Politics,Climate Change and Sundry issues

Politics,Climate Change and Sundry issues
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Tuesday 12 August 2014

The Decline and Fall of ‘Team Australia’ - » The Australian Independent Media Network

The Decline and Fall of ‘Team Australia’ - » The Australian Independent Media Network



The Decline and Fall of ‘Team Australia’














As much as I struggled to agree with anything
John Howard said or did when he was Prime Minister, there is one thing I
had to give him credit for and that was his willingness to compromise;
not that he did it very often.  I don’t see the same attribute in Tony
Abbott. He seems too obsessed with achieving a desired outcome and too
ideologically driven to admit error.



Not surprisingly, these were classic characteristics of his mentor,
Bob Santamaria. To illustrate the point, take his response to the little
girl’s question when visiting Seaforth Public School in Sydney last
week. The little girl’s question was, “What happens when people don’t
agree with your point of view?” Abbott’s answer was so drawn out it
became boring, but at no stage did he use the word ‘compromise’. He
should have given the class a one word answer, i.e. compromise. He
couldn’t do it.



Lenore Taylor reinforced this view when she wrote in The Guardian that he appears unwilling to listen and how this is perceived both in the cabinet and by the rest his parliamentary colleagues.


“In the final sitting weeks of the winter session,” Lenore wrote,
“Tony Abbott held an unusual meeting of his full ministry during which
he was asked by a junior minister how the government was intending to
deal with the widespread view that it had broken election promises. The
prime minister’s response was forceful and absolute. The government had
not broken a single promise, he insisted. There was nothing to deal
with, no case to answer.”



It is this refusal to acknowledge the bleeding obvious that we can
identify as the beginning of Abbott’s demise. If he is unwilling to even
consider that he has broken election promises, one can only draw the
conclusion that he has become the problem. No government party will
tolerate that for long. If they can’t get him to change his approach on
the issues they know will certainly bring them all down, they will get
rid of him.



Joe Hockey (image from afr.com)
Joe Hockey (image from afr.com)

Now, let’s look at Joe Hockey and the state of the May budget.
Between Labor, the Greens and the PUP and other independent Senators,
the main thrust of what was delivered on budget night looks almost
certain to become dead meat, precipitating a rewrite. Even Peter
Costello has weighed in with some free advice.
A rewrite of the budget would necessarily see an end to the Medicare
co-payment proposal, so too Abbott’s Paid Parental Leave Scheme, the
deregulation of university fees as well as a revision of the quite
brutal attack on the unemployed. When coupled with the abandonment of
the proposed changes to Section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act,
this represents collectively, a failure of leadership.



Hockey has rejected Costello’s advice which tells us that he, like
Abbott, is not listening either, despite travelling the country trying
to convince the cross bench Senators to pass his budget. This is not all
that surprising given his public display of defiance but as the pressure builds for a major rewrite, ultimately he will almost certainly be forced into a humiliating back down.



This will not just be seen as a defeat, it will further diminish his
leadership aspirations and cause a groundswell of antagonism among
different members of the parliamentary party, further dividing the
pro-Abbott camp from the Hockey camp. That’s a recipe for self-
destruction.



If anyone doubts that, think Rudd/Gillard, Howard/Costello,
Hawke/Keating, Fraser/Peacock, Whitlam/Cairns and Gorton/McMahon. Such
internal disunity has been the driving factor in the defeat of five of
the last six administrations. That this should be occurring to the
Abbott government just one year after winning the election must count as
a staggering piece of mismanagement on their part and a refusal to
learn from history.



More significantly, these self-inflicted wounds place the government
in a parlous position. All current polling tells them they will lose the
next election and that Tony Abbott is a major reason for their decline.
More recently, support for Joe Hockey has also fallen dramatically from
an earlier high, precipitated by a budget that has become a millstone
around his neck. Jovial, genial Joe now finds himself being portrayed as
uncaring, heartless Joe. Hardly the preferred image for a future
leader.



So, where to from here? The likelihood is, nowhere, precisely because
they are not listening and because their performance thus far, has been
a train wreck. It has exposed the inequality evident in their ideology.
It has further exposed the absence of an alternative leader. Whoever
they chose would prove to be just as divisive as Abbott. The only two
that come to mind are Julie Bishop and Malcolm Turnbull. We all know how
unpopular Turnbull is within the party and Bishop has convinced many
that she has struggled as Foreign Affairs minister and has, at times,
appeared out of her depth. Expecting her to present as a viable prime
minister is pushing the envelope. Having said that, she is the likely
choice. The rank outsider would be Kevin Andrews but it is difficult to
see someone further to the right of Tony Abbott ever being elected
leader in the foreseeable future.



team1And
therein lies the dilemma for Team Australia. Furthermore, when your
most ardent supporter starts to criticise your performance, you know the
end is near. The Murdoch camp is already starting to back pedal as
demonstrated in this article by Malcolm Farr at news.com.au.







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