Humble servant of the Nation

Final Curtin for Julie Bishop, is it curtains for the Coalition?

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In the end all the shouting and stomping was for nothing. Momentum lurched one way and then the other only to be stopped dead in its tracks as Julie Bishop got to her feet in the House just after three o’clock yesterday to announce her retirement from politics.

Everyone could take a breather. The quarrels, scandals and policy missteps would take a back seat. Bishop’s announcement led on all news reports with the day to day entrail examination of federal politics either discarded entirely or run somewhere up the back just before the sport, the weather and the amusing cat that does the ironing segment.

A 20-year veteran of federal politics, Bishop was a minister in the Howard government (Education and Science, Women, and Ageing), the first female deputy leader of the federal Liberal Party (erroneously described as Deputy Prime Minister on both the Channel Seven and Nine News services) and Foreign Minister in the Abbott and Turnbull governments since 2013.

Depending on your view, we have just 78 or 85 sleeps before the next election. Of these, just three have been set aside as parliamentary sitting days. Put that in the nice work if you can get it category.

On the final sitting day but three of the 45th Parliament, Bishop not only halted the tawdry to-and-fro politicking, she cast other retiring pollies into the shade.

Euromoney’s MVP in 2009, Wayne Swan’s valedictory speech where he tactfully neglected to mention the 100,000 or so single mothers he, Julia Gillard and Labor dispatched into poverty, was left to nestle deep in oblivion while Labor’s favourite policy nuffy, Jenny Macklin, might wander off into retirement to try her hand at getting by on the Newstart Allowance, as she once boasted she could but now probably won’t.

Bishop took a near marginal seat to the safest confines on the electoral pendulum. She won almost two thirds of the primary vote in the 2016 election. She enjoyed a three per cent swing on primary vote while nationwide the Coalition lost 14 seats with a 3.55 per cent swing against it.

Depending on your vintage, is JBish the Keith Miller or the Shane Warne of Australian politics, e.g. the best captain we never had? Had she emerged triumphant from the scorched earth of the August 2018 spill, where would the Coalition be now? My best guess is she and it would have enjoyed a significant poll bounce at least in the short term, but we are dealing with fantasy politics here. The truth is, she could only find 11 supporters out of 85 in the party room and once that grim news hit home, her decision to retire from politics was only a matter of time.

Given the stunning personal support she enjoyed from voters if not the Liberal Party room, we can safely say there will be a swing against the Liberals in Curtin at the next election. It may be a beaut, if the Liberals get the politics of the preselection wrong. Worse, it could have a knock-on effect in other seats where margins are much tighter (Andrew Hastie in Canning, 6.8 per cent and Stirling where Michael Keenan is retiring, 6.1 per cent).

The Coalition could lose the next federal election in Western Australia alone. On the betting at this moment, Labor would pick up Hasluck (Ken Wyatt), Pearce (Christian Porter) and Swan (Steve Irons).

Those bubble bound necromancers in Canberra have long thought the retirement of Bishop would allow Christian Porter to seamlessly traverse electoral borders and ensconce himself as lord of the manor in Curtin.

Porter is one of the Liberal Party’s brightest charges, the current attorney-general and a potential leader of the parliamentary party.

We can also safely assume there will be no captain’s picks of candidates in Curtin given the arcane nature of Western Australian Liberal Party which has been fussin’ and feudin’ since I was a lad.

Another retiree from parliament, the National MP for Mallee, Andrew Broad, a man who regarded himself as something of a James Bond of Australian politics — whether it was a Craig, Lazenby, Moore, Connery, Dalton, Brosnan or Woody Allen, I cannot say — did offer something of a scientician’s view of gender and politics in a door stop to SkyNews yesterday.

“Politics,” Broad said, “is very gruelling on people who want to have a family and the very nature of biology is that it’s tougher on women.”

I am not entirely sure what that means but it seems to me that upsetting a good chunk of 51 per cent of the voting public is not an especially solid strategy in electoral politics.

Bishop has called for a woman within the party to replace her. The parachute drop of Porter into Curtin, while eminently sensible, will necessarily and obviously cause headlines and very possibly widespread consternation. It will not be an easy preselection. This is a case of politics pointing to one outcome while logic points to another.

In the end it might not matter, especially if the people of Victoria decide to put the Liberal Party’s lights out a good two hours before the votes start rolling in from the west. But if an unlikely victory is to remain possible or even if furniture is to be saved, what happens in Curtin in the next two months will be crucial to the Coalition’s future.

This column was first published in The Australian on 22 February 2019

190 Comments

  • Dismayed says:

    Lipstick on a pig. climate “solutions”. 1.a means of solving a problem. “Iain MacGill, from the school of electrical engineering and telecommunications and the Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets at UNSW, said the Coalition had chosen to extend and expand one of Australia’s most questionable climate policies to date.
    “We have no assurance that the ERF has really delivered all the Government’s claimed emission reductions from the scheme and, unfortunately, that would seem to be a feature, rather than a bug, of the mechanism design,” he said.
    And there is another $1.5 billion to be spent over 10 years, also including initiatives likely to happen anyway.”
    https://reneweconomy.com.au/morrison-puts-lipstick-on-tony-abbotts-pig-of-a-climate-policy-16806/

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    You know you are getting on a bit in age, Mr. Insider when you don’t recognise the names of many Actors and Actresses who won Awards at this years Oscars, just announced, full list linked.
    https://tinyurl.com/y6a36utd

  • BASSMAN says:

    Who did he blame for the current problem in the church
    re child sexual abuse? The devil! (GULP!)

