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Is Dominic Perrottet good or bad for Scott Morrison? Truth is, no one knows, despite the insider guff from press gallery drones about their mutual respect blah blah.
Perrottet is a strong contrast to Gladys Berejiklian, yet another white, socially reactionary male with a strong, almost cultish, religious background — just like Morrison. Something of a fail on the product differentiation score; the Liberal Party is a broad church — with the emphasis on church.
Perrottet also presided over a much bigger scandal than Berejiklian in terms of money and lives affected. The icare debacle saw billions of dollars lost and thousands of workers underpaid amid serious conflicts of interest.
The history of the scandal doesn’t say much for Perrottet’s management skills.
Matt Kean’s elevation to state treasurer is also important. Kean has secured victory after victory on renewable energy by finding a convincing narrative about regional growth and selling it to the New South Wales Nationals. It helps that both NSW parties are less dependent on donations from fossil-fuel companies than their federal counterparts, true, but Kean has demonstrated that forgotten adage of policymaking in Australia: that good policy should be good politics and in the area that has rent the federal Coalition time and again. He could be the key to a successful and reforming new government.
But have a look at recent polling to see how important NSW is to Morrison. In a result that presumably confounded the many press gallery commentators who were lauding AUKUS as a masterstroke, the most recent Morgan poll last week had Labor increasing its two-party-preferred lead to eight points. No one pays attention to polls after the 2019 debacle, and fair enough, but it’s the state numbers that are more interesting.
Labor’s huge lead in Victoria has come off quite a bit in recent months but it would still enjoy a swing there of nearly 3% and pick up a seat. In Western Australia Labor is sitting on a swing of 10%, and can probably count on at least two seats, maybe three, including Christian Porter’s in Pearce. In South Australia Labor has a ridiculously large lead that would deliver Boothby and maybe even Sturt. Labor is looking at a swing against it in Tasmania, but not enough to endanger its seats. But no one really knows what might happen there anyway.
The point isn’t that these results will be what transpires at an election, but that Morrison can’t really look to increase his margin in any of those states — in fact the Liberals will be mounting defensive operations in them to try to save seats — and against popular Labor premiers in two states.
It’s a different story in Queensland. Morgan has Labor trailing five points on a two-party-preferred basis, but that’s nearly a 6% improvement on its disastrous 2019 result — which notionally brings several seats into play. But Labor has four seats there on less than 3%, even though the general view is that the Liberal National Party can’t top its 2019 result (Clive Palmer’s ad spending will also be relevant).
That’s why Morrison has ramped up his attacks on the Queensland government in recent days, accusing it of engaging in extortions and shakedowns of the Commonwealth (a state trying to get money from the Commonwealth?! Ye gods) and pre-emptively accusing it of ensuring that other Australians would be able to holiday in Fiji before they could holiday up north. Health Minister Greg Hunt piously declared it would be “a matter of the most serious and grave concern” that the Queensland government might have misled Queenslanders about the state of its hospitals.
Interestingly, though, they’ve refrained from referring directly to Palaszczuk, perhaps confirming Dennis Atkins’ suggestion that the premier is personally popular and attacking her doesn’t do the Coalition any good.
Labor is also doing well in NSW, although its lead there has softened. It’s looking at a nearly 6% swing, enough to deliver three seats. The removal of a popular Liberal premier thus introduces uncertainty for Morrison in what is a must-win state. That Nationals Leader and Deputy Premier John Barilaro also bailed out, along with Transport Minister Andrew Constance, might also give the impression of instability at the top of the government — although after 2019, does anyone think that’s a killer issue for voters?
And remember: Morrison and his office constantly leaked and backgrounded against Berejiklian, annoyed at her popularity and willingness to lead on bushfires and the pandemic while he was content to sit on his hands. Perrottet watched that sort of thing happen first hand, and might be disinclined to put up with it to the extent that his predecessor did. Both might want a closer working relationship than that between Morrison and Berejiklian.
And if the election isn’t until next year, Perrottet might prove successful and popular enough to boost the Coalition vote. On current form, Morrison needs a lot of help to eke out a win in Queensland and NSW.
My speech to text thingy in my computer has a real problem with this pair.
One comes out as berry jelly can the other as parrot head.
must be some pinko leftie gremlin in the algorithm.
Nonetheless, it’s perspicacious and possibly prescient.
Well they are a palpably pretentious pair of pompous political pretenders.
BUT, always avoid alliteration as an argumentative agency.
