The federal Liberals’ current problem isn’t so much senior MPs leaving as who they have staying behind.
Kelly O’Dwyer and Michael Keenan aren’t irreparable losses, but they’re young — Keenan is 46 and O’Dwyer 41, compared to the average age of their Liberal colleagues of around 50 — and, by the low standards of the last five and a half years, they’re reasonably competent.
Both mixed political staff work with private sector experience before entering politics; both have readily employable skillsets, even if their immediate focus will be on their families. Keenan’s description of himself as having been “an absent father in the lives of my children” must have hurt to admit and again confirms the toll politics inflicts, especially on West Australians.
Others, of course, may follow: Julie Bishop, Craig Laundy (another younger, competent prospect the party can ill afford to lose); the dogs are barking about Greg Hunt who, like most Victorian Liberals, looks to be facing a difficult election but with the added burden of being despised by voters for his treachery. None will likely want for careers post-politics.
Compare them to the kind of people who are sticking around in the Coalition. Eric Abetz in the senate. Tony Abbott, Kevin Andrews, John Alexander, Bert van Manen, Jason Wood — Liberals of varying backgrounds but none of them offering much for the future, beyond the fantasies of restoration in Tony Abbott’s head or, perhaps, destabilisation of a new generation of leaders.
Barnaby Joyce, likewise, is remaining in parliament and harbours dreams of leadership. Factional manoeuvring has at least spared the LNP the indignity of offering Ian Macdonald and Barry O’Sullivan a return to the senate, but the unfortunate George Christensen will be going around again in the house of reps, as will Ken O’Dowd.
The loss of Nigel Scullion, at least, is neither here nor there. Noteworthy as the minister who confessed to Malcolm Turnbull he hadn’t bothered watching a major Four Corners expose of his own portfolio in his own territory, Scullion departs in a manner that at least looks like generational change.
Otherwise, the generational change is of the wrong generation, compounding the loss of Julia Banks to the crossbench and the failure of Dave Sharma in Wentworth. If the rats are leaving a sinking ship, it’s one made of dead wood.
If the Liberals find themselves in opposition after the election — a prospect less certain than many make out, but more likely than most MPs would be comfortable with — the inevitable post-election review won’t merely have to examine the dearth of women in its parliamentary ranks and the incessant infighting that has characterised the last four years.
The party will need to ask why, exactly, it governed so poorly from 2013, why even ministers with experience from the Howard years proved incompetent and why the frontbench “generational change” over which Malcolm Turnbull presided when he became prime minister failed to improve the government’s performance. The dearth of talent is a political problem at elections, but it becomes even more damaging in office, and the Liberals face a future increasingly understocked with competence.
You can’t talk about Lib deadwood without mention the chameleon Christopher Pyne, who just blends into the background when the shit is hitting the LNP fan and otherwise avoids anything too strenuous. Bland on a stick! But made for life.
Completely agree; he’s the beaming, guffawing minister for nil achievement. The deadest of a lot of dead wood still in the ministry.
Of all the names mentioned in the article, including the ‘reasonably competent’-seeming (according to Bernard) O’Dwyer and Keenan, the only one worth a crumpet is Craig Laundy. Thinking of the Three Amigos – Abbot, Abetz and Andrews – brings bile to the mouth, in both senses of the word.
Laundy shines bright in a sea of grey Liberals.
It’s hard to name anyone better than Pyne to gush about the farcical and impractical submarine project. He is a perfect fit.
We are watching the end of the liberal and national parties as we know them, malcolm fraser was well into the formation of a new centre political party when he died and that party is still there just waiting for the small L libs to join as soon as the election is over, its likely that both bishop and turnbull will be members or even leaders while the nats morph off to hanson and bernadi with a few of their moderates switching to frasers party as well, it will be a long time before these parties could form a government and if labor does what it says it will it can possibly be in power for years, shorten showed his courage by giving Murdoch the finger which will go down well with the swinging voters as well, rudd and turnbull showed how useless it is crawling up Ruperts wrinkled up old arse
“If the Liberals find themselves in opposition after the election — a prospect less certain than many make out, but more likely than most MPs would be comfortable with”
While I disagree that an election win for Labor is certain, I would agree that the size of the thumping the libs will get will be less than they deserve.
“Ministers with Howard years experience”, hardly a good reference.
Scooter’s out, pumped, proselytising and ready to bluff and bluster his way back in at the election. He could pull it off because it’s god and Brian Houston’s plan. With the sound off, watching his repertoire of facial expressions today while he showed us his divinity was both horrifying and entertaining.
I think he is thinking to emulate Howard’s 2001 campaign. Howard came from behind, spent shamelessly on bribes for the community and hey presto! won another several years in government.
JMNO….Howard won because 9/11 drove the public back to the status quo as always happens in times of turmoil, and because a boat named the Tampa floated over the horizon bringing a dog whistle he could use to call in the racists. Unless some crazy Jihadi does something on a worldwide scale and/or boats start arriving off Darwin in droves within the next 15 weeks, lightning will not strike twice.
I agree with you, Evil Brian. It played a really big role and Morrison can’t replicate that (I hope), but Howard did chuck truckloads of money to the electorate as well and it strikes me that Morrison thinks this might work again. I certainly hope it doesn’t because they are incompetent, riven and completely without ideas