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How apt it was that new Energy Minister Angus Taylor spent half an hour hiding from the media yesterday after his first speech, sequestered from scrutiny and questions. It used to be that ministers gave speeches, then took questions and the media reported what was said. Now the speech is dropped to newspapers ahead of time, it is perfunctorily delivered and the minister hides from journalists afterwards. A truly efficient process would involve the minister not bothering to deliver the speech at all.
More to the point, it was a perfect symbol of a government that has entered its fifth year of having no climate policy beyond a renewable energy target that has less than two years to run. The risible Emissions Reduction Fund continues to dribble money to lucky business participants, but even the government itself no longer pretends that’s a credible policy, and cut off its funding.
As Matthew Stevens — of all people — noted at the Financial Review, Taylor’s speech was literally incoherent in its stated approach to government intervention, but then Taylor was attempting to rationalise his party’s incoherent economic position, so that’s understandable. The Liberal Party is now not merely the party of big taxation and big spending (both substantially higher than under Labor) but the party of big government regulation and the party of defence industry protectionism. If it commits to underwriting new coal-fired power stations, it will be the party that has reversed electricity privatisation as well. No wonder Taylor was reluctant to face questions about what exactly that all means for the purported party of free markets.
Amid the constant talk of government intervention, however, there is one area where there can be no intervention: emissions reduction. Since 2014, when Clive Palmer allowed Tony Abbott to kill a cheap, effective carbon pricing mechanism (remember Al Gore?), Australia has had no long-term climate policy, and will not have one while the Coalition remains in office federally. Moderates within the Liberal Party lack the guts to stand up to the denialists, and the Nationals still prefer to pretend climate change is a Chinese hoax, or the world is getting colder, or whatever this week’s conspiracy theory is.
Bear in mind that the policy used an an excuse to knife Malcolm Turnbull would have done nothing to curb emissions and may well have undermined the level of renewables investment to which investors had been prepared to commit despite the lack of coherent policy since 2014. If the denialists are prepared to kill a leader merely for making a token gesture to emissions reduction, there’ll never be any actual policy.
Where does that leave Australia? Labor now has to explain what its policy will be if it wins next year. Presumably a revamped NEG with meaningful reduction targets, not the pissant business-as-usual Abbott targets, will be the most attractive policy for the opposition. The NEG might be a literally fourth-rate policy behind a carbon price, a emission intensity scheme and a clean energy target but might garner support from Liberal moderates and business — although the record of Australian business is to whine about the lack of bipartisanship on energy policy but say nothing when Coalition denialists tear down working policy.
If the Coalition, by a miracle, remains in power, then responsibility will default to the states and territories to drive down emission, not merely in the energy sector but other areas — especially transport and agriculture. Given the states have direct responsibility for both energy and transport — contrary to the weird argument of denialists that the states should have no role in emissions reductions — the onus will be on state and territory governments to establish both meaningful reduction targets and the mechanisms for achieving them across all significant emissions reduction sectors.
If one level of government simply removes itself from a critical area of policy, then other levels have no choice but to act.
It’ll be interesting to see whether the ALP have been spooked by the Coalitions pathological fear of any sort of climate policy. If they haven’t and they decide to champion the issue it will be a definite point of difference during the election campaign. The entertainment value of watching Taylor attempt to explain energy policy without reference to climate change and the impact of this on his relatively healthy margin in Hume will be worth the price of a ticket.
Yep, point of difference was the whole reason for the insurgency. Stand by for duelling electricity price models
Literally the first time in years I’ve read any mainstream political journalist acknowledge that hey, maybe Labor is the answer rather than Malcolm Turnbull doing stuff he has ruled out is the answer.
I’m hoping Labor comes to the election with not just a better NEG but with at least the Clean Energy Target originally recommended by the Finkel Review (even though the Finkel Review was nobbled by Turnbull to prevent it even considering an emissions trading scheme or anything of that nature). My theory of politics is you have to be bold while you have the wind in your sails, because it doesn’t come along very often – Obama’s failure to do very much with the biggest popular tailwind I’ve seen in politics in my life is a prime example of why. Howard and Workchoices is the flipside, the cautionary tale of when you misjudge how much wind you really have.
