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Labor’s dark art of the political verbal exposed

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Earlier in the week, sound, fury and internal Liberal Party squabbling ensued when Scott Morrison parachuted the former Labor National President, Warren Mundine, into the seat of Gilmore on the NSW south coast, dispensing with the locally preselected Grant Schultz, son of the late former Liberal MP for Hume, Alby Schulz.

The PM pronounced Warren Mundine a good bloke. I know Warren and I can attest to that. He has ancestral ties to the region in Gilmore and in normal circumstances he would be seen as an excellent candidate for the hyper-marginal seat.

The local Liberals were said to be furious. Schultz took his bat and ball and declared he would run as an independent, rendering a triangular contest into an electoral parallelogram. The Speaker of the NSW parliament and Liberal MP for the South Coast, Shelley Hancock, described the move as “one of the darkest days of the Liberal Party.”

Before we knew it, Libs state and federal spent the next three days shrieking angrily at one another from the parapets.

The commonsense response from one’s opponents at these times is to let questions from reporters go through to the keeper in an effort to pretend that one is above it all.

But three days ago, Bill Shorten couldn’t help himself, saying, “The Liberal Party replaced a woman (Ann Sudmalis, who is retiring) with a man (Mundine) who wants to put nuclear reactors in Australia, including Jervis Bay.”

Similar remarks were made by Shorten’s deputy, Tanya Plibersek and other senior Labor MPs.

The problem is Mundine has said no such thing. The story seems to have gained some credence following an interview Mundine did with ABC Illawarra some time ago.

So, let’s go to the third umpire in the form of the transcript of that interview:

ABC journalist: You’re a fan of nuclear power, if we want to talk about energy policy. Jervis Bay is famously a part of Australia which — sorry — Jervis Bay once upon a time was touted as a potential area for a nuclear power plant, in fact, there’s a cement slab still sitting there which is where they were going to put it. Do you think that’s a reasonable idea?

Mundine: As you know, I’m a strong supporter of nuclear power, not because I’m a supporter like I follow a football club – it’s the science. I just was a keynote address speaker at the Australian Geo-science Convention in Adelaide just a month ago where you had a thousand of Australia’s top scientists, and geologists, and we had several hundred overseas scientists sitting at that conference, and not one person at that conference spoke against the use of nuclear power. In fact they said if Australia is going to be an economic growth, an economic power going into the future, you cannot have 100% renewables, you have to have a nuclear power within that mix.

Journalist: Okay, I understand that it’s about the science, but would Jervis Bay be a good place to put it considering its Commonwealth land, and if not, perhaps Port Kembla?

Mundine: Oh, there’s a number of places you could put this, and you know, until you actually sit down and actually look at the research and review of certain areas and that, then you can make a proper decision on where these things could go.

Warren Mundine. Picture: Phil Harris
Warren Mundine. Picture: Phil Harris

I sought comment from Mundine two days ago and he confirmed he has “never made mention of a nuclear power plant in Jervis Bay.”

This is how a political verbal works. Drop a dubious and unsupported remark into the political conversation at an early stage and let it float into the consciousness. Never mention it again because by then the allegation would need hard evidence of which there is none. By that time, however, the mischief will be gormlessly spread around on social media and elsewhere, often at the urging of anonymous party apparatchiks.

Before you know it, the verbal becomes regarded as fact to the point where it consumes the candidate and obliges him or her to make multiple denials that in the context of our politics today are regarded with cynicism by voters.

For those curious about the politico-legal status of Australia’s tiniest territory, Jervis Bay is a most unusual construct. The roughly 70-square kilometre land mass was gifted by the NSW s government to the feds in 1915 as part of its land allocation which makes up the ACT today, in order to provide the otherwise fledgling landlocked federalès with their very own port and harbour views.

The several hundred residents of Jervis Bay vote in the ACT seat of Jenner, not Gilmore. But three kilometres away is the township of Vincentia then Huskisson, and the major popular centres of Nowra and Kiama.

None of this should matter as the construction of a nuclear reactor in Jervis Bay or anywhere else is not Liberal Party policy but the verballing of Mundine contains just a snifter of circumstantial evidence which helps perpetuate the lie.

