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Bill Shorten: Man of ideas — mainly yours, if they’re any good

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If you have any good ideas, Bill Shorten would like to hear them and take credit for them if they come to fruition.

That’s not to say he’ll take the blame if it all goes tits up. Just the acclaim thanks. This is the way the Labor leader operates. To date with all things considered, this approach to clambering up the greasy pole of Australian politics has been stunningly successful.

The early whispers from within the AWU and the Victorian Labor Party was there was a young man with a bright light shining above him. He had a future, a big future.

Some even gushed Bill Shorten was the next Bob Hawke. But it quickly became clear that those who offered this excitable view had never met Bill Shorten, or Bob Hawke.

Shorten entered the federal parliament in the midst of the hysteria that was the Rudd ascendancy. Shorten being Shorten, he expected a junior ministry at least in the Rudd government. Rudd being Rudd, he left Shorten to cool his heels on the backbench for the next two years before throwing him a bone – parliamentary secretary for disability services. One suspects Shorten, accustomed to cavorting on the national stage, initially sniffed the appointment with scepticism as a task below his station.

To his credit he got stuck in, and before you could say National Disability Insurance Scheme, Shorten elbowed his way into the frame, like a photobomber of Australian political history, implying he was the architect of the scheme. Not the unfunded, uncosted bits of it or the mind-numbing bureaucracy attached to it that have necessarily attracted criticism, but the good bits the majority of Australians supported as fair, reasonable and overdue.

I am not engaging in a critical analysis of the NDIS here. My point is Shorten’s MO is selective appropriation. Pick up what works, claim it as your own, dismiss what doesn’t as someone else’s problem.

A year later it was Rudd who was looking for a job, evicted from the Lodge as Shorten stood outside a Manuka Vietnamese restaurant with a mobile phone in each ear. Gillard became Prime Minister, Shorten got a ministry for his trouble and the rest (including how Shorten ditched Gillard and anointed Kevin Rudd’s return as PM for another promotion three years later) is history.

Clambering over the political corpses of one’s colleagues is another one of Shorten’s skills. Take a look around. Is there anyone in the current parliament who hurdles the political dead more deftly than Our Bill? Maybe the Foreign Minister, Julie Bishop, could strap the crampons on and give him a run for his money but I’d argue Shorten has climbed higher peaks quicker. His Sir Edmund Hillary to her Sherpa Tensing perhaps.

It is often said the hardest job in politics is leader of the Opposition. I am not quite sure how this truism has come to pass. I imagine being Prime Minister is a damned sight harder and comes with a vastly more onerous set of responsibilities. The so called “hard” part of being Opposition leader is the challenge of making sufficient noise in any given day to get one’s dial on the telly for a three second grab.

I would argue the Turnbull government has made life very easy for Shorten.

The government’s obsession with Shorten is understandable. Their polling continues to tell them a) they are roughly as popular as a syphilis chancre and b) the only thing stopping people from marching into their electoral offices and setting fire to the office furniture is the lingering thought Bill Shorten might be worse.

But like punch drunk fighters Malcolm Turnbull and his senior ministers come out throwing haymakers that rarely land. Talk about your rope-a-dope. They literally can’t utter a sentence into a microphone without mentioning Bill Shorten’s name. We all know why they do this: it’s an attempt at monster creation, a bit of the old fear mongering, as if they are players in a melodrama and the audience is booing and hissing at the mere mention of Bill’s name.

This fails on a number of levels. Firstly, Shorten delights in the attention. Secondly, no one really believes Shorten is a moustache-twirling super villain from central casting. Machiavellian and conspiratorial, yes, but he ain’t no Lex Luthor. Most of all, the “mention Shorten at all costs” tactic fails because the punters expect the government to be talking about government things rather than engaging in tawdry partisan politics.

As an example, midyear, we had the PM and his Minister for Finance duelling insults with Cormann casting Shorten as a Stasi-lovin’ East German communist (which is highly amusing considering Shorten’s Victorian Labor right affiliation) while Turnbull depicted Shorten as the billionaire’s boot boy.

