To observe that Bill Shorten has been mostly solid, and largely uninspiring, during his tenure as opposition leader will earn no one any prizes for originality.
But as we hurtle towards an election that — barring a catastrophic mismanagement from Labor (not out of the question) or an incredible turn around from the Coalition (which… less likely) — will deliver him the office of prime minister, it’s worth focusing on the things our PM-in-waiting is willing to sound like he’s said, but not actually said.
On wages
The argument around a “living wage” in Australia has been around a little while now. The Australian Council of Trade Unions called for Australia to replace the minimum wage with a living wage in November 2017. While there are debates about what a living wage actually looks like, and how effective it can be without reforming the tax and welfare systems, last month Shorten announced that it would be adopting it as policy. But, as Michelle Grattan noted in the The Conversation, the announcement lacked some pretty serious detail:
Bill Shorten will unveil on Tuesday a process to have the Fair Work Commission phase in a ‘living wage’. But he will not say what it should be as a proportion of the median wage, or how long its implementation should take.
On Pauline Hanson and race
In the aftermath of the Christchurch shooting, when Australia was (partly) reckoning with the material impact of years of racist provocations from people like Pauline Hanson, the debate shifted to whether the major parties would take a stand, and call out the inflammatory rhetoric for what it was.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison ducked the question, saying she never came to him with any issues around race. Shorten was willing to go further… by a few centimetres:
[Shorten] said ‘some of the things’ Senator Hanson had said were racist, but declined to apply the label to her. ‘I don’t think Islam is a cancer. I think some of the things she’s said don’t reflect the thinking of mainstream Australia.’
On Adani
Shorten has managed to steer clear of this one for a while, but in the months around the Queensland state election, he treated us to a round of the Equivocating Game for the ages. He was accused of peddling one story to inner-city voters and another to regional voters about whether a proposed Adani mine should go ahead. This reached a surreal peak when he managed to qualify and contradict himself four times within a couple of sentences:
Shorten said Labor was the party of the environment, but ‘if one government enters into contracts then a future government can’t simply rip them up. To do so would be [a] sovereign risk.’
‘I’ve been to Queensland, from the outback to the coast, it’s a beautiful country and it’s worth preserving.
‘But I also travel to mining communities and coal communities. It’s not an either-or. We are a resource nation, a mining nation.’
On Newstart and ParentsNext
Stories abound about the cruel indignity inflicted on recipients of Newstart, the $40-a-day unemployment payment that hasn’t gone up in 25 years. A heartbreaking number of our readers have got in contact to share their experiences. At the same time, more or less everyone who is called upon to have an opinion on these things — regardless of where they are on the political spectrum — thinks it should go up.
And it has been noted that Labor’s budget reply, although broadly well received, still won’t commit to an increase, promising instead a “root and branch review” of the program in the first term of a Shorten government.
Along the same lines, one of the most consistent pieces of feedback given the calamitous ParentsNext program is that it ought to be made voluntary; and while Labor was damning about the program — again, promising an overhaul — they won’t change that:
Labor’s employment services spokeswoman, Terri Butler, said the evidence presented to the committee showed the program had ’caused parents and their children great distress’. ‘Parents will still be required to participate in the program when they first become eligible for it. Beyond that, we will take an evidence-based case-management approach to making sure the program meets the needs of individual families without being intrusive or punitive.’
On encryption
On the last sitting day of 2018, Labor drew widespread criticism for its last-minute capitulation on the government’s anti-encryption bill. Labor MPs stood and eloquently argued against many elements, and then the bill was passed in its original form with precisely zero amendments.
There are legitimate concerns about the encryption legislation but I wasn’t prepared to walk away from my job and leave matters in a stand-off and expose Australians to increased risk in terms of national security … I will take half a win and move forward than simply continue this sort of angry shouting, which I think does mark — I think you’d all agree — the government’s conduct.
Proposed Labor amendments will be stranded in parliament until after the election.
So what I’m seeing here is….
1. He’s announced a policy without the full details yet. You do realise the election campaign hasn’t even formally begun? How is this an example of Shorten wanting people to think he’s said something he hasn’t said? He hasn’t tried to make it look like he’s given details.
2. Calling Hanson a racist merely rallies her supporters around her, each insisting that just because they’re concerned about radical Islam or about immigration or whatever that it doesn’t make them racist. Calling her a racist makes her the centre of the news again. Attacking the things she says is much better.
3. “This reached a surreal peak when he managed to qualify and contradict himself four times within a couple of sentences” and yet I can’t see even one contradiction in the bit you quoted. The real “surreal peak” was the messianic fervour of the media to drag down Shorten during those byelection days and whip up the prospect of a leadership change. Crikey and the Guardian joined in with dozens of articles focussing in on Labor and Adani in the byelection campaign period (but not on the actual government and Adani, oh no). Yet Federal Labor’s position on Adani is clear. No government financial support for the mine. No government favours. Also not going to break the law or break a binding contract just to block one boogyman project because Labour is an alternative government not a protest band.
4. Fair enough. I don’t know if this will be in the campaign or whether it has been kicked down the road. It really shouldn’t be kicked down the road, but it might be. Traditionally the first budget of a new term is when governments actually make hard calls, so….
5. I agree that this is a concern but I don’t see how it’s an example of Shorten wanting people to think he’s said something he didn’t say.
I agree that there were no contradictions in that word salad but that is only because, like everything emerging from bumBoil Shlernt’s mouth, it was a big, fat nothing burger.
He never sez nuttin!
That way he can squirm & equivocate and wear down everyone with a sense of reality and self preservation, life being too short to waste on his focus grouped, reworked, rote learned zingers.
This coalition government has been a total rabble, divided, untruthful, lacking transparency, whilst changing leaders with monotonous regularity, and Labor’s the problem? So let’s get this straight, you’re criticizing Shorten for not being 100% consistent, 100% of the time?
No.
For not only not saying anything worth hearing at any time but lying as he does so, treating us as idiots with no place else to lodge our vote.
I am quite happy to go along with his ‘lies’. It will be quite a change from the l.ies we are used to.
No, the guy out there telling blatant lies constantly, this weekend about EVs and Labor’s EV policy, previously about the medevac bill or whatever else took his fancy is MORRISON. M-O-R-R-I-S-O-N.
I struggle with Shorten too, but he’s one man with 24 hours in the day- he has a good team and he’s managed to hold their confidence ….
Disappointing neither Party are looking a real increase in the age pension. According to OECD 35% of Australian pensioners are living in poverty.
Scott Morrison says to forget about relying on the age pension and it should not be regarded as an entitlement. Which either from ignorance or deliberately to “con” the voters he completely ignores that in 1945 the government introduced the Nation Welfare Fund, this was to fund pensions etc. A portion of everyone’s tax was put into the Fund.
In 1977 Fraser transferred the money to consolidated revenue. Since then we have continued to pay the tax ensuring that we have money available to fund pensions.
2007-13 ALP increased pensions single 51% married 36%
2013-18 LIBS increased pensions 9%
The Liberals cut $2.4bn from the pension budget while it defends and supports borrowing $5.2BN+++ to pay people this borrowed money, increasing intergenerational debt, for tax they have not paid