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Political giants leave difficult legacies. For two decades, Labor has been berated for failing to match the political and policy standards of the Hawke-Keating years — particularly by the Coalition, which smeared and vilified both men as corrupt when they were in politics but elevated them as the exemplars of political and policy achievement afterwards.
John Howard wasn’t exactly a giant of the stature of Hawke and Keating but he, too, casts a long shadow for his party, which has endured four leaders since his eleven-year reign and is considering a fifth. At the moment, there’s plenty of reflection about how both the resurgence of One Nation and the increasingly dangerous product differentiation by the Nationals would have been handled better by Howard.
Part of the problem is that, much like a coach looks much better if she has a bunch of champions turning out for her, Howard had much better Nationals leaders. Barnaby Joyce is a pale shadow of Tim Fischer and John Anderson, even if Fischer was every bit as idiosyncratic as Joyce. And they in turn had people like Ron Boswell, that florid lion of rural Queensland who, whatever his own ideological obsessions, was committed to fighting what he regarded as the deeply toxic influence of the far Right in Queensland politics.
But berating Malcolm Turnbull for failing to be sufficiently Howardesque in his handling of One Nation and the Nats is like complaining that if only the current generation of Labor figures were like Hawke and Keating, we’d have more economic reform. Magically transplanted into today’s political environment, Hawke, Keating and Howard would all struggle for much the same reasons as the last four Prime Ministers have struggled:
- Neoliberalism is dying. Voters are no longer content to acquiesce to the demands of the great god of Reform. They push back aggressively, as Anna Bligh and Campbell Newman can relate, and the pushback is no longer confined to regional electorates. They viscerally hate many parts of the entire neoliberal project despite being demonstrably wealthier for it, and are prepared to back parties that share their hatred.
- As part of this, wage stagnation is engendering deep disaffection not just for market economics but for corporations and the super-wealthy. The dearth of pay rises in recent years seems to confirm what many voters always suspected about neoliberalism, that it was a system designed to benefit corporations and the wealthy, not them. The few, not the many.
- There’s no longer a unified media space to dominate, Keating-style, with cut-through messages that work with voters. The media is fragmented, less interested in politics and far more democratic than it was even when John Howard clumsily began a Youtube video during the 2007 election campaign with “good morning”. Any utterance by politicians is now vigorously contested, fact-checked, contradicted, demolished, often within seconds of appearing online. The only people who cut through are people like Tony Abbott, whose entire message is “no”. And even he just got soundly thrashed on marriage equality.
- Australians are far more disengaged from politics than they used to be. The level of informal voting and the level of non-major party support have increased in recent elections while the level of major party membership and of actual interest in political news and current affairs has fallen.
All of these things mean politicians have less control, operate in a far more hostile media environment, have less capacity to reach voters and face economic policy challenges that Hawke, Keating and Howard never did, or which they faced in more nascent forms. None of that is to belittle their achievements. They had different challenges to face, and they overcame them. But their lessons don’t always easily translate into 2017. Turnbull’s political judgment might be pretty maladroit but pretending it would be easy if he was more like Howard is an exercise in analog-era nostalgia.
Be it far from me to lay claim to understand this world we live in Guy . . . but, but, but, am having some difficulty in identifying this other world . . . “All of these things mean politicians have less control, operate in a far more hostile media environment, have less capacity to reach voters . . . ” ” . . . utterance by politicians is now vigorously contested, fact checked . . . . ” ???
Bernard.
You’re thinking of the “well-fed Lenin”.
“… despite being demonstrably wealthier for it …”
Hmm. I think the truth of this assertion depends on your definition of “wealth”. We’re also much deeper in debt, with much less income and job security, than we were. And, I suspect, much less happy.
I am reminded of the Warumpi Band album Big Name No Blanket. Wealth is useless if you cannot afford a house with it.
“Demonstrably wealthier”?
Mushrooming personal debt with home ownership a fleeting wish?
All right for “some”?
And for those unable to afford their own home there’s rent stress – what does that do to long term “scraping a deposit together” aspirations?
BK claims to have dealt with the neocon monkey on his back but he remains a statist – “Australians are far more disengaged from politics than they used to be…the level of non-major party support have increased in recent elections while the level of major party membership” assumes that ‘major party’ is a definition “.. of actual interest in political news and current affairs“.
The claim that this “(interest)has fallen.” founders on the earlier reference to “non major party support increased”.
Just cannot acknowledge the old paradigm is dead, deader and deaded as Eccles might put it.
Agreed. I too thought this claim marred an otherwise intriguing line of argument.
How can BK square “disengagement” with the 80% turnout for the SSM survey?
Yeah, this point was really odd. Somehow people moving away from the duopoly is a sign of disengagement? Surely voters continuing to zombie-like vote for the big two no matter what slop they served up would be a sign of disengagement.
Doubly so for lack of new members for the parties. I admit mine is an outsider’s perspective, but it’s hard to escape the feeling that the only “engagement” parties want from their members is the prompt payment of membership fees and to volunteer to hand out HTV cards every other year.
All great points, Bernard.
I would also add one of my own, that is also associated to many of yours.
The political parties have concentrated their malice and ideology as their base has shrunk. On both sides of the divide we experience a meme war as a replacement for good policy. Blind Freddy can see that on most social issues the general population is completely at odds with the parties. It’s almost counter-intuitive. Last Saturday in Queensland we saw Liberal voters choosing Green candidates and in the SSM postal vote, tradies were voting “Yes”. And the lion shall lay down with the lamb.
Anyway, the only enjoyable pastime we have in the current political climate in this country is watching the political heavyweights in both camps flounder about and struggle to comprehend their own environment. The Nationals now think that if they can take a wee crab-walk from the Libs they will be able to continue the old soft-shoe shuffle in the bush. They see nothing, they do nothing and learn nothing.
Let the movie continue.
On one hand I despair at the lost decade of the last ten years of Australian politics, on the other hand I agree with you. It’s great entertainment to see supposedly intelligent people make complete idiots of themselves again and again.
Pass the popcorn.
Howard’s handling of One Nation? Bullshit, he was a jellyfish who sold the Liberal party to her.
Depends how you define “handling”. He loved all that “swamped by Asians” crap, and he was the one who held up that map of the continent painted entirely dark brown as “what will happen if Native Title gets up” (or words to said effect).
And she had no other positions.
Abbott sank her (funded by party faithful) for Howard to salvage the spoils of her xenophobic cargo.
Except Abbott didn’t. She’s still here and her original party was a con job as they said then. Howard never once called her out as racist, largely because he is one as well.