When Labor was in a doldrums period in the mid-2000s (before brief success and then a return to the doldrums), there was intense debate about what Labor needed to do. Bill Shorten added his take: what Labor needed to succeed was more success. He was laughed at for that, but he was sorta right.
Once you’re on the upswing, your words acquire weight and force. But getting back to that point relies on your words having meaning and force. And round it goes.
The paradox of opposition has been a factor for a long time. But, hell, the Opposition used to actually get reported on. It used to be thought that the proceedings and decisions of an opposition party national conference would be worth reporting on at some length, and with some comprehensiveness, by the major press.
Yet one scours the national papers and sites for any sort of report, even in summary, of the decisions made and the alternatives proposed. All I can see on the online versions of coverage are: a single story on energy policy in The Age and SMH, a running blog in Guardian Australia with a few preview stories from days ago, and a cheap gotcha in the Oz about the zoom not working for the online event. The AFR’s story today is mostly a political strategic assessment, leading with the announcement that Albo’s cutting down on the grog.
OK, given that it was online it wasn’t the most exciting conference in the world to cover. And there is every reason to believe that Labor wanted it to be reported low key, so as to keep focus on the government’s women problem.
But that’s all the more reason to cover it diligently. Labor announced a major change of direction from the established consensus, with a return to state-directed manufacturing efforts. Since that would shape how we live in profound ways, and marks a real political difference opening up, it should have been widely covered and considered in real time, and today as a conference wrap-up. We did so, but we do not purport to be the newspapers of record, or the full mainstream.
All the more reason why they should have had such coverage. And in the past they would have. Make no mistake about it, it’s not just your imagination or faulty memory if you’re older (i.e. if you’re a subscriber), this is real civilisational decline.
Your correspondent has recently been reading through whole years of the dailies from the 1950s through to the 1970s, and as well as coming to some conclusions about what was of the time — 40% of Melbourne’s Herald in the early 1970s was Pentridge prison escapes and hand-drawn lingerie ads as far as I can tell — there’s also the fact that things like political conferences, their decisions and debates get reported, even if there’s no drama. This was on the principle that the public should have a ready, synthesised account of what an alternative government might look like.
The absence of anything like that — quite possibly there’ll be something in the Saturdays, but then again, quite possibly not — is part of the general disconnect between politics and everyday life that the mainstream media is not merely reflecting but contributing to.
One doesn’t expect anything from The Australian except game-playing and sabotage. As a national paper, the Oz has been a net negative contribution to the national life. We would have been better off as a country if it had shut down during Murdoch’s cash crisis in the late 80s (well before the actual rot set in, quality wise). New Zealand has pretty average media, but it’s a better place, and the increased divergence between the two countries is substantially due to the presence/absence of News Corp.
But not expecting much from the national broadsheet (that expectation is a measure of the decline itself) doesn’t absolve the Nine papers and Guardian Australia. It especially doesn’t absolve them from questions about their absolute bias towards, and dominance of, stories fashioned around individual experience, atomised selfhood and fragmented existence.
We all know the excuses as to why these stories — from the confessional to the pretty non-forensic reporting on social (especially gender) issues — get prominence: because of the fabled algorithms, and the capacity to track individual story uptake.
That has developed in leaps and bounds from a generation ago. We genuinely live in a society where many people now have no “horizon of the social”. They simply don’t see social life as anything more than the sum of atomised stories and connections. But once again that has been exacerbated by the media’s willingness to feed back such hyper-individualism to the reader in a manner that quickly becomes not merely circular but centripetal.
Yes, it matters what the opposition thinks and believes. Yes, their views should be featured by a media concerned to hold the government to account. The absence of that creates a curious disconnect, whereby the government’s actual policies and broader actions are reported, often uncritically and unanalytically, while a series of social problems are reported without context, connection to political happenings, or in anything other than a socially atomised fashion.
By now, in the ex-Fairfax papers, the government should be being pilloried, filleted and shellacked for the absolute failure of the vaccine rollout in Australia. This is a failure all the more damnable given our success in tamping down COVID-19 through lockdowns.
We could have been the first larger country to really, totally knock off the threat. Instead, we’re at the edge of going back in because of a sort of somnambulant inefficiency, a simple and basic lack of application by everyone from Scotty on down to Greg Hunt; a gurning, poly-incompetent failson if there was.
We used to do this. Media used to do this. Oppositions used to do this.
We now seem to live in a media and politics sphere where that whole category of direct contestation — what oppositions are proposing about how we might live differently, full incompetence by government — has been replaced by a near-exclusive focus on conditions in government for staffers: a soap-opera, serious enough in its events, but in which a political elite act out their dramas while we observe and choose our heroes from among them to represent us.
Can we get some genuine social, collective, programmatic politics back into the mainstream press? News Corp is a lost cause. Guardian Australia may have become a place where the algorithms select the staff. Fairfax editors will have to talk back to the Nine right-wing consiglieres who run the joint and give us Uhlmann and, hahaha, Parnell McGuinness.
But do they have the actual conception of politics I’m talking about? Or has it been lost there too? If do, we’re largely gone. I cant see many other places where this sort of thing is happening, save for outright autocracies. If so, we appear doomed to be a sort of giant drifting suburb on the ocean, absent a metropolis, for some time to come. Labor, may we succeed soon. But will it be? And what will it inherit?
April fools! Everything’s great here! Your house is worth $2 million! You’re rich! It only cost your life to pay for it! (Conditions apply.)
With the federal government up to its eyeballs in sex scandals and a covid rollout with four flat tyres the ALP should expect to sleepwalk to the next election victory.
However sleepwalking is not possible for the comatose.
Australian politics currently has the shallowest depth of talent in living memory. If it is true we have the politicians we deserve – then god help us.
ROFL. Both your comment and your moniker!
