Another four-week break in Parliamentary sittings and some of our politicians take wing again. Kevin Rudd is off to the G20 of course, and Penny Wong is going to Ban Ki-Moon’s UN climate change summit, which is intended “to focus Heads of State and Government on the need for urgent action, and to mobilize the highest level political will needed to reach a fair, effective and scientifically ambitious global climate deal” at Copenhagen.
Good luck with that.
Malcolm Turnbull is also off, making a “private” visit to the UK for a few days to meet his Conservative counterparts, his long-ago humiliation of the Thatcher Government presumably forgotten. He is leaving Julie Bishop in charge, which could be fun, especially if acting Prime Minister Gillard decides to make trouble.
The most unexpected departure is that of Andrew Robb, whose temporary retirement to the backbench while he gets on top of a depressive illness came as a shock on the weekend.
Make no mistake, that would have been a tough call for Robb to make. He is a party man through and through, one of Turnbull’s strongest supporters (despite disappointment that he missed out on the shadow Treasurership) and has an exemplary work ethic. He has also steeped himself in the climate change issue since becoming Turnbull’s emissions trading spokesman last year. But he has made clear he thought he wasn’t able to serve his party as well as he wanted.
It was the right call both personally and professionally, as was the decision to reveal it. Recent weeks must truly have been, as he suggested to Laurie Oakes, hellish for him. The last thing you want to do in that state is constantly interact with people, which is the default setting for any politician. Even simple meetings with close colleagues can seem like nightmarish ordeals that you’ll do anything to avoid, let alone the constant cycle of media appearances and portfolio engagements required of a shadow minister.
The Liberals will miss him, badly. Robb has been the ballast of the Opposition. With Nelson and Costello leaving, Tony Abbott flapping his mouth off on most anything that takes his fancy, Julie Bishop utterly out of her depth, Joe Hockey speaking first and engaging his brain second, Barnaby Joyce becoming de facto leader of the Nationals and Malcolm Turnbull himself going off the deep end over the faked email affair, Robb has remained rock solid throughout.
Time has shown that he should have been made shadow Treasurer rather than Hockey. Instead, for months he has been trying to navigate the near impossible course of securing enough Coalition support for an ETS to get this killer issue off the political agenda as soon as possible. Unlike Greg Hunt, regarded as a bomb-throwing greenie amongst some his more conservative colleagues, Robb hails from the more sceptical end of the spectrum on climate change, meaning his endorsement of the Turnbull position on the CPRS carries weight with the flatearthers and those otherwise inclined to knock it back outright.
In his stead comes Ian Macfarlane, an outright climate sceptic, card-carrying member of the Greenhouse Mafia and former Industries and Resources Minister. Maybe, like Robb, Macfarlane understands the political need for the Opposition to simply get emissions trading off the agenda; maybe, like Robb, Macfarlane’s endorsement of a negotiating position with Labor will carry some of the more hostile backbenchers over into supporting, or at least not opposing, a deal.
One way or another, Macfarlane’s status as a former member of the “dirty dozen” will alter the dynamics of the Senate negotiations significantly.
The Liberals, and anyone who wants to see the CPRS make it into legislation this year, will fervently pray that Robb makes a speedy and complete recovery. For that matter, so will anyone who has dealt with him and knows the contribution he has made to keeping this Opposition together.
Great article BK. Seems an honest and useful assessment of the state of play to ‘those on my left’.
I wonder how many commenters will accuse you of blatant Labor bias over this one.
I would have preferred Robb as shadow Treasurer, but he’s not especially adept at radio interviews and struggles for the 1-liners that encapsulate his side’ s position. Is that fatal for a top political leader?
Andrew Robb has always been a good Liberal. Unfortunately, Andrew, like many others, could not cope with bloodymindedness of the Liberal leadership. Many people left the Party. Others, are just quietly watching the whirlpool the Libs and are in trying to catch their tails. I am sure that Andrew’s current condition is not family related. He got caught up between two worlds: Liberal principles and ever sabre rattling Libs bosses with no principles.
