It’s now a well-established feature of contemporary politics that the prime minister and leader of the opposition are equally disliked by voters, that however unpopular, indeed actively loathed, Julia Gillard may be by them, Tony Abbott fares little better in their esteem.
It’s unusual to have the nation’s leader and alternative leader so disliked. It’s even more unusual that in both cases there are clear, popular alternatives sitting on the shelf. Last week’s Nielsen poll was only the latest showing of the extent to which Kevin Rudd and Malcolm Turnbull are voters’ preferred leaders. According to that poll, nearly twice as many voters prefer Rudd to Gillard. Turnbull’s lead over Abbott isn’t as large when Joe Hockey is included, but has a Rudd-sized lead over Abbott head-to-head.
The results are consistent with those of Essential when it last asked similar questions in April. Like Nielsen, Essential found that for Rudd and Turnbull, their own party’s voters didn’t like them anywhere near as much as the other party’s voters. In both cases, that parallels the views of their parliamentary colleagues.
The only really significant change over the past 12 months has been that Turnbull has broken clear of not merely Abbott but Hockey, who once equalled or surpassed Turnbull as a leadership alternative, in both polls.
Hockey of course is a high-profile member of the Abbott team, joined at the hip to his leader and, presumably, tainted by association with a hideously unpopular opposition leader. Turnbull, as communications shadow, pops regularly to snipe at the NBN (that whole “wrecking” thing isn’t working out so well) and opine on media matters, but otherwise seems more in his party than of it. Rather like Rudd, even when he was foreign minister; even more so now that he sits on the backbench, wandering in to question time and sitting down the back with his mate Anthony Byrne.
It’s hard to avoid the parallels between Rudd and Turnbull, so many of them are there. Both leaders cut down by their parties, punished with the public humiliation of ouster. Both highly intelligent, both arrogant men with much to be arrogant about, Turnbull of the glittering legal and business careers, Rudd the Labor leader who took his party into government, reversing John Howard’s “two-term victory” over Mark Latham. Both with a strange knack for communicating with voters — Turnbull because he appears to believe the rest of us have working brains and talks to us as if we do, Rudd with a folksiness so transparently fake it actually works in spite of itself.
And both with management styles hand-crafted from every “do not” list of executive tips ever written, geniuses at alienating colleagues, not just in the normal way of politics, a profession where you don’t just have to work with people you loathe and heartily disagree with and do it in public, but alienating in a more fundamental way, one that makes people swear they’ll never sit in the same room as them ever again.
The other parallel of course is that both have already had a go as leaders, albeit with different results; Rudd’s polling was still strong when he was knifed by Gillard; Turnbull was badly wounded when Abbott found it suddenly convenient to reverse his position on the CPRS.
For both men, public narratives of their executions have taken firm hold, and both centre on climate change. Turnbull stuck to his principles and was brought down by his party for it; Rudd failed to stick to his principles and was brought down as a consequence. Both ended up in the same place — purged of whatever sins voters attributed to them first time around by their humiliation, far more popular than the leaders who assassinated them (let us not forget, as voters appear to have done, that Rudd and Turnbull secured their leadership at the expense of their own predecessors).
Neither narrative is correct, but in politics as much as in love we only see in other people what we want to see, until living cheek-by-jowl with them kills our illusions.
In this context, Rudd and Turnbull are less important as alternative leaders than as walking representations of our disillusionment with contemporary politics, of our lack of trust in political leaders and major parties, of a search for authenticity in a profession where pretty much every image is confected. The humiliation and purgative experience of public ouster is one real experience we can fix onto for both figures, and the (likely vain) hope that either will have learnt through their ordeal what was missing from their leadership.
The Age of Entitlement, Hockey christened it, albeit his gaze was fixed abroad when he did so. But the sense of entitlement may only be a part of a broader alienation from politics and its practitioners, and the economy, the frustration about a strong economy that doesn’t deliver anything except “structural adjustment”, the economic reforms that have benefited companies and their executives, the sense that whatever we have gained over the past 30 years isn’t what we really wanted, that there might be a leader who understands that and wants to do something about it. The last one who tried was Rudd, and his failure to meet high expectations was one of the key reasons for his swift fall in popularity.
The trick might be to avoid raising expectations. If the current polls continue, Abbott will become prime minister with a large majority and abysmal popularity. There’ll be no high expectations about an Abbott prime ministership. In which case, he’d only have to be a moderate, competent, sensible leader to pleasantly surprise voters.
All politicians know that you shouldn’t promise what you can’t deliver. And what voters want at the moment, to the extent they can articulate it, is something no one can deliver, not even Rudd or Turnbull.
“If the current polls continue, Abbott will become prime minister with a large majority and abysmal popularity. There’ll be no high expectations about an Abbott prime ministership. In which case, he’d only have to be a moderate, competent, sensible leader to pleasantly surprise voters.”
This comment is odd to me, Abbott has promised to un-do the carbon tax, MRRT and means testing on just about everything. He is going to increase pensions, cut taxes and increase the surplus. He is going to have a ridiculously generous paid parental leave scheme and pay for everyone to have nannies. He will pay out billions to big companies to cut their carbon emmissions and he has made a massive issue of trust and politicians keeping their promises.
So while no one will expect a popular PM when he starts breaking promises and his economic management is shown to be the dud that it is the polls will swing against him hard because he does not have the popularity.
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I agree Jimmy, we will be the laughing stock of the world if we allow the success we are currently experiencing to be down written by limited news & vested interests.
Then totally trashed with a lieberal government. What will the rest of the world think of us if they realise we kicked out an extremely good government results wise, only because we allowed the lieberal mouth pieces like Alan Jones to tell us we should do so because Julia supposedly lied to us at an election.
Oh my god a politician lying an election who would have thought it.
Stop the presses, oh we cant they are Rupert’s.
Get over it & stop being so bloody childish. If Abbott wins you will have something to really complain about.
I find it curious that the term knifed is used when talking about Rudds demise as leader . Turnbull lost leadership because of a party spill and Rudd avoided a party spill by stepping down but the process for both parties was basically the same . Hockey it could equally be said to have knifed himself because he didn,t or couldn,t count the numbers . Would Abbott have beaten Turnbull in a two way contest we will never know but Rudd knew he didn,t have enough support .
To step down he cast himself as the martyr instead of being the man who was defeated in a party spill the actually took place . The very process that got Rudd the leadership job he shunned when he knew that same process was going to lose take leadership away . So its ok when you know you have the numbers but when you don,t its not ok ? What I will never understand or forgive is the sabotage of the election campaign , beyond comprehension . I find it extraordinary that the PM with minority government has had legislation passed on many issues the Rudd did not with majority government . Those issues may not be as strong as originally intended but like the exclusion of GST on fresh food are the product of negotiation and consultation with various groups . Rudd could deliver the story but couldn,t deliver the outcome . He just appeared to go on to the next item on the agenda rather than continue the fight . His ignoring of the Greens probably cost him getting getting legislation passed in the senate but he was trying to wedge Turnbull while sidelining the Greens . The Greens reacted by cutting their nose off to spite their face , Dumb on both sides .
“Gillard and Abbott” – both cases of be careful what you wish for?
Jimmy – “Government by Thought Bubble” – courtesy of “Bubbles” Abbott – all cue and no chalk (even Gillard’s got more ball-room than him – she’ll go on Q&A).
[But he doesn’t have to do much – anyone thinks Labor’s not in trouble, and doesn’t have to do something to turn things around, isn’t paying attention – Abbott’s troupe stand to win the next election by default. That’s not enough to scare sense into too many voters – that have to touch the fire, to feel the burn.]