If you’re still wondering exactly why Cory Bernardi split from the Liberal Party that he stood for seven months ago in South Australia, you’re not alone. In an unilluminating Senate explanation of his move yesterday — at four minutes it was brief enough to be insulting to his former colleagues — he complained that the Liberal Party’s values had been, he said “set aside for expedient, self-serving, short-term ends”. At a media conference afterward, he appeared to offer multiple explanations of his departure and of his intentions: he wanted to provide stability for the conservative side of politics (by splitting – go figure), he wanted to help the Liberal Party shift back to its core values (by leaving it), he wanted to do something about the rapid growth in minor parties (by making his own).
But the common thread was that he had not changed in his entire time in politics, with the clear implication that the Liberal Party had. However, when asked to identify exactly how the government had changed, he was unable to produce an example other than Josh Frydenberg’s ill-fated climate action review.
There are some simpler explanations: Bernardi’s massive ego, a desire for vengeance against moderates in his own party branch, and the self-delusion of an extremist that he’s somehow in touch with a silent majority rather than a vocal minority.
But does his critique — to the extent that it can be worked out — of the Liberal Party stand up? Based on the assorted tea leaves left around by Bernardi, it appears the gap between the Liberal Party’s purported values and statements and its policies and actions in government has grown too wide for his comfort.
The charge is an easy one to make: any governing party has to compromise — either it has compromise forced on it by the constitution via the electoral system, or it discovers the political cost of failing to compromise if it doesn’t, as the final term of the Howard government showed (the period that Bernardi today lionised as “the good old days” longed for by voters). A government that had followed Bernardi’s advice and shifted even further to the right than Tony Abbott did would have failed even faster. And if you’re trying to recall how much effort Bernardi put in to supporting the Abbott government at its most right wing — in the 2014 budget — good luck: instead, Bernardi criticised “the perceived sophistry of some of the positions it took to the election” in a Press Club speech in June 2014, which otherwise ignored the budget.
[Poll Bludger: the electoral reality of Bernardi’s ‘silent majority’]
But there is a significant gap between the Coalition’s policies in government and the rhetoric it employs, based on its Liberal principles. The party that spent much of its time in opposition decrying the “budget emergency” increased spending and blew out the deficit in government — spending is still well above the levels inherited from Labor, even factoring in the government’s “zombie” spending cuts that the Senate has blocked. Instead of acknowledging its change of fiscal strategy — needed to protect a soft economy — the Coalition continued to pretend all was well fiscally, then took to blaming the Senate and Labor, before newly appointed Treasurer Scott Morrison actually ‘fessed up in 2015 that spending had got out of control.
But the dissonance continues: the government simultaneously talks about the threat of a credit rating downgrade because of persistent deficits, while promising significant tax cuts for big business a key part of its agenda — cuts that will increase deficits and reduce surpluses (should they ever arrive) by a total of $50 billion over the next decade. The government says it has made important emissions reduction commitments as part of the Paris climate agreement but only has one policy — the Renewable Energy Target — that will only achieve a fraction of those targets. Not to mention its focus on manufacturing protectionism in Australia while proclaiming the benefits of free trade, or its boasting of its massive infrastructure investment program while such investment fell in a heap under Abbott and has barely recovered since.
[Rundle: don’t underestimate Cory Bernardi]
Bernardi wouldn’t even regard some of these as problems. Climate change doesn’t exist, governments should be cutting business taxes, government spending is bad. But they’re all variations of a theme of a government that isn’t really clear what it wants to be — not merely in its leadership by a man who famously believes things quite at odds with the views of the right of his party, but even in areas where there is raging unity between Turnbull and his party — even with Bernardi. Is the Coalition about cutting taxes? If so, why has the tax burden increased significantly since Labor lost office? Is the Coalition about living within its means? If so, why has it constantly pushed the return to surplus further and further away and will soon need approval to take debt beyond $500 billion?
My consistent argument for a while now has been that both sides have made politics much harder for themselves with a learned helplessness about articulating and explaining positive policy — especially the Coalition, courtesy of the relentless negativity of the Abbott years, which ensured no one ever had to make the effort to explain or defend the nuances of policy, and thus lost the capacity to do so. It’s hard to see how the Liberals’ dearth of coherent policy is disconnected from this, rather than merely being a product of the Prime Minister’s captivity by the right. Bernardi himself has suggested the problems are of much longer standing that Turnbull’s Prime Ministership — today he specifically referred to his 2014 Press Club speech as a warning.
Bernardi’s solutions make little sense — urging his party to shift far in a direction that, on many issues, would take it even further away from the political mainstream. But his identification of the problem may not be entirely astray.
