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Daniel Andrews: so popular, even John Howard’s praising him

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The result of the Victorian election has been analysed to within an inch of its life. Federal factors, state factors, good leadership, leadership in a vacuum. One thing we can conclude with certainty is that Dan Andrews is the most successful political leader in Australia at present.

He is a formidable politician. We know this because his opponents now acknowledge it.

Andrews has gone from socialist ne’er-do-well, painted as a cartoon villain in so many op-eds last week to being extolled by John Howard during an interview with Leigh Sales on 7.30 on Tuesday night.

“Can I give credit where it is due, I think Daniel Andrews was a very good campaigner. I think he is an extremely good communicator. He explains things clearly, simply and well …” Howard said.

High praise.

The previous titleholder was Annastacia Palaszczuk who went from minority government in Queensland in 2015 on the back of a 12 per cent swing, to forming majority government in Queensland in 2017 with a four-seat net gain.

Dan Andrews’ triumph in Victoria with votes still being counted points to a nine-seat net gain and swing towards Labor on primary vote of 4.6 per cent with the Liberals (-5.9 per cent), Greens (-1.6 per cent) and Nationals (-0.2) all down.

Elsewhere in the states there are new governments in power who are yet to return to the people to have their appeal and their records tested. In New South Wales, the thumping majority won by Barry O’Farrell in 2011 was cut back in 2015 under Mike Baird by 15 seats. Gladys Berejiklian faces a tough fight to hang on in the 2019 state election on March 23 next year and will almost certainly lose seats.

Federally, no government has been returned with an increased majority since the Coalition under John Howard in 2004.

This makes Dan Andrews the undisputed king of electoral politics in Australia. While there have been calumnies (notably the ‘Red Shirts’ scandal with allegations of electoral fraud) and missteps along the way, his first-term agenda has been substantially carried out. The plan for a second term, how to get there and why was effectively communicated.

In the campaign, Andrews assiduously avoided attack politics. He chose to rise above it for the practical reason that the majority of voters are turned off by the schoolyard name calling and petty derision commonplace in politics elsewhere.

Basic stuff, really, for any political party seeking to find its way into government and stay there.

Maybe we need not look much further at the reasons for Andrews’ success. But I want to tell a story that I thought was best left until after the Victorian election lest it be thought I was trying to sway voters. We are beyond that now and the dust has settled.

I’ve had dealings with the Andrews government, not as a journalist but as an advocate on behalf of Denis Ryan. Many will know the story. Denis was a detective with Victoria Police based in Mildura who sought to prosecute an outrageously prolific paedophile priest only to find corrupt forces within VicPol turn against him. That was in 1972. He lost the job he loved and was left battered and bruised by the encounter.

Denis Ryan’s story was told by me in 2013 in the book Unholy Trinity. The assertions of police corruption and wilful ignorance within the Catholic Church were proven in the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse in 2015.

The Andrews government had no legal liability to compensate Ryan. The statute of limitations had long since lapsed. I could only appeal to their sense of decency. I had meetings with ministers and almost endless streams of correspondence with various apparatchiks, chiefs of staff, media advisers. Former ministers in Labor governments were recruited to lobby current ministers.

Denis waited.

It was only when Premier Andrews stepped in that the wheels started turning. His intervention accelerated the matter to the point where the 87-year-old hero to so many in Victoria and across the nation received his compensation within a matter of days. After 46 years of waiting for justice, it was all done and dusted in less than two weeks.

The undisclosed amount was not a lotto win for Ryan. It was enough to buy him digs in a retirement home in Mildura and see his needs taken care of for the remainder of his life. He can enjoy a holiday now. That’s the strength of it and despite being owed millions, that is all Denis wanted.

I often said to Labor ministers, “If you want to have a good day in politics go and stand next to Denis Ryan. Shake his hand and see him right.”

I thought they might be swayed by the thought of a good news story. An election was looming. A government could always do with a good news day.

Remarkably,  Andrews did not seek to make a virtue out of it. Neither Andrews nor any of his ministers went up to Mildura to stand on a flat bed truck and hand Denis an oversized presentation cheque in front of a gaggle of media, in an attempt to squeeze a vote out of it here and there. Instead it was done quietly. Without a fuss.

The payment did not have to be made and without the intervention of Andrews, the request for compensation may well be gathering dust on someone’s desk deep in the bowels of a minister’s office in Spring Street. Dan Andrews chose to compensate Ryan without any hullabaloo, any rough politicking. He just did it.

From someone who has been an observer of government for a long time, seen them come and go — some good, some less so — it was impressive.

Some might say the Andrews government did what any government should do and they’d be right, but the fact remains there were eight state governments in Victoria from both sides of the divide that should have acted but did not.

Ryan was made a Member of the Order of Australia on Australia Day this year for his services to “child protection investigations”. He was named Mildura’s Citizen of the Year, the award bestowed upon him on the same day.

After he received his compensation, another award came his way. Denis was to be made a Freeman of the City of Mildura.

He personally invited Premier Andrews to attend the ceremony. Andrews replied in writing days later.

Dear Mr Ryan,

I am sorry I cannot be there in person to see the conferment of your latest title, ‘Freeman of the Rural City of Mildura’.

But I cannot think of a more deserving recipient.

While others chose to hide the truth or avert their gaze, you instead shone a bright light on one of our darkest chapters.