We should certainly change the date of Australia Day to 1 April.
Ha!. Nice idea.
I have to admit that The Guardian, after many years, has gone downhill rapidly in its reporting of major political issues.
Moreso, I’ve noticed a huge, disappointing difference in quality stories since late last year.
Whether it’s fear of defamation/libel suits or something completely different, I don’t know.
But, the journalists I used to look forward to tearing strips off the liars on both/all sides of Parliament, are suddenly less vocal, to the point of being dead quiet.
Comments on political matters have been turned off without explanation to subscribers since January 2021, with the only avenue for such being, when the great cartoonist, First Dog on the Moon, provides light/dark relief on matters that many of us care about.
It’s become so bland at Guardian Australia, I can now go for days without reading it at all and still catch up on, well… nothing much at all.
Thanks Guy for calling it as it is.
But independent media is stepping up to the plate, although they do not have the reach.
There is some semblance of life remaining in the likes of Kangaroo Court, & Friendly Jordies to some extent but I cannot think of any other news/political publication worth reading.
Honourable mention to Inside Story and IA but that’s about all.
Michael West
Michael West – of course!
That’s twice now, when berating the sludge of meeja, that I’ve omitted to give him a thumbs up.
And look at the contributors he lines up.
and John Menadue: Pearls and Irritations.
All depends on who they have in their sights. Wrong target. Wrong target!
It’s hard to replicate the quality of the NY Times for example without more robust demands and critiques from the journalists themselves. But of course it takes some ticker to take on the the self righteous, Sycophantic and opportunistic personalities and editorial structures in the fishbowl of Australian media ownership, the creation of the lack of political leadership and courage and surfeit of opportunism in turn by both parties.
I eventually subscribed to the Guardian mid last year. This year, I hardly read it! As you say, comments are turned off, even Amy’s parliamentary reporting seems to have toned down – a pity – there are some very astute commenters who I enjoyed reading as much as many of the articles they were commenting on. This year….I’ll give them another month or so, then maybe redirect my limited funds elsewhere – maybe a full sub to Crikey, to go with IA and a couple of others……
Truly,the Grauniad’s decline has been a devastating blow to those of us who used to rely upon it for incisive, informed and accurate reportage.
I reckon the rot set in when it fell for bLIAR – even in 1994 he was well known for what he became in office, a principle & ethics free zone.
With the destruction of FauxFux by Wozza and worse, the only daily worth reading is the New Daily.
This flaccid organ is so useless as to be no longer even a joke – it is now little more than a sheltered safe-space for the wanker brigade.
Compare the UK version particularly marina Hyde with the gutless and lame Australian version.
Note how rarely comments are allowed on a Hyde piece. Or Crace.
Even their best cartoonist Steve Bell (who has been sacked several times) often is comment prohibitted.
No comments at all on any factual piece, just the fluffy feel-good stuff.
Agree and notice changes too, goes back several years to when the Scott Trust ownership needed TG to attract more income, hence, moving to the centre more, in Oz also into the vacuum left by Fairfax moving to the right.
Issues include no comments on contentious or even neutral topics, patchy coverage of Labor and any related issues that offer only an overview, too much fluff including entertainment and celebrities and too much fawning around senior MPs with focus upon the government sound bites and messaging.
A symptom has been TG UK, which had an American friend in disbelief, where Paul ‘Population Bomb’ Ehrlich presenting an article in the ‘Environment’ section, blaming humanity, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation (at the time Exxon Mobil owners); would fit better in Oz, like SPA does, with The Australian.
Interesting from the UK on what has gone wrong with the Guardian i.e. led willingly into corporatism:
https://mronline.org/2019/05/07/beholden-to-corporatism-how-the-guardian-sold-out-the-working-class/
Thanks for that link – I was unaware of the corporate explanation but the time line certainly gels.
Even now it remain the Blair Beobachter, even though they tried to pump up the tyres of Drear ‘Labour self harmer’ Starmer in an homage to their true love, the Dark Prince over the Water.
I’ve noticed that too and have had a similar experience of just skimming through and turning to other independent media. What’s going on at the Guardian?
Murphy can always be relied upon to defend morrison.
She is chief “fluffer” for the daggy dad.
The guardian also has an unhealthy obsession with megs and Harry and how hard done by they are.
Hmm, d’ya think Porter et al suing for defamation (and other pollies threatening same) may have had SOMETHING to do with the decision to turn off comments by the Guardian lately?
A gaping hole in your otherwise excellent article, is a complete lack of comment on the proper role of the national broadcaster…in an ideal world we could happily ignore the MSM and just rely on our ABC…but sadly those days are pretty much gone too.
Did you spot anything in the ALP conference about policies to restore the ABC to its former glory?
True about the parlous state of the ABC but, by “…restore the ABC to its former glory” I’ll assume that you mean before 1986 when HawKeating, determined to gut it, let David Downhill run riot for 9 longggg years.
By the time the Rodent won office it was already an empty shell, barely writhing.
Now I know where all the money went from bushfire funds. To the busfore of independent journalism. Liberals! Mr Porter?
What happened you ask? I’d suggest there is no appetite for the grand narratives of political parties, the vision thing, either when in government or opposition. Because that would necessarily involve resurrecting the much denigrated carcass of ‘class’ as an analytical concept. Much more productive for news outlets to garner clicks (Crikey included) via a race or gender analysis.
And why bother with a class analysis, or big picture statements, when, as Rundle notes, we have its replacement ‘by a near-exclusive focus on conditions in govt, for staffers: a soap opera…in which a political elite act out their dramas while we observe and choose out heroes from amongst them to represent us’.
…….
Well when you have, at last count, at least two Labor MP’s referring openly to Labor as a “brand,” then I am afraid you have an accurate description of Australian politics today.