The now-cliched “unprecedented” should be retired as a descriptor of our times. They remain extraordinary, terrifying, uncertain, no doubt. But we’ve been at this long enough to reflect on what has worked for Australia, and learn from other countries.
Nonetheless, our politicians are still operating under a governance paradigm built hastily in the first weeks of the pandemic, whose elements were never sold to the public as permanent reforms. On Friday, a meeting of the national cabinet decided to appoint a member of the National COVID-19 Coordination Commission to chair a new hotel quarantine inquiry. Four months ago, none of these forums even existed.
Premised on a war-like “state of exception“, these bodies mostly emphasise the speed and decisiveness of elite messaging, at the potential expense of hearing and reacting to affected people’s experiences on the ground.
As Melbourne and the rest of Australia enter two distinct new phases of the pandemic, we ought to reflect on who will be sitting at the tables where era-defining decisions have and will be made — and whether this reflects best practice and public will this time around.
Command and control doesn’t work
When the coronavirus was truly novel, frazzled and disoriented Australians demanded quick and decisive action from government. Scott Morrison, keen to remedy his slow and indecisive response to the summer bushfires, quickly centralised authority in the highly secretive national (“war”) cabinet and began issuing far-reaching edicts.
State leaders likewise clamoured to demonstrate speed and competence, flanked by small groups of senior ministers and bureaucrats. The adults were taking charge.
But international evidence now suggests that while high-level government coordination is important, centralising decision-making too heavily in the hands of too few elites undermines responses to the pandemic by creating “tunnel vision”.
A new study released Thursday found that Germany’s response to the coronavirus was hampered by elite concentration of power, while Trump and Johnson’s closed-off crews of cronies in the US and UK continue to disappoint.
Conversely, mutual learning emerges when institutions, stakeholders and citizen groups can work together productively, alerting each other to potential threats and opportunities. The countries that have been most successful at combatting the coronavirus, such as Taiwan and Iceland, have been particularly good at this.
Central coordination will remain important, but unilateral displays of strength and speed are looking less reassuring than ever. The Victorian government’s rapid deployment of police to affected public housing towers, for instance, provoked public backlash for imposing “order” on residents instead of working with them. A more collaborative approach later emerged, with community leaders, volunteer groups, politicians and social services working with authorities to ensure a smoother and more just operation.
A VIP-only network
Where the federal government has tried to bring outside actors on board, it has been highly selective. Its National COVID-19 Coordination Commission is a hand-picked cadre of business leaders who have faced conflict of interest accusations. The only union representative, Greg Combet, left in June.
This collaborative approach ends with the PM’s phone contacts. The rest of us are stuck with the command-style approach that is rapidly bleeding over into our rebuilding effort.
Morrison, NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and others are seeking to “fast track” various infrastructure projects to revive the economy by bypassing normal approval processes. The economic aim is sound, but such approval processes exist for important reasons — to ensure the projects stack up, and to ensure those who will be affected by the project are consulted and can influence the decision.
Again, speed and “efficiency” are being weaponised to avoid scrutiny and community dissent.
Take, for instance, the Berejiklian government’s recent decision to extend the license of a Hunter Valley coalmine further into the 2030s — hardly a “shovel ready” project to create immediate jobs. The relaxed approval rules are being taken advantage of to silence the legitimate concerns of environmental groups (who have also been locked out of the national commission) under the guise of emergency stimulus.
Giving people their say
Northern European nations do a lot better at bringing governments, organisations and citizens together to bridge divides. Their tradition of “corporatism” involves entrenching the representation of various interest groups in the policymaking process, not only as advisers but with voting rights. This model is uniquely suited to the pandemic rebuilding project that requires a unified national effort.
Ten years ago this month, the Gillard government attempted a half-hearted version of this with its “citizens assembly” on climate change. The idea was later dumped, ending Labor’s flirtation with direct democracy that began with the failed 2020 Summit.
Now, the Morrison government is convening industrial relations working groups with unions and employers, hoping they may cooperate as productively and profitably as on industry super boards. But this portfolio is where stakeholders are least likely to find compromise, given their intractable disputes born of decades of neoliberal industrial policy.
Our leaders have been somewhat effective at practically addressing the coronavirus pandemic so far. But the authoritative, top-down approach developed for our initial mobilisation is quickly losing its utility. Pretty soon the bunker has to open up and let the rest of us in.
“Pretty soon the bunker has to open up and let the rest of us in.”
Not if Morrison and his droogs have their way. The slow slide towards Fascism.
According to an article by Dr Lawrence Britt, the 14 characteristics of fascism are:
Powerful and Continuing Nationalism
Disdain for the Recognition of Human Rights
Identification of Enemies/Scapegoats as a Unifying Cause
Supremacy of the Military
Rampant Sexism
Controlled Mass Media
Obsession with National Security
Religion and Government are Intertwined
Corporate Power is Protected
Labor Power is Suppressed
Disdain for Intellectuals and the Arts
Obsession with Crime and Punishment
Rampant Cronyism and Corruption
Fraudulent Elections
Quite a few of them match Australia these days.
Satdee Paper headline and sub, Satdee before last, on a piece by Karen Middleton;
“Morrison ruling by ‘Henry VIII’ clauses”
“New concerns surround the government’s increased use of legislative powers to bypass the parliament and create laws that cannot be amended or overturned.”
“Morrison, NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and others are seeking to “fast track” various infrastructure projects to revive the economy by bypassing normal approval processes.”
Were there no infrastructure projects approved, or nearly so, just before the pandemic?
“Ordinary Australians deserve a say…”
Why? We elected this authoritarian government. What have we done to deserve any better? Morrison and his gang are consistent in avoiding any oversight, they dodge parliament, they only speak to friendly journalists, they attack any independent bodies that might defy them. They run their Covid strategy using Henry VIII powers so that parliament has no say at all. They have replaced COAG, which was fairly open, with a national council that operates in secret. The only people Morrison’s gang have any time for are the wealthy individuals and corporations who pour money into his party’s coffers. The rest of us are only required to keep their businesses profitable. So long as ordinary Australians keep on voting for this why on earth should we have a say?
Hear, Hear.
Alas, too true. They had their say – which was that they didn’t care.
About anything, apparently.
Not only independent bodies, but individuals. And not just defy, but merely express an opinion. Ask Andie Fox what fascist Alan Tudge did to her.
One of the most important things with any emergency is to have a unified, single voice that then becomes familiar to listeners/viewers — this has never happened with this pandemic.
Too often conflicts of both interest and message have resounded to great confusion both in Australia and its states and territories but most notable throughout the world.
Communication 101 has always said that the message needs to be with the K.I.S.S. principle foremost. Sadly this has not occurred here and we do not need another inquiry to confirm it.