Your courage of conviction, and your relentless pursuit of justice, have changed our nation for good.

On behalf of the Victorian government and the Victorian people, thank you.

Yours sincerely,

Dan Andrews

Politicians come and go. And Dan Andrews one day will certainly go. The how and the why is a long way from being determined. As Paul Keating said of a life in politics, “Everyone goes out feet first, the only difference is whether the pall bearers are crying or not.”

There is perhaps another truism. In politics as in life, decency goes a long way.

This article was first published in The Australian on 28 November 2018. 

637 Comments

  • Dismayed says:

    PM calls press conference. no about about stoking fear.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    I say, Mr. Insider this upcoming Victorian Royal Commission sure is getting blanket coverage by the Media.
    We all seem quite fascinated by the Criminal World it seems.

  • Dismayed says:

    If only we had an Agile, innovative government instead of the a regressive pork barreling coalition.
    https://theconversation.com/making-australia-a-renewable-energy-exporting-superpower-107285

  • Boadicea says:

    For those who like Nordic noir, good ine streaming on SBS on Demand right now – MODUS.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Ex ousted thinks he’s still in PM Malcolm Turnbull copping it from all sides re his Political Interference, Mr. Insider.
    He is getting smashed nightly on the “Bolt Report” on Sky as well he should be.

    • John O'Hagan says:

      All sides, Henry? The Right, the hard Right, and the lunar Right?

      He’s no longer a member of the government, so all this hoo-ha about his pronouncements is a sideshow, conveniently distracting from their real woes.

  • Bella says:

    The Australian Conservation Foundation has just launched legal action against the Federal government’s decision to bypass the full EIS Environmental Impact Assessment on Adani.
    Turns out the government may have made an “error of law” by allowing a mining company to have a significant impact on water resources without one.
    I don’t know about you Razor but I’d say the court just may decide that 12.5 Billion litres of free Galilee Basin water in a year is ‘significant’ therefore the water trigger must now ‘legally’ be activated. FINALLY.

  • John O'Hagan says:

    As the Vic election results firm up, it’s becoming apparent that reports of the Greens’ death are exaggerated, as they have been regularly for 30-odd years. What some jaundiced pundits hastily declared a “wipeout” has actually seen them picking up an extra lower house seat.

    They did lose 4 out of 5 in the upper house, but mostly due to preposterous preference deals rather than any swing. There was a small overall swing against them, no doubt due to several badly-handled controversies of their own making, enthusiastically pounced upon by Labor.

    On that, I’m always baffled by the way Labor and the Greens waste so much energy competing for market share of the progressive vote. If Labor had redirected even a fraction of its anti-Green efforts toward actually campaigning in some of those skin-of-the-teeth Liberal holds, the conservative wipe-out would have been even more comprehensive. Surely that should be their priority?

    • Trivalve says:

      I think that they’re desperate not to be seen in/as any sort of coalition JOH. (If they were, we’d have to consider nomenclature too. After all, the Coalishun couldn’t be The Coalition if there was another one. It would get Pythonesque quite quickly (as if the govmint wasn’t already)

    • Boadicea says:

      I’d say the Greens vote is becoming more significant down here – which may show up at the next election.
      Tasmanians are getting fed up with the Hodgman government’s secret deals with developers and being treated like kids who don’t know what’s best for them.
      Labor are keeping quiet on most issues.
      I didnt vote last time (state election) but would probably vote Green next time – purely as a protest vote to save our wilderness.

  • jack says:

    a guilty pleasure the last couple of days reading those dreadful right wing Murdoch lackeys Shanahan and Overington setting out exactly why Malcolm Turnbull is no longer PM, and probably should never have been in the first place.

    Talk to folks in the Sydney business community and they will tell the same stories, any time a deal went tits up, MT would be casting around to see who he could destroy as punishment.

    His record in politics is even worse, always leaving behind a trial of broken friendships and alliances.

    Anyway, amusing as the pieces were, I can now see they were wrong, we on the Woke Side see Malcolm as Bambi, an innocent unfairly and untimely removed by the forces of darkness without any justification whatsoever, personally I’m making sure that I am as mystified as Barrie Cassidy and Andrew Probyn and Phil Coorey and Katherine Murphy as to why MT is not PM.

    • Trivalve says:

      Jack, Shanahan, hmm …my kids went to school with a couple of his. I heard some stories that humanised him a tad. He certainly has a vision and I’d have to say that it coincides with some of the blinkered mutant mutterings coming out of the government of late. He’s probably right (!) that MT should never have made PM but neither should the trilobite that we have now and of course, we all know what we had before that. I’m starting to think that Gillard was the only one worth the bother in the last ten years and she ruined her chance at a widely well-regarded legacy by the way she ascended to the job. I tend to think that Crean and Beazley would have been Labor’s safest hands but the chips didn’t fall the right way (then there’s Combet, Tanner…)

      As for Overington, I used to think she was essentially normal (compared to the likes of Albrechtsen) but I’m not so sure lately. Plus she blocked me on Twitter and I don’t ever recall saying anything to her.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Turnbull, the only one who could, salvaged, the party from Abbott . And stood a good chance of winning the next election. And that’s why the RWNJ’s nailed him.

  • Milton says:

    Are there any statues currently being built to honour John Winston Howard, OM, AC and if not why not?

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