Many Liberals went through very traumatic experience: had to accept senseless wars, big government, lobbyists’ paradise and shopkeepers mentality of the Howard era. Mr. Arkwright from ‘Open all hours’ comes to mind.
Andrew is not a stage clown and he would never ‘mesmerise’ the voters.
It is high time we got rid of political clowns and start electing people who really do care about this country future.
So far, both political parties have failed to address the real issues, like i.e. education. Education is a joke and ‘job creation’ haven for many poorly trained education providers; universities are in tatters and young Australians are deprived of proper academic /intellectual environment.
Environment is another joke. We talk and talk and watch other countries. Australia is unique in many a respect. We should afford to have solar panels over our roofs. Waiting for China already selling cheap panels?
Well, we don’t need political dancers. We need concrete, visible solutions to the challenges of our times.
I wish Andrew well. Hopefully he will recover soon. Political recovery is a challenge.
It was the Howard Govt who forced an Australian to China to manufacture his ‘you beaut thin solar panels’? It was also the Howard govt who forced another Australian overseas – to California, where a mult0-billion dollar company is doing trials on solar power. They believe that it could be ready for base load electricity needs within 5 yearss – there’s about 2+ left. The interview is on the 7.30 Report of October 2007? They believe that it will be cheaper than nuclear and hopefully cheaper than coal. Australia emits enough energy from the sun in one day, to provide the world’s needs for one year! (Prof. Ian Lowe, ACF – 7.30 Report too.)
What we need are politicians who are committed. Not to the fossil fuel industry and in particular the mining lobby. We need politicians who’ll stop stuffing around and get on with it, and people who are serious about alternate energy sources, and then putting serious money into it. The fossil fuel industry receives subsidies of about $10 billion at the moment. They should be told, that the party is over, and the money is no longer available – it’s just ridiculous. They’ve been making great profits that we are all subsidising via our taxes. It’s time it stopped! Our taxes are going towards the latest huge increase in the CEO of BHP Billiton – that’s obscene!
Hi Liz, I’ll try and flesh out some details with the solar companies you refer to.
I suspect with the ‘thin panels’ you’re referring to Origin Energy’s ‘Sliver Technology’. They’ve been fiddling around with that for years. It’s supposed to be cheaper because they cut the slices of silicon very thinly, so less is used in each panel, and silicon is a major cost contributor to solar panel expenses. Problem here though, is there’s still a major labour component in their manufacture, and Good Aussie Labour is a lot more expensive than Chinese labour. They could be manufactured for s similar cost in Australia, but would need Government support. In which case, it’s hard to defend; are we better manufacturing in a protected market at home, or in an open market in china? I’ve got no idea.
The solar theremal company is Ausra, who are playing with Compact Linear Fresnell Arrays; just a type of solar thermal plant. There’s a few competing designs, all of which are relatively closely matched. Much as I’d like to bag the Govt over this one, but it’s hard to point the blame at them. Ausra have been fiddling around with the CLFR array at Liddell Power Station for years, and to the best of my knowledge still don’t have it working. It’s a pilot demonstration plant yet it doesn’t work! I think Liddell received Govt support, but can’t recall from what program, might even be State. Anyway, I personally doubt Ausra were ever serious about doing major business here; California is their big market, and Australia will never compete with that sort of scale. They might put in a couple of projects here and there, but they’ll mostly be manufactured in the States.
Any solar thermal plant should be capable of heat storage and therefore ‘base load’ generation. Which BTW is a term I despise that has virtually no value. I think ‘despatchable’ is more useful. There are a few spectacular energy storage projects under way in Australia, supported surprisingly by the Old Govt through the Advanced Energy Storage TEchnology program. There’s a couple of good solar thermal projects there.
Costs? Should already be cheaper than nuclear by a mile. WIll be cheaper than clean coal, but we’re a long way off being cheaper than thermal coal with no carbon capture or carbon penalties. It’s burning dirt! How can anything sophisticated compete with that?