Attorney-General Christian Porter
In a week that started with the governing class patting itself on the back and declaring “Mission Accomplished” in turning back the tide of third parties, Labor and the Liberals served up further evidence of why they’ve lost the trust of voters and generated growing disillusionment with our political system.
In Victoria, the rorting of taxpayer funds for political purposes by the Andrews Labor government was confirmed by the state’s ombudsman, elevating the Victorian Labor Party to the unenviable status of the country’s most scandal-plagued government — a status achieved within its first term, when the New South Wales Labor government took several terms to build up its corruption, although admittedly it plumbed far greater depths of criminality and personal venality when it did. No one is suggesting Labor MPs personally profited from electorate office staff funding being used for campaigning. But the cavalier conflation of public funding for the business of democracy with the party’s self-interest reflects a mindset of unaccountability — and a disregard for the responsibility attached to use of public resources.
Unluckily for Victorians, the electoral choice is between a dud government plagued by scandal and an opposition with links to alleged organised crime bosses.
A separate but related mindset informs the equally cavalier disregard political parties have for the privacy of voters, which has come into relief courtesy of the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Armed with access to the electoral roll (which should be strictly confined to the Commonwealth and state electoral bodies) and an exemption from the Privacy Act they themselves wrote into the law, the major parties have assembled colossal databases with individual profiles of every voter, and engage third-party contractors to supplement and exploit those databases to tailor their campaigns and advertising.
There’s strong support outside the political parties for their gratuitous exemption from basic privacy requirements to be ended — from the privacy commissioner, from the Australian Law Reform Commission, from the Australian Privacy Foundation. But the Attorney-General rejects the idea of change. Christian Porter claimed “this exemption is designed to encourage freedom of political communication and support the operation of the electoral and political process”.
That’s simply not true. The privacy exemption, in fact, hampers political communication, because it prevents voters from learning how parties target them, and what the parties know about them. The “communication” envisaged by Porter is one in which parties dictate how they will subject voters to marketing, and voters have no recourse. Nor is there any evidence the imposition of privacy laws, and the right for voters to see what information parties have accumulated on them, would harm the operation of the electoral process. Indeed, greater transparency about political parties’ targeting of voters would surely support the electoral and political process far more than the current conspiracy of silence between the parties.
As the Grattan Institute correctly noted in a recent report, voters’ sense that politicians can’t be trusted to act in the interests of voters, is a key driver of political disillusionment and the increasing willingness of voters to turn to non-traditional parties. This can only be remedied by political parties being willing to be more open and accountable and to display integrity. There’s no sign that’s sinking in in Canberra.
Bernard, I *really* think you’re over-egging the pudding with your frequent references to Victorian Labor. Though what they did was extremely stupid, even the Ombudsman accepted that there was no actual malice involved…..& all the money has since been repaid.
In NSW, by contrast, you’ve got around a dozen Liberal MP’s forced to resign due to corruption, & the NSW Branch of the Liberal Party denied funding by the AEC due to money-laundering. Also, as you’ve alluded to, you’ve got the Victorian Liberals & their connections to mob bosses, & senior members of the party stealing *millions* of dollars from their own party. So you’ve got blatant stupidity vs blatant criminality. Apples & Oranges.
Not sure about the lack of malice part. I think someone in Vic Labor had the bright idea & then the participants were recruited to carry it out.
Also one scandal making them the most scandal-plagued government in the country, really? I live in Melbourne. Most of the things the Herald-Sun considers a “scandal” have washed over without a ripple. This one may not, hard to say, but nobody here would consider the Andrews government more scandal-plagued than Turnbull!!
Sinodinos and Hockey got off scot free from the icac investigations they were implicated in, as did Matthew Guy with that planning rort on Phillip island.
I think the lack of malice was a quote.
Not to mention Guy’s meeting with a mob boss for Lobster dinner. I mean, he was caught on tape for Pete’s sake…..yet he is still the Party Leader.
Bernard, what a load of rubbish, or do you not get news from NSW? Most scandal plagued Government??? Not while the Libs run NSW. They could not run a chook raffle. Sydney is a gigantic road cutting, decisions are made for which the only conceivable reason would be a bribe of some sort and the bloody light rail form one side of the city can’t use the tracks on the other, they knocked down a memorial avenue for the sake of a few racegoers and spent tens of millions on a pedestrian bridge. Andrews crowd may have got away with a couple of hundred Ks, but Baird and Berejiklian have received millions in rorts designed to circumvent donation laws and apparently the planning act.
If, as seems ever more likely, T1 & T2 are too sclerotic & immutable to perform the simple functions of government, few as they are such security/safety & organising water supply and drainage, the only rational response from the citizenry is to seek representation elsewhere.
The Victorian state Labor government has garnered well-deserved repute for getting on with desperately-needed transport infrastructure, albeit with the fortunate availability of income from the PoM lease. And yet I’m moved to rewrite Keane’s statement. Unluckily for Victorians, the community of Victoria is faced with an invidious electoral choice. It is between [1] a government…” that has grown arrogant from its obvious electoral popularity from ‘getting on with it’ (this arrogance most exemplified by Andrews’ defiant, even contumacious personal posture when challenged over such things as self-serving unsolicited transport proposals that sometimes have aspects to them that are far from being in the community’s interest, as much as his government’s flirtation on the fringes of corruption) and [2] an opposition that just presents as ‘more of the same tired old discredited elites’ singing the same lyrics to the same melody we have come so much to hate. Our choice at the election will not be between them, for that is no choice at all. It will be between the establishment of a wholly-new paradigm for government (one that is not predicated on the philosophical tribal apparatus that so enervates these gamers) where the will of the people is paramount, or simply withdrawing from the voting process. So bad has politics become in this country, that it no longer matters who ‘gets in’ and none deserve the privilege of receiving the acclamation that a vote bestows.
I agree. I am particularly galled that the legislative response to the Red Shirts on one side and the lack of political donations transparency on the other, includes a significant increase in taxpayer funding for all MPs. The legislation easily passed through both houses of parliament despite the fact there is absolutely no benefit whatsoever to voters. I dread the coming elections, and robo-calls and influx of advertising. It’s all our money, being wasted by politicians and bureaucrats, with no benefit to be derived from voters/taxpayers.
‘Dud government’ is a bit unfair. There’s a lot going on in Victoria that is pretty good.