The final sitting day in the parliament yesterday provided a timely reminder that Labor has a long and illustrious history of finding itself in golden situations only to totally stuff them up.
Forget the next three years, Bill Shorten and Labor could turn the dumpster fire that is Canberra at present into an inferno that could engulf it and everyone in the general vicinity in less than 12 weeks.
In other, brighter circumstances it might be the kind of efficient service delivery the punters expect from government.
Presuming Shorten and Labor win the next election (and that requires a sizeable leap of faith if not logic after yesterday’s shenanigans), one can only speculate what disasters will come its way in government. My best guess is Shorten will do a Nick Greiner, establish a federal anti-corruption commission only to find multiple members of his cabinet and ultimately himself, ensnared in it, providing an alternative meaning to the term “conviction politicians”.
In what stands as an extraordinary political achievement, Labor managed to disappoint everyone across the political spectrum yesterday — people who vote Labor, people who don’t and people who were thinking of voting Labor but now probably won’t.
It was as if the tactics committee met, handed Shorten a ball-peen hammer and told him to belt himself over the head with it, on the basis that it would feel better when he stopped.
The telecommunications access and assistance bill became law yesterday, passing through the Senate 44 votes to 12, after being waved through the House with bipartisan support.
It is, of course, a bill of the government’s making. It is a disaster, created by legal minds with little or no apparent expertise in technology. The problems with it are numerous but the biggest lies in the fact the law would require technology companies to target a single device or small number of devices, but only in a way that does not introduce a “systemic weakness” that impacts all users.
The techs I have spoken to say this is all but impossible and may lead to tech companies feeling obliged to leave the country rather than run afoul of this putrescent law. One of our most prolific and profitable industry sectors may leave our shores in droves. Well done, everyone. Throw another log on the dumpster fire.
The other major problem with the bill is it is yet another intrusion into the privacy of the citizenry. Predictably the response from the government and the opposition is of the tedious, “if you done nothing wrong, you have nothing to worry about” kind.
Labor’s favourite urger on Twitter, member for Gellibrand, Tim Watts, lectured a clearly unnerved Twitterdom on Tuesday night in an effort to bring some calm. “Wait and see our amendments,” the young MP promised. In the end Labor dropped its amendments altogether and waved the bill through.
It is a dreadful piece of law and by Labor’s own admission will need to be amended early next year, leading to the obvious question, and one that remains unanswered, why wave it through the lower house at all?
Timidity and cowardice
The old maxim that any day when the political debate turns to border security is a bad day for Labor seems to have Bill Shorten and his front bench spooked.
Labor is everywhere and nowhere on this issue. Jelly nailed to a wall.
Timidity and political cowardice are never far away with this mob.
The day started with Prime Minister Morrison facing a humiliating defeat in the parliament, with Labor and the Greens supporting a crossbench bill which would leave the decision on refugee repatriation to Australia entirely in the hands of those with medical expertise. Instead it was Shorten and Labor who were left pink-faced in embarrassment as the bill was filibustered to within an inch of its life in the Senate.
Everything Labor sought to achieve did not happen and everything it did not want to happen came to pass.
News reports today indicating Labor has softened its policy stance on refugee policy lends strength to the prevailing view that Labor is soft on border control while Shorten et al have simultaneously upset Labor voters who were hoping for a more humane policy response.
Faced with the prospect of multiple triumphs in the parliament in the morning session, all Shorten could do was lament the scoreboard at the end of the day. Win-win had become lose-lose.
As the House adjourned for the Christmas break, it was difficult to determine who felt more relieved — Scott Morrison or Bill Shorten. The only good news for both men is the parliament will sit so rarely in the New Year, they may as well call in the caterers and hire out both chambers for weddings, parties, anything. Maybe a funeral or two.
The focus in recent times has naturally been on the Morrison government and its travails. There appears to be no way out for the government, that is until we pause and turn our gaze to Bill Shorten and the Labor opposition.
And when we do, we are drawn to the conclusion that it would be madness to underestimate Labor’s capacity for political self-harm.
This column was first published in The Australian on 7 December 2018.
Perhaps the topic is struggling to cope with the enormity (1401/1223) of the heterogeneous comments?
No Maxwell, Stoinis, Short or Weatherald in any Australian squad just announced. Renshaw back in and along with Labushagne has hardly made a run this season? FN disgrace.
Made a lot in County Cricket last season though.
Renshaw, like Labuschagne played the first half of the shield season and had No form. Renshaw like Harris has been hit in the head and concussed multiple times taking their eyes off the short stuff. They have technical issues that will not be corrected at test level. I raised Pucovski early in the season but he too has been hit and concussed a couple of times along with his personal health struggles. I think Sanga would have been a better bet if they wanted to blood a really young guy. Stoinis has shown he has the temperament to raise to the next level. Maxwell has averaged 50 in first Class cricket for the last 2 years and between 42 and 45 for several years before that. a middle order with Maxwell and Stoinis will take games away from oppositions in one or two sessions. Maxwell is worth 20 runs in the field every day. Hohns and Chappell are the problem. It is clear they are not good leaders, communicators or managers of the newer generations. Which is what they should be. This is about the same old problem the teams are picked on who is a nice good guy rather than someone who actually thinks for themselves. Teams prosper when individuals no their own self. Teams fail when they are like sheep.
I think it’s waaaay time that Hohns at least was put out to pasture. Who does he have pictures of?
Wade has the best average let’s put him in.
Got to remember that there is a character test now in the selection process – right schools, right parentage, right brown nosing, right technique, right state.
Got all that – right !
Greg Palast calls the US “The Armed Madhouse.” I think he’s right and the Americans are so preoccupied in trying to nail each other , the “Trump Effect” has made it worse than ever.
http://ednews.net/en/news/world/348148-pelosi-brands-trump-putin-relationship-dangerous
It’s one big dysfunctional family and it’s 50