Of course, let’s remember that Labor is wary of the media. Despite all professing to believe in science and tut-tutting at the denies, this media savaged the “carbon tax”, backed Tony Abbott’s destruction and continued to put the most positive possible spin on Turnbull’s escalator ride down through the options towards the NEG (at least Crikey recognised the NEG for the fig leaf it was). At the 2016 election we had the patent nonsense of Lenore Taylor in the GUARDIAN of all places insisting it was “glaringly obvious” that Turnbull and Hunt were going to introduce an emissions trading scheme of their own after the election, just in case people think I’m a bit harsh on the extent of the media’s armchair ride for Mr Turnbull in that campaign, and the extent to which the media got it horribly wrong across the board with few if any exceptions.
Nonetheless, I think the opportunity now exists for Labor to be a bit bolder than just the NEG. Labor has no need to suck up to Tony Abbott. News Corp will savage Labor no matter what their policy is (and Chris Uhlmann will mysteriously fail to care), and I tend to think Shorten can sell the electorate on a more principled and advanced policy on emissions despite whatever faffing around comes from the usual suspects at Fairfax, Channel Nine and so on.
Yeah, maybe… maybe? While Labor has been peeking out from behind the emissions curtain lately they have been a bit of a shocker in recent years as well. They mainly look better at the moment because nothing could make them look as bad as the Libs.
I hope you are right, Arc.
Arky – on that “wind full sail” theme, not only BO but Blair & Krudd. (I could include Bubba Klinton but disdain forbids.)
All three came to office with massive public support due to disgust & exhaustion with previous regimes, huge working majorities and having promised, if not magic ponies & puppies, a range of policies demonstrably desired by their electorates.
All were astonishing in not just their utter refusal, not simple failure, to do what they promised but ended up being the enablers of the opposites whom they ousted.
Almost as if the konspiracy nutters have a point that it doesn’t matter for whom one votes, the government/Deep State always remains.
CP Snow from mid 20thC Blighty caled it the corridors of power, exemplified by Sir Humphry & his ilk.
It has been a sad fact that so many important policy decisions have been effected by internal party factionalism from both sides when in government.
The current political party system is not providing adequate structural stability to put up a leader who can actually make any decision about any policy direction. Perhaps it is time for a less bi-party federal parliament whose domestic policy directions are guided / over seen by a equally powerful COAG.
If federalism is failing then states need to fill the vaccuum .
No commonwealth property or perks should be used or received while not performing the duties of an elected official of this country. Both Libs & Labor have wasted tax payer money on organisational matters, this must be repaid, Federal/ state and territory Parliaments should sit for a prescribed number of days that deal sole with the governance of the country/ state or territory, any time spent on political party organisational issues does not count and will not be funded by the commonwealth as MP’s income or entitlements, or use commonwealth property with out payment to the commonwealth.
all MP’s need to raise the bar on actual policy productivity or face consequences.
As a farmer, I’m afraid for our future as we have no climate policy, no drought policy and no energy policy. But we have committed to an emissions reduction of 26% by 2030, across all sectors.
Yes, farmers and the transport sector must also reduce emissions by 26% because our Federal government is determined to hold the electricity sector to such a low target. By refusing to govern this government is setting the country up for disaster that too few of us are willing to contemplate.
Spot on Peter
The conservatives can faff around for the next 8 months and then when they are removed Labor can get on and provide good policy in the energy sector. In the meantime the Labor states and South Australia ( nearly there already) can hit the accelerator on renewable energy, similar to California in the US.
When it comes to courage in government, Lyndon Johnson had the ticker except for the Vietnam war. When told he couldn’t do this or that, he answered,” well what the fucks the presidency for?” Australia needs a Keating type maddie for a period to act as a laxative on our political constipation.
Indeed, I remember the lightning visit by Al Gore courtesy of Clive Palmer.
Doubtless Gore has blotted it from all memory or else is still scratching his head wondering what the hell was that about.