Politics,Climate Change and Sundry issues

Politics,Climate Change and Sundry issues
for website listing my blogs : http://winstonclosepolitics.com

Saturday 19 April 2014

Liberals, in denial over O’Farrell’s error, should learn from this –

Liberals, in denial over O’Farrell’s error, should learn from this –

Liberals, in denial over O’Farrell’s error, should learn from this


As NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell heads for the exit, shooting the
messenger won’t help the Liberals. Incestuous links with business will
continue to inflict damage on the party, especially in a party branch as
inept as NSW.




Based on the reaction to Barry O’Farrell’s resignation by
unnamed federal Liberals and their media supporters, denial runs deep
in the Liberal Party —   about the role of the Independent Commission
Against Corruption, about the entrenched problems of the New South Wales
branch of the party, of how the incestuous links between business,
unions and both sides of politics are a cancer on democracy.



Peter Hartcher’s Fairfax piece
shows some federal Liberals in outright denial. Maybe it’s just a stage
of grief, but it’s remarkable. ICAC had pulled down O’Farrell like it
pulled down former premier Nick Greiner, one claimed. Another called it a
“kangaroo court”. It was a day for laboured metaphors: former Liberal
staffer Peter Van Onselen invoked both the star chamber and witch trials
in one paragraph in a furious screed against ICAC in The Australian. The paper itself editorialised
that O’Farrell had been “led into political entrapment” and was a
victim of a deliberate plot by ICAC, a body that “traduces reputations”
and “leads to political car crashes over minor matters”. You almost
feared a torch-wielding mob was going to form at Holt Street and march
up the road to burn down the commission.



Strange, but those complaints weren’t being heard when Labor
crooks were being exposed by ICAC or when a Who’s Who of former Labor
leaders appeared there to explain their response to the intrigues of the
corrupt. And entrapment? It wasn’t ICAC that forced Barry O’Farrell to
insist that he’d have remembered if he’d received the bottle of wine,
just like it wasn’t ICAC that forced Nick Greiner to make his profoundly
stupid offer to Terry Metherell. This sort of stuff is verging on
conspiracy theory.



Such denial isn’t surprising from politicians and
commentators who have been operating on the assumption that ICAC
primarily existed to humiliate the Labor Party. But it misses the point
that this is yet another instance of the deep problems of the NSW
Liberal Party affecting its federal counterpart — and the damage isn’t
limited to ruining Tony Abbott’s high-profile Badgerys Creek
announcement yesterday. A former O’Farrell minister, Chris Hartcher,
will be before ICAC the week after next to face his own investigation.
And stood-aside Assistant Treasurer Arthur Sinodinos is at the very
centre of the Australian Water Holdings scandal as a bizarrely incurious
company chairman with a memory like Swiss cheese.



Don’t forget, the NSW branch had lost Tony Abbott the 2010
election through factional disputes and ineptitude in its preselection
processes — which were well-flagged before the election.
It had lost the 2007 state election after the Right knifed John
Brogden. That loss, at least, led to a power-sharing arrangement between
Left and Right in 2008, only for intra-factional warfare to break out
within the Right that saw threats of “World War 3” ahead of the 2011
election.



Luckily the party managed to hold together to achieve a
landslide win under O’Farrell, and Sinodinos was supposed to be the
bloke that would keep the peace when he came in as state president after
O’Farrell’s victory. Instead, there were complaints that Sinodinos, who
also entered the Senate late in 2011, allowed the Left under Michael
Photios to wield too much power. The branch also allowed duds like
Jaymes Diaz to cruel their hopes of picking up more western Sydney seats
in last year’s federal election. And this is the Prime Minister’s own
branch, one in which as opposition leader he had to repeatedly intervene
to demand that key players keep the factional peace, rarely
successfully.



Baird should go further in curbing the interactions between lobbyists, business figures and his ministers …”
Whether likely new premier Mike Baird, and the prospect of a
more difficult 2015 NSW election, is enough to stifle another round of
factional warfare, remains to be seen. And the party is still looking
for a state director less than a year out from the election after Scott
Briggs, the Nine Network’s chief lobbyist and a former deputy director
of the party, bailed out of the position at the last minute earlier this
month.



Baird of course has his own problems with Nick Di Girolamo,
whom he appointed to the State Water Corporation in 2012. That’s the
problem with the Australian Water Holdings matter: its slimy tentacles
extend everywhere, including to Joe Hockey’s fundraising arm, which
returned AWH donations, and to former state vice-president, O’Farrell
confidante and lobbyist Michael Photios, who continues to be a Left
powerbroker within the party.



If federal Liberals and their media cheerleaders think these
sorts of links between party officials, donors, former ministers,
former staffers, lobbyists and business mates and serving ministers are
OK, then they’ll continue to see colleagues, even good, ethical
colleagues like O’Farrell, tripped up. Maybe being in the federal
sphere, where there are fewer direct opportunities to influence business
outcomes compared to state government, has dulled their capacity to see
the problems of such deeply incestuous relationships. Or maybe they’re
so convinced that business interests and the public interest are
indistinguishable that they don’t see the risks of such relationships.
This is the crowd who attack Labor’s close links with trade unions but
think it’s fine for Sinodinos, a former NAB executive, to try to sneak
through Parliament amendments that would gut financial advice consumer
protections because the big banks (via an industry association led by
Brogden) want it.



O’Farrell made a start in trying to curb those relationships
by overhauling the NSW political donation laws. Abbott also did the
right thing in banning party officials from being lobbyists. Baird
should go further in curbing the interactions between lobbyists,
business figures and his ministers, and shedding more light on the
interactions that can occur. The voters of NSW will benefit, and so will
his government.



They won’t from shooting the messenger, like some federal Liberals appear to want.







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