes betting markets valuable is their capacity to aggregate all available sources of information to predict a result, but without polling information anchoring the market to some semblance of reality, without that knowledge of what people are actually thinking on the ground, the betting markets were left drifting in the breeze, ostensibly being guided by lint powered column inches telling us that Labor was a shoe in because, well, that’s what ought to happen.
So should we really be surprised that without political polls running in the Territory campaign, the markets were so out of whack with the result? While the markets may have gotten the end result right, the magnitude of the victory will probably come down to a few hundred votes — hardly the landslide that was predicted, and certainly not justifying 1/14 odds that some markets were offering.
Good information makes good markets, and there is no better information than good, independent polling. It provides far more than fodder for horse race political commentary, it provides certainty and knowledge and evidence for observable reality. And at the end of the day, isn’t observable reality what all good political commentary should be about?
I’m just wondering about some ‘third party, segementation’ type effects up there: Back in July 1998 I spent 3 weeks helping organise the legal data base of hundreds of arrestees for anti Jabiluka protests in a demountable in Jabiru and then out of the Env Centre NT office.
(It was the week Jeff Buckley died too and they played “Everybody wants you” on the morning radio and you could hear the lump in the announcer’s throat. But anyways …)
Howard lost the Jabiluka U mine arm wrestle and it hurt I bet. And some real activist talent stayed up North when the busloads left for down south again.
Next the land councils etc did over Shane Stone’s statehood referendum a year or so later. Then the ALP got the shock of their life winning the 2001 election. So how much of that activist injection in 1998-9 changed things there? Itself based on the call out by TO’s Yvonne Margarula and Jacqui Katona from 1997? The nascent Green Party probably didn’t attract too much attention 8 years ago.
Well it’s just speculation really, but personally I have no doubt that activist crowd was a tonic on Darwin society back then, and Howard’s intervention in 2007 was partly about reversing the embarrassment of 1998, and the referendum loss, and the ALP win in 2001. And personally I am beginning to think, notwithstanding Bob Brown’s boosting of their result at the election on the weekend, that the Green Party ramp up off a low base in the NT might have taken some edge and synergy off the ALP machine? That is the greens/Greens are no longer doing Labor’s work for them in the grassroots domain?
And here’s another wild idea – all that expensive languishing infrastructure at Christmas Island (Good Weekend recently) was in case the hawks in Howard’s regime decided to go for a nuclear armed and/or joint US base to match the space port and ex PM’s nuke dual use energy agenda. I’ll never forget seeing those modern Roman princes in uniform back from Pine Gap mobbing for their departure, loud and proud at the bus depot presumably off to the Darwin Aiport. Their accents gave me a headache.
I wonder if ex NDP Mr Garrett sees any merit in these suspicions, or is it all just too conspiracy?
Good one Kevin.
Also just to clarify my reverie about Jeff Buckley RIP above, true anecdote listening to that song in the blaring blaring tropical sun but actually it must have been a year anniversary by the radio show (early July 1998 for May 29 1997) and the song was a posthumous release, quality stuff. Up until then I’d never really listened to his stuff.
Seemed to fit the surreal politics of the moment.
The result simply reflects the fickle nature of the NT electoral system, where any seat can be decided by a handful of votes of the 3000 or so voters in each seat. Having said that, NT voters are a cynical lot and will general give the finger to someone for calling an early election on the basis that only one party can deliver a gas plant. At the end of the day it can hardly be seen as a ringing endorsement for Mills or rejection of Hendo. I liked Malcolm Turnbull’s cheek in the Oz today suggesting it reflected on a lack of Federal Labor leadership…or words to that effect! Pots and kettles come to mind.
Werte (Arrente greeting) Crikey, IMO, Labor shot itself in the foot by not supporting it’s traditional base again, maybe taking too much advice from southerners again but KRudds recipe has been analysed, the secret ingredients were found to be artificial & alot of the looney left up north asked for a refund, or at least, a more organic party.
As Marilyn stated, Territory Labor jumped on CLPs “law & order’ quota while ignoring any seats south of the Berrimah line & the biggest shift in Aboriginal Affairs (the Intervention takeover) didn’t rate a mention.
With the Territory Aboriginal population making a third of the potential polling pie, I thought any efforts to criticise the Howard, Brough, Pearson propaganda program on behalf of the constituents directly subjugated would have won themselves some heart if not votes. Just like the feds, maybe they’ll realise that the hippy Green vote (who protested by not giving preferences to anyone, which could have been crucial in some seats) cannot be ignored, at least in this case they lost my vote.
I too agree with James – the so-called commentariat are terrible. There is no attempt to provide informed, intelligent information, it is either lazy press releases or totally biased comment based on their own or their editor’s point of view. I also get sick of these ‘journalists’ arrogantly pontificating on TV programs (such as Andrew Bolt on Insiders) as if their views were the only ones that mattered. Fortunately not many voters watch these programs – only other journos wanting another lazy story. The pundits are predicting an easy win for the Labor Party in the upcoming WA election – this must cheer up the Libs no end! I am predicting a close call.