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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

  • Dismayed says:

    So wait, we are lampooning a politician for listening to the people and putting forward some of their ideas? Of course no other political party or person has ever used someone else’s idea’s?

    • Desali says:

      Bit ridiculous .. it seems to me that Bill listens to the people and follows up with solutions .. One would surely assume that a politician would listen to the electorate.. the latest example of the ‘government’ now debating what the people of Australia have recently voted for in a plebiscite because they couldn’t / wouldn’t listen to the plebs and taking a week ‘off’ to do so is a crying shame. Turnball had a personal hissy fit victory speech on the night of the last federal election which he won by a slim majority but during the following week Bill travelled Australia thanking all those many people who had voted Labor and still listening to their ideas seems to me a good idea

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Any scuttlebutt about an early election on your patch Dismayed?

  • smoke says:

    german coalition talks are kaput

    what now for merkel?

  • Milton says:

    No doubt when he gets his PhD he’ll insist on being referred to as Dr Rudd.

    • Penny says:

      If he has a PhD, he’s entitled to be called Dr. Rudd, Milton….

      • Milton says:

        I know Penny it’s just that it’s Kev. If i’m near death on a plane I don’t want to hear Kev say “Hi, i’m a doctor and i’m here to help”. And yes Tracy (and Penny) i’m aware of what a tough slog it is. I’d be surprised if many attempting it didn’t have a breakdown of sorts.

    • Tracy says:

      After eight years my husband still hasn’t got his doctorate, I’m trying to encourage him to get back into it.
      It’s a hard slog Milt, especially when you have a day job.

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      Not all we QLDers are made of stuff as you and I dear Milton, alas poor Kevin. Cheers

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Its considered to be more of a quaint curtesy thingy Milton, not generally extended by your egalitarian, fair dinkum, knock-about Aussie. Otherwise known as the ‘stuffed-shirt’ syndrome.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Oh! there’s an ‘o’ missing.

      • Penny. says:

        Hardly a quaint courtesy Carl. And I’m usually the one that tells people not to bother calling me Dr. if somehow it comes up. One of my credit cards for example has the title of Dr., the other Mrs. and the other just Penny. I am always accorded the title of whatever is on them…..and as most of my friends are the egalitarian, fair dinkum, knock-about Aussies, Carl, we still can acknowledge each other’s achievements I think without being called stuff-shirts.

    • JackSprat says:

      It will be the first multi-volume thesis in history. They will probably have to add a new wing to the library to house it.

  • BASSMAN says:

    Malcolm is shutting down parliament….why? He has lost control of his borders.

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    He drives a hard bargain old Phil. Promised not to fart and laugh at the next “cucumber sandwiches”.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5101255/Queen-awards-Prince-Phillip-rare-honour.html

    • Tracy says:

      Oh c’mon JB, Phil can be bloody good value entertainment wise, nothing like a Duke of Edinburgh gaff.

      • Boadicea says:

        Good on them. Both in their nineties and have survived marriage for 70 years without going insane.
        Good old Liz. We’ll miss her when she pops off. Amazing woman
        Now there’s a woman who has succeeded in a man’s world!

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Quite true but my Palace contact tells me he enjoys letting rip and giggling in company and has only relented under the conditions he insisted on to Her Majesty.
        Cecil says they are real stinkers, Something had to be done.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Gaff or gaffe? Whatever, they pong.
          My contact tells me Her Majesty was at her wits end, which wasn’t far. Am amusing addition to the anecdotes about Phill’s fatuous flatulence is that Her Majesty would hiss angrily “Stop that!”
          The Duke would look about keenly and exclaim ” Certainly dear, which way did it go?”

    • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

      Marvellous business, JB. God Save the Queen!

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      I do confess, Mr Baptiste, to standing roadside as their Royal Highnesses slipped by in the Silver Phantom, a tear in my eye and pride pounding in my chest. Am sure you too have experienced similar emotions re their HRH’s. I am of course looking forward to POTUS Trump coming to Oz for a visit and if I am lucky he will do a “walk” and I can shake his hand. Would that I could dash out in front of the Motorcade yelling “You Magnificent Bastard Donald, run over me!”, however those earnest chaps in the black suits may make Swiss cheese of me with their Uzi’s or whatever they use these days, not a sight am sure you would like to see! Cheers

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Henry, I think I have a cunning plan. With precise calculations I am certain we could flip you from a spring loaded device to land precisely in front of The Donald’s car.
        I made a crowd funding appeal about an hour ago and we are already oversubscribed. Kimmie is willing to kick in a million dollars to a charity of your choice if you wear a T shirt with the message “Run Over Me Sludge Guts With False Hair.”
        Go you good thing Henry. Make a name for us as a fun loving nation.
        Best wishes.

  • Huger Unson says:

    A group of fit young men who choose to create a squalid camp out of public funds and then blame others for the mess? We’ve seen this one several times over, it doesn’t impress the taxpayers.
    Memo to empathy-seekers – clean up your own sh*t, first, and the politics may follow.

  • Wraith says:

    Natasha ‘the destroyer’ Stott Despoja was head of the Australian Democrats for more than a decade. Definite success.

    • wraith says:

      This one was supposed to be reply to Penny and Boa on women in politics.

    • Dismayed says:

      I think yuo will find the end of the Dems. started when they sold out on the GST. Natasha was not the leader then. Interesting she is married to a conservative right leaning news columnist.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      “More than a decade” ?

      Ahem….. , I always understood that Stott Despoja replaced Meg Lees in 2001 and threw in the towel in 2002 after about 16 months as leader of the ADs.

      Sadly and apparently SD couldn’t carry the team with her.

      • wraith says:

        Your’e right Carl! Bet you dont hear that very often do you? What I meant to say was Senator and then Leader, and in politics for more than ten years. I figure that amount of time and leadership means success, or not, if you use Abbott as an example I suppose. Or Pynie. Perspective.
        cheers Carl

    • smoke says:

      Janine Haines….not too shabby

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Go Anastasia you good thing! QLD State Election Polls update Mr Insider as we read: ” Queensland Labor has its nose in front of the LNP with just days left until the state vote.
    A ReachTEL poll, for Sky News, has Labor ahead of the LNP 51 per cent to 49, after preferences.
    Labor is also ahead on the primary vote, with 34 per cent of Queenslanders saying they’ll vote for the incumbent party, to the LNP’s 30 per cent. One Nation has 17 per cent support, while the Greens are on 10 per cent.”

    • Razor says:

      How they can calculate preference flows with ON being in the race is beyond me Henry. The truth is nobody can call this one. Particularly a dud outfit like Reachtel.

  • Tracy says:

    You could also say that Abbott took a lesson from Rudd with his constant undermining and sniping, Turnbull sbould have shut him done long ago, Turnbull……disappointment is thy name…..BIG disappointment.
    Shorten is a shocker, a lot can happen between now and the election but not looking forward to him getting the job, he will have to navigate Rudd vol II of the memoirs but no more than he deserves, time the dirt came out anyway.

  • Boadicea says:

    Looks like Mugabe has outsmarted them again. Carrying on as if nothing untoward has happened.
    Apparently the jubilant protesters of yesterday are once again reluctant to voice their opinions openly.
    Little hope for Zimbabwe sadly.

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