  • Dismayed says:

    geez is this the little milton, hdjb, yvonne and razor blog? and as usual barely a perspicacious sentence from any of them.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Bless you sweet Dismayed we don’t get our “Daily Thought” from Get Up or the Labor Party we think for ourselves lad or lassie you should try it someday. Cheers

    • Boadicea says:

      “Perspicacious” hey. Gosh that’s a big word from you, Gary. Cut and and pasted no doubt – because you’re rather illiterate when you attempt to write your own stuff aren’t you? Try not to be such a prick, babyface.

    • Razor says:

      I think we know who exceeds the comments of Milton, boa and myself put together by a long stretch Dismayed. In fact you’ve driven many a long time contributor off due to the shrill nature of your posts and childish name calling of other contributors in your comments. I have the e-mails to prove it! But that’s your job and I get that. That’s the thing with the left, because they’re not doing they have time to be a trained activist receiving an e-mail everyday outlining the speaking points. I’ve caught you twice now doing that. Unless you have some sort of telemetry which picks up Labors and getup’s points for the next day.

      • Dismayed says:

        HAHAHAHAHA. now that is a stupid and paranoid delusional comment razor. You have caught nothing but your own paranoid delusions. i have told you numerous times I have no and have never had any affiliation to any political group or movement. The only one that posts more than you, little milton and angry old foul mouthed yvonne is HDJB. Your claims as usual are pure hysterical dishonesty. No surprises fair dnkum. talk about fair dinkum.

      • Boadicea says:

        Agree Razor that a good few bloggers have left stating Dismayed’s behaviour as the reason.
        It’s a pity as they had interesting contributions to make that weren’t abusive, There are just a few left – and I sometimes wonder if the blog will survive.

        • Razor says:

          He doesn’t want it to survive Boa. That’s the point. The left are about silencing all those who dissent.

        • Dismayed says:

          Bullshit. if they have left how have they said it was due to me? Name One? You cannot because you are flat out lying. Fair dinkum your obsession is out of control. Your need to blame other is a disgrace.

      • Penny says:

        Nah Razor, it’s Henry who has driven me away….

  • Boadicea says:

    Tracy: Re your earlier comnent.
    Does Melissa Price actually exist? She sure keeps a low profile. I don’t know what she looks like. Really bizarre. She declined to be interviewed on RN this morning too.
    You would think the Minister for the Environment would be right out there in todays’s world.

  • Rhett Carbine says:

    It’s Keryn Phelps for me at the election she supports the gay community 100%

  • smoke says:

    stuff all that other fly blown carrion that passes for politics, this is the important stuff. fix it and maintain it or get the bullet come election time.
    https://www.investmentwatchblog.com/who-wins-in-a-long-drawn-out-gradual-housing-bust/

  • JackSprat says:

    I think she was a great Foreign Affairs Minister.
    Not great in the selling of ideas though.
    One has to give both Abbott and Turnbull their dues – their supporters stick to them like glue.
    Bit of a battle going on in the blog Jack – quantity versus quality ? 🙂

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Get on him Climate Change Buffs! How good is this, Mr. Insider as we see Prime Minister Scott Morrison will today launch a pre-election climate change policy, pledging $2 billion for projects to bring down Australia’s emissions.
    “Our Climate Solutions Package will ensure Australia meets our 2030 emissions reduction target — a responsible and achievable target — building on our success in comprehensively beating our Kyoto commitments.”
    Now it’s starting to get interesting.
    http://tinyurl.com/y3f5q8ua

  • Boadicea says:

    Michele Grattan is right – the depressing reality is that whoever wins in May will inherit a ”bitter, sceptical, exhausted electorate”.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Wait till the last couple of weeks Boadicea when the Election is close, the Polls closer and the Voters faced with the stark reality of having “Electricity” Bill Shorten as PM. Cheers

      • Jack The Insider says:

        But what if it doesn’t? One particular point many analysts and all barrackers are ignoring is the splintering of the right wing vote which has become quite pronounced in the last decade but will reach its acme this time. PHON, UAP, Cory’s Tories, Xenophonian centrists, a small army of Liberal independents etc. What we saw in Longman for example is the Liberal vote declined shifting largely to PHON but PHON preferences flowed 60 Liberal – 40 Labor. What we’ve seen in state elections and by elections is the preference flows aren’t coming back to the Libs in a comprehensive way. Polling won’t reflect this. Polling companies adopt preferences based on history. I honestly don’t think you’re prepared for what’s coming.

        • BASSMAN says:

          NSW election will be interesting to see if Federal issues bite. Gladys has done her best to tell Morrison to stay away!

          • Jack The Insider says:

            Polling shows minority government one way or another, which way is uncertain. Labor leads 51-49 in most recent polling but that would not be enough to win the nine seats it needs to form majority government.

    • Bella says:

      I think people have quit listening because election promises turn out to be empty promises Boadicea. They know how it works now.
      None of it passes the pub test & they treat us like mushrooms. 🍄

      • Boadicea says:

        Yep Bella
        I’m over the lot of them. I’ve tuned out. Shorten will win, and some sort of opposition will rise from the ashes I guess.
        Down here we have politicians dropping like flies too. Two Liberals in the space of two weeks. Hodgman like a stunned mullet in as minority .

      • smoke says:

        vote all established parties in the very last boxes
        vote first any indy [the more eccentric the better] or any drovers dog, pet shop galah or pastafarian

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