Sound advice.
Very true.
C’mon Queensland. We can do this. We got Australia into this mess at the last election, we can get us all out of it at the next. I’m thinking there’s a lot of us who have a pretty dim view of Morrison and his mob alternately ignoring and slagging off at the Sunshine state. Thing is, intra-state, we don’t need opening up. We’re open baby. (At the Gold Coast last Sunday I drove around for 45 minutes between Mermaid Waters and Broadbeach looking for a carpark before giving up … it was truly packed with happy, long-weekend, school holiday beach-goers, while Pacific Fair packed with shoppers.) As for interstate, well, what Morrison’s “opening up” means for us is a massive influx of infection given the high case numbers in NSW and Victoria which are set to skyrocket post open up. Add to that the vaccine and quarantine debacles being firmly in people’s minds as an LNP Federal Government epic fail and, well … let’s say I live in hope 🙂
He has to get things “open” for the sake of his coming election campaign. He is totally unconcerned at probable deaths as a result – as long as they hang on until the election.
Count 7 weeks from the “Opening up” to the election and about 2 weeks more to the deaths and ICU overloads, but, hey presto, if MoMo still has the keys to Kirribilli House, his alter ego Smirko the clown really won’t care what happens then because 3 more years in the big house on the harbour.
Clive and Craig have been limbering up their disinformation advertising Face Book, Tik Tok, and MSM campaigns, I really think that the only thing which will cut through this will have to be the “Clive Palmer and Craig Kelly tell lies” “Pull the other one it plays music”..
I’m in Tas, and it’s the same feeling here re. Scotty’s “freedom” – we’ve already got one, thank you! It’s vurrry nice!
All opening up to NSW and Vic prematurely will do, is overload our poor health system, and kill lots of people.
Morrison was in no hurry to get people vaccinated, but he’s in a hell of a hurry to get rid of restrictions regardless of whether it’s safe to do so, so he can proclaim himself the man who freed the country.
The health, and literally, the lives of our citizens, are all fair game on the sacrificial altar of Morrison’s political ambitions. He will do anything, no matter how horrid, to stay in the job.
What I don’t understand, with his cunning plan to be the Great Liberator of our country, is once restrictions are lifted, he’s only got a few weeks’ window to bask in the glory, before the infection rates start to climb. After that, who knows what will happen? If it’s all sweet as a nut, then Scotty wins big time. If it’s a disaster of sickness, death and hospital meltdowns, then surely there’d be no coming back from such an horrendous outcome.
It’s a Trump-sized political gamble he’s taking, with the lives of the common folk as his poker chips.
NSW and VIC are starting to get the picture with the other states.
Do you think the guts of Australia will shut down so that the lemonade stands of the other states can flourish?
The “guts” of Australia is shut down because of Gladys and her let it rip Perottet.
The difference between NSW and Victoria’s response to ‘vaccinating their way out” of their out breaks is the difference between the use of Pfizer in NSW (2 to 3 week) and Astra Zeneca (6 to 8 weeks).
MoMo is the PM for NSW.
Scott “Robodebt” Morrison hectoring anyone else on “shakedowns”? ROFL.
Also Dom ‘Icare’ Perignon looking like the ghostly reincarnation of Johnny Winston
He is truly scary!
Given Morrison’s narrow majority currently, and that he looks like bleeding seats in WA, SA and Victoria, surely the key for him to win government is to reverse the decline in those states, rather than win more in NSW and Queensland to make up for it. Mind you, with his attitude to those southern mainland states as it is, maybe he’s just given up on them already. There is definitely no sucking up to electors in WA at the moment – quite the reverse, which is strange when out of 15 WA seats in the new parliament, the Liberals currently hold 10 of them. That’s a lot they can lose if they disregard us, antagonise us even.
Morrison knows how to win elections – pray for a miracle with Bro Stuie and Bro Alex Hawke
And redirect all the money from all the emergency funds used for fire, flood and cyclone recovery to sporting clubs in the safeish seats and the marginals and the very marginals, then take every spare penny and put that in a couple of slush funds for bribing the bush with roads and by passes and parking stations for train stations which are closed.
Why do you think Barilaro has rolled off, because he was put in charge of the fire recovery money and the south coast still hasn’t seen a bean. Whereas Lismore got a Sky Diving facility.
You really can’t make this up.
Most likely the opposite. Perrottet looks like a mortuary attendant, but with some ultra-conservative social views that don’t really align with urban NSW voters.