Within the Labor Party they have been expecting the coming of Malcolm Turnbull for several months now. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd realised that Brendan Nelson would be replaced when the government’s electoral honeymoon continued beyond the six month mark. The verdict from the pollsters was just too damning for the Liberals to keep the good doctor in the top job. That coming up to the end of its first year in office, Labor should be in front by a substantial margin more than on the day it won the election was, for Rudd, almost too good to be true. Shadow Treasurer Turnbull was clearly just waiting for the right opportunity to take over.
Perhaps the only doubt in Labor Party about who their opponent would be in 2010 was the possibility that Peter Costello would throw off his reservations about competing for the leadership. That prospect, which would have pleased team Rudd because they believed that Costello would prove no more appealing to Australians than Dr Nelson, finally disappeared last week as the book launching got under way. Attacking John Howard was clearly not something that would be done by a man who ever wanted to lead the Liberal Party.
So this morning Labor got the Liberal Party leadership it expected. Malcolm Turnbull’s elevation will be met with quite a degree of nervousness for the government. Prime Minister Rudd knows that he will now have an opponent of substance with considerable skill as a debater in the Parliament and as a performer on television. The parliamentary experience might not be considerable but the rough and tumble of the republican debate makes up for much of that. Engaging with the likes of Kevin Rudd holds no fears for a man who proved he was more than capable of holding his own when talking about Presidents or Queens with John Howard.
The new Liberal Leader will be largely unknown to perhaps a majority of Australians. We pundits based in Canberra tend to forget how few people actually take much notice of politicians talking on the television. There is probably no firm impression of what kind of man Malcolm Turnbull is apart from a general view that he seems pretty smart and is quite good looking. It is only now with the concentrated attention that is paid to a leader of the Opposition that he will cut through in a way that determines his fate as a vote winner.
Labor should be concerned that Turnbull will prove far more successful that the man he replaces at showing himself as a self made man from humble origins. Just as part of the Kevin Rudd’s attraction comes from the story of the boy brought up by a widowed mum expelled from the family farm, the story of young Malcolm being raised in a humble flat by a single dad will play well in the suburbs. I notice that this was one of the major themes of this morning’s press appearance. I can’t wait for the New Idea and Woman’s Day versions. It will surely blunt any attempt by Labor to portray Turnbull as some kind of rich patrician from Sydney’s posh Eastern Suburbs. Australians, as Rudd well knows, quite like the story of lads rising from humble origins.
JamesK: Well James, be surprised. It’s what opposition is all about. The first player sets the mise en scene, and the hapless victim plays to the lead player’s ad court. Yeah, I caught the bit about the Republic. As a Republican I was delighted. But by the time it was dropped my attention was wandering, and I wasn’t sure which program I was watching, the News, or the 7.30 Report. BTW as a Labor supporter I’m delighted that Rudd should get some real opposition, I just hope he doesn’t warble on about his upbringing ad nauseum.
On a totally different subject…When you are using letters for words, as in BTW, could you possibly use caps? That way I have a chance to understand what you’re saying. Pretty please?
O.K.
Really Venise? You surprise me. I thought despite the typically relentlessly inane and non-informative questions from Kerry O’Brien to leaders of the Liberal Party, Turnbull managed to come out straight and likable.
As an unexpected bonus, he landed a blow on Rudd wrt the latter’s playing politics with the Republic non-debate on a day that may rival the famous “Black Tuesday” of October 1929.
Having just watched the 7.30 Report, and seeing the ease with which Kerry O’Brien reduced Malcolm Turnbull to banal idiocy and being totally boring; I hope The opposition can jolt their new leader out of a similar performance tomorrow morning in Parliament.
Oh, I get it. Howard was a suburban lawyer, Turnbull is a high flying corporate lawyer. So now, the Liberals have another tricky leader. How long before he offers the electorate another “never ever GST” line just before the next election. Malcolm has some questions to answer re: HIH corporate collapse. Interesting. Oh yeah, as he was a lawyer for Packer & Co, what will the Liberals’ position be on such nation defining issues as “cross media ownership laws”? I predict a “never ever nuclear” line before this term is over. Come on Kevin, clobber this clown and clobber him hard. Oh, and just how much tax does this individual pay, and how much does he avoid paying, while seeking the highest office in our land?