He can be one thing or the other but he can’t be both. So, there’s no consistency of message and, worse, no clear communications strategy.

The so-called dark arts of politics, communications — spin if you like — is really not that dark at all. More often than not it is steeped in common sense. If I was giving the government advice it would be this: spend the Christmas break not mentioning Shorten at all. Make a New Year’s resolution to mention him as little as possible. Let him make his own noise.

And who knows, if ignored for long enough, this weird Labor cat might even disappear.

This column was published at The Australian 2018.

 

329 Comments

  • Boadicea says:

    The reason MT cancelled next week’s sitting was to gazzump Shorten’s plan to cause havoc
    Fair enough I would have thought. The sitting will be extended forward so no drama
    Shorten plays dirty and it’s win at all costs . It would be a bit like winning a sporting match because the other side was a man down.
    It’s time to see who are dual citizens before parliament will have any sense of legitimacy.
    I hope they dig out some Labor ones to be honest.

    • Trivalve says:

      Shorten plays dirty? he’s up against the mob who invented it. One rule for us…and f*** the rest.

      Where were you in 1975 Boa. (And that ain’t all, believe me).

      • Boadicea says:

        I was in South Africa in 1975 Triv. The year we backward folk got television!

      • Penny. says:

        It certainly isn’t all TV. After 1975 was when if there was any honesty in the LNP it was rarely seen. Labor plays dirty and mean, but the behind the scenes players in the Coalition really do win first prize for bastardry.
        The Australian people are all too well aware of it and that’s why the LNP will get rolled badly at the next election. I don’t like Bill Shorten at all, but the fact that he will be the next PM lies firmly at the feet of Malacol Turnbull and his spineless team.
        I also predict that when people get less hysterical about our first female PM, history will show she was a real achiever.

        • Penny. says:

          Gawd, I should use the VR technology…..Malcolm Turnbull

        • Boadicea says:

          By all accounts Gillard was a charming person and brilliant negotiator, Penny – until she strode onto a podium in front of the cameras – when she turned into someone else.
          Maybe we never saw the ”real Julia” .
          That, together with her dealings with the shady union boyfriend, that necessitated her involuntary departure as a partner in the legal firm for failing to set up a client file, will, I think, always dog her and keep her off the list of the greats.

  • Milton says:

    Not sure what it’s like on the streets in Zimbabwe but i’d feel a little weak in the stomach having gone out on them the day before expressing my distaste for Mugabe, and post haste for his departure only to wake up the next morning and find the old toad still there. As Jack mentioned previous post open the doors. Mussolini might have considered his self lucky!

    • Boadicea says:

      Yes Milton . Sad to see that despot still in control.
      It’s a worry that the blokes engineering the coup are just as ruthless as Mugabe. God knows what’s coming next, even if that bastard hangs on to all his assets and quits
      It would be more promising to see Morgan Tsvangarai there
      He at least seemed genuinely concerned for his country

  • Rhys Needham says:

    Actually, sticking to the AC/DC topic (Vale Malcolm Young), a truly clever leader might have perhaps gone for High Voltage and perhaps turned it into a spiel on electricity policy (a truly clever leader might have actually done something genuine about it, though, like kicked the State Governments in the arse about their failed privatisations and corporatisations, the excess numbers of poles and wires, the artificial boosting of the rest of the portfolios of electrical assets to perhaps boost their future market value and sale price, the extortion of so much in dividends from the public retailers and wholesalers, the excess costs of marketing and executive pay, and breakneck roll-outs of new generation sources with limited contingency planning and extra interstate transmission lines, just to name a few things – and maybe kick AEMO up the arse as well).

    • Razor says:

      Well said Rhys. A non-partisan explanation that sums it up. Nobody what anyone says this all started with privatisation. Public utilities should NOT be privatised. Before you start your looter spiel Bassy, Labor kicked it off here in Qld.

      • Trivalve says:

        I’m of the same opinion. I’m sure I’ve said so before. And how will they balance the budget when they’ve sold everything.

        As for Malcolm’s choice? Surely Highway to Hell?

    • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

      A really, truly clever leader would cut Canberra loose from energy policy entirely and let the State governments wear the electoral consequences of their incompetence. Unfortunately, as in so many other policy arenas, the feds have so tightly bound themselves into this by promising to fix all the problems that their State counterparts can do their usual trick of blaming Canberra, dusting themselves off and walking away from it. With everyone screaming at Canberra to fix the mess, there ARE no electoral consequences for the people who created it.

      Not the way the federation was designed to work. Which is why it doesn’t.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Yes, if Bill Shorten does get the keys to The Lodge he can thank his time spent with the AWU when dealing with the Chiquita Mushrooms company.

    After all, that’s where he learnt to keep them in the dark and feed them s*!t.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Absolutely a prerequisite for a Prime Minister Carl.

    • Bella says:

      Carl, even if Shorten does become PM he won’t be allowed to govern without disgusting frontpage rubbish like depicting him as a Nazi officer. ‘Beaconsfield Bill’ was another though he did handle that awfully difficult situation very, very well.
      He’ll get slammed by the media even if Labor gets this country back from the crippling failure of the past few years.

      Shorten’s also a proud union man & anyone who supports a fair days pay and insists on worker safety will always raise the ire & lower the profits in corporate Australia & obviously they won’t cop that.
      Can’t have the worker bees only losing their penalty rates, heck, too many of us may be earning above our station already.

  • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

    The one achievement of this government that I would have rated on the far side of impossible has been making Power Bill a real contender. The bloke is as straight as a pretzel and genuine as a three-dollar note. Only Sam Dastardlyari out-shonks him.

  • Trivalve says:

    The interesting thing here is that not so long ago, Rudd and Gillard were being similarly counselled to stop talking about Abbott all the time and get on with governing . Played right into the Coalishun’s hands and now they’re doing the exact same thing.

    Mind you, I think Corman must have a genuine dislike for Bill. He hasn’t shut up about him ever since his cubic bonce has been appearing on our screens. I’d call it an obsession. One exception – his Remembrance Day speech. It was rather good I thought.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Iss becorze Billa is hevving a square head and not hevving zer Cherman excent. Verry suspicious men is Billa.

    • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

      The faithfulness with which the Liberals have followed Labor’s script is something to behold. I believe one of Tony Abbott’s miscalculations was assuming – quite rationally – that no matter what problems there were with his leadership, the party would never be so bat-sh*t crazy as to do what they did. He underestimated Malcolm Turnbull’s ambition and overestimated the discipline and loyalty of his party-room.

      As for the obsession with the opposition leader, a wag once asked if Julia Gillard was charging Abbott rent now that he was living in her head. Again, the sense of Déjà vu is uncanny.

    • JackSprat says:

      TV. As far as I can tell, succinct answers are beyond the man on any subject.
      The Libs have fallen into the same trap as Labor did.
      If you remember, everytime they opened thir mouths it was Abbott Abbott.

  • smoke says:

    no I don’t have another source…simple facts will do
    https://www.michaelwest.com.au/mexico-proves-coal/

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      I may be remiss but I cant find an endorsement from the Australian Coal Association for that report smoke.
      Not even a peer review from Matt Ridley.
      Asking for the acceptance of mere established facts and rational observations from a target audience of denial loonies is a bit optimistic isn’t it?

  • Bill Grieve says:

    I really don’t have any suggestions for Bill Shorten , what more could the average Aussie ask for , Malcolm has plans to give everyone tax cuts and he’s working very hard to cut our electricity bills , lets not become to greedy.

  • OAP from wayback . says:

    If Malcolm intends to give everyone tax cuts , surely he won’t forget us old aged pensions …

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