“My consistent argument for a while now has been that both sides have made politics much harder for themselves with a learned helplessness about articulating and explaining … the nuances of policy.”
Astonishing. The proper way to repel Trump-mania is for the two main parties to better explain ‘the nuances of policy’? Remind us: how did that just work out for policy nuance-specialist Hillary Clinton?
But Hillary did not campaign on policy at all. All she said was ‘Trump is a meanie who hates women and gays and look at all the celebrities I’m surrounded by’. Her website apparently detailed her policies but behind all the technocratic jargon everyone new what her agenda was – shilling for Wall St. and destroying the Middle East for Isreal. The problem for politicians is not that policy is too hard to articulate to the public, it’s that if they were straight-forward they would have to admit to horrible things.
He has some good points, but now he will be outside the tent trying to piss in.
Elected as a mainstream party member but now a fringe dweller.
Remains to be seen if he can have any influence and perhaps do deals with the other ‘unrepresentative swill’
I used to be rusted on LNP, but Big Mal is the ultimate disappointment – $500billion debt -FFS where are the adults now in charge of Australia credit card?
Lining up at the trough for their entitlements.
Not where Bernardi is that’s for sure. What good ideas were these?
Bernadi didn’t just suddenly appear from the dust of creation, the Party selected him as one of their own; hence, mea culpa. I guess you’re allowed one dark and defiant angel. However, the Coalition appears to have way too many, and problem belongem them.
Delusional, an ego that far outstrips the limited talent and brains within. He is the king without clothes.
Can someone please explain why Bernardi gets 6 years in the senate. As the last election was a double dissolution, half the senate are only going to get 3 years. Can’t the LNP offer up his seat for re-election next term. My understanding is that there aren’t any rules around this, only conventions, but half of the senate will be up again next election.
Anyone can come in with some answers there. I’m missing something, lots obviously.
When I want some answers I really want to hear them. So I’m treating you, as if you were me. (I don’t guarantee my answers.) The Senate is bicameral. i.e. composed of two legislative bodies. A Senate election is held every three years (?) where one half only stand for election. The other half stands at a different election. Last election for the lower house was also a half senate election. And Cory Bernardi’s seat wasn’t up for re-election. So, by announcing it this early, Bernardi gets to have six years of comfort
in a feather-bedded divan. ##I don’t know if I’ve got this totally right.
If you doubt Bernardi’s honesty you could have asked yourself what a died-in-the-wool, brazenly active Roman Catholic could be doing trying to mend some of the scars created by the Churches whimsical? Callous? Treatment of small children? But, which, you may care to ask yourself, could be more important; that, or the bringing of some peace to the tortured people who suffered so much.
Hi, I get your point, but you got it almost completely wrong describing the election system. The Senate is one house in a bicameral system – the other house is the Reps. Last election was a double dissolution and half the senate get three year terms and half six years. BC was lucky having the second LNP senate spot in SA and thus won a six year term. He had enough gall and hypocrisy to have his election paid for by the LNP knowing full well he could not win on his own merits.
BILL: I knew I was making some mistakes. But I was sort of heading in the right direction, although I had the house of Reps, and the Senate being part of the bicameral equation.
Thank you for coming to my rescue.
Cheers, Venise
Is the electorate so unconcerned with politics they refuse to do anything about the abysmal circus which appears daily-except on holidays, public holidays and school holidays. It is called “Question Time.” And, it features carefully rehearsed little playlets where ministers huff and puff and sling insults and opprobrium at their opposite numbers. Does anything of importance occur at these bun fights? It doesn’t seem to. Rather it consists of inane “Dorothy Dixers.” Or politicians leaving one set of unprincipled bigots for another set of unprincipled useless wonders.
Cory Bernardi finally does what he has been promising to do for some years. He leaves the Liberals. Big deal. In four years time the electorate will have forgotten his name. After all someone in the Murdoch press today described Bernardi as not “being the sharpest knife in the drawer.”
As for Malcolm Turnbull:…does he think he can win an extra million dollars for every cliché he utters? “The Labor Party,” woe and despair, “Hardworking Australian families,” no speech can be uttered without this phrase being uttered at least six times.
Holding his glasses in one hand and pointing them at who ever displeases him while trotting out “hard working Australians” again. This litany is meaningless, pointless, and boring, Also it is an insult to our “Hard working Australians.”
… just pray that they don’t change it to “smart working families” because that would raise questions of NBN, new technologies and sunrise industries.
far better to manage decline and ensure that your donors suffer least.
The ‘Speaker’ should be a High Court Judge or similar with no political membership. It should be completely apolitical and take a legal approach to responses made. Question time is a farce albeit a little amusing at times.