In 1969, the Gorton government sought expressions of interest for the construction of a 600 MWe heavy water reactor at Jervis Bay. When Gorton lost the prime ministership to Bill McMahon in 1970, the proposal ran out of steam, so to speak, after a cost analysis undertaken by Treasury showed a new coal fire power station at another location was going to be about a quarter of the price. In the meantime, some preparatory work was done, a few trees were chopped down and some concrete poured which the locals now use as a boat ramp at Murray’s Beach.

Local media outlets have been rustling up the far-fetched story of a nuclear reactor being knocked up in Jervis Bay ever since, and they trot it out on quiet news days every couple of years.

The media may, to some extent, be complicit but Shorten and Labor have attempted to paint Mundine not just as an outsider in Gilmore but a man who has recklessly given the thumbs up to a potential Three Mile Island, Fukushima or God forbid, a Chernobyl in Gilmorian backyards.

But I caught you, Bill, and this verbal is not going to get up.

This article was published in The Australian on 25 January 2019.

342 Comments

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    So, Dismayed’s man Shorten has to defend his contemptuous policy of plundering self-funded retirees’ only means of support by stealing one of the late great Margaret Thatcher’s lines.

    The bloke has neither shame or originality.

    But then again, who can forget his ridiculous line to David Speers a few years ago, pandering to PM Gillard.

    • Tracy says:

      To be blunt bullshit.
      The various “self funded” retirees I come across at a relatives every Christmas manage to have expensive trips overseas every year and then there’s another forty odd grand on a new car, they aren’t poor.
      They whinge like hell about any drop in government largesse although the friend who just bought a very nice unit with water views in the eastern suburbs and then moaned that her Medicare safety net had been cut took the biscuit.
      I’m subsidising people who have more disposable income than I have, being self employed I can only dream of the lifestyle some of these people have had since 55, we aren’t looking earlier than 65 if that!

    • Dismayed says:

      so it is razor’s position that the Australian Labor party caused there to be over 25 million refugees and over 68 million displaced persons on the planet today. razor you have one setting dishonest hysterical bullshit. oh and more people claiming refugee status have entered the country since 2013 than occurred between 2007 and 2013 but razor will never let the facts get in the way of his dishonest bullshit.

  • Not Finished Yet says:

    Sad news this morning from the NFY household. We live in an area where koalas are common, unlike the case in much of their range. Sometimes they spend the day in one of our trees and on morning dog walks we see as many as five or six. In particular, we have had a lot of joy watching a mother and baby over the last five months as we have seen them at least once a week. When we first saw them the baby was clinging tightly to the mother, but over time it has grown to be a juvenile, still staying close to the mother but gradually gaining its independence. On the morning of Boxing Day the two of them were in the gum tree only a few metres from the corner of our house, with another koala higher in the same tree. This morning we found the juvenile dead on the ground. I suspect that the recent extreme heat has just been too much for it. Despite being agnostics, we gave it a decent Christian burial. It made me reflect on the terrible toll that must have been taken on our wildlife by the extreme weather of the last few weeks.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    “Fabulous” news Mr. Insider as we see Sydney Anglican Archbishop Glenn Davies is to get a $7m new Mansion.
    How utterly disgusting given so many struggle to find a simple roof over their heads.
    Shame Davies, Shame you are a rorter of the most disgusting kind and I am being most generous in my “praise”.
    Just look at the pic of the pompous wretch in the article linked below, he is revolting!
    https://tinyurl.com/y8d24x7v

    • Bella says:

      Isn’t that just what churches of all denominations do Henry?
      You know, take great care in keeping most of the dosh for their own luxurious surrounds whilst giving sermons about loving a deity.
      You bet they do. After all ‘he’s’ given them palaces like the one in Rome.

  • jack says:

    Who knows how the Brits would vote in a second referendum.

    I always though I would vote leave, if i had a vote, but even more so now that the EU has helpfully exposed what autocrats they are.

    I wouldn’t worry too much about a no deal, Lee famously bawled during his press conference the night Singapore crashed out of Malaysia, and it was the best thing that could have happened to the place.

    Of course, if Leave is stymied by the anti-democrat we know better than you types in London, then the next best thing would be to stay in and burn the joint down from the inside.

    well, perhaps not burn it down, but reform it back into being a common market.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    The “fascination” with possibly the most horrific ever Serial Killer, Ted Bundy, continues Mr. Insider, with NETFLIX releasing 2 Series on him and it has ignited so much interest that they have pleaded for Bundy not to be considered “hot”.
    Bundy was a Serial Killer in the US in the early ’70s and reportedly killed anywhere between 30 and 100 innocent young Women including a 12yo Girl.
    He paid the ultimate price finally in 1983 when he went to “Old Sparky” the Electric Chair.
    How on earth he got away with Murder for so long is amazing, possibly the Technology of the day aided him.
    https://tinyurl.com/y8k2ru28

  • Milton says:

    Go the Patriots (MAGA), go Starcy (oi oi oi)!

  • Not Finished Yet says:

    wraith

    I read your comment about relatives and Christmas with a sense of deja vu. It has been fifteen years or more since we had our epiphany. We have spent every Christmas day since then with a family who are close friends and in a similar position, well most of their relatives are on another continent. Our children grew up together as good friends too. Don’t weaken in a few months time.

    • wraith says:

      She made my dad cry mate, absolutely broke his heart, as soon as she got the power of attorney and gods knows everything else, she locked in him a nursing home after lying to him he was only going in for respite, sold his house out from underneath him, his car and every possession he had, gone. When I found him he was in an empty room sobbing. Two pairs of socks, a picture of mum and some old track pants. Not even is radio to keep him company. Thats my side of the family, sibling number one, it gets worse. The things they have all done since. No, I wont ever weaken.
      .
      ps sorry JtI my love, I did tell you it was the fight of my life. And I failed him. Sorry for the longer post.
      Never give in, never surrender.
      cheers NFY

  • Milton says:

    Reading through Jack’s tweet and the horrible story of lies and deceit that occurred in Canberra to a bloke and his family. Bettina Arndt is trying to collect some coin to reimburse the massive expenses incurred by the young mans parents for legal costs. imho a more worthy cause than the CFord Foundation.
    And what the dickens has Tim Wilson been up to? I expect better from that lad.

  • Bella says:

    Saw this in a discarded newspaper today.
    https://amp.couriermail.com.au/news/opinion/labor-has-forsaken-bluecollar-workers/news-story/f8e6867e4e91a62a934233a38913b085

    It IS the Courier Mail so much of the content of the article would be incredibly biased, however, this latest ‘Adani’ sob fest by them about letting down 14,000 plus job applications is a joke when that company admitted in court that they had exaggerated the 10,000 jobs figures & had only a small fraction of permanent positions. Even these may be fully automated as is their true agenda.

    This project will destroy the Galilee Basin in it’s current form with it’s ancient springs, abundant wildlife and the only agricultural water supply, not to mention the impact on the GBR & 70,000 jobs, so I say cry me a river over a dodgy mining company not getting their way if this is true.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Bella, Labor (both state and federal) have confirmed on a number of occasions that they would support the Adani mine going ahead “if it stacks up”. The latest obstacle that seems to be causing some consternation is a rare bird of some description.

      I understand the majority of the indigenous folk in that neck of the woods want the mine to be a goer. They’d know a fair bit about any danger the mine may present to the surrounding environment, including both GBs, one would have thought.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Bella, further to my previous (3/2 @ 6.21pm), there does seem to be mixed messages re Indigenous acceptance of Adani’s mine. However I have read that Traditional owners have reportedly said – “If we can get 30 per cent or 100 per cent … we like to try get as many people as we can into the workforce,”.
        Adani jobs in high demand as Indigenous groups call for a bigger …
        http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-01-24/adani-indigenous-groups-call-for…/9353042

      • Bella says:

        Sorry Carl I have good reason not to believe any of that except the bit about Labor’s stance. The fence they have been sitting on, both federal & state, will eventually break.
        If the current water investigation doesn’t rule Adani out and Labor decides to let it go ahead then those three NthQ seats won’t save them from the shitstorm of Australian voters who will desert both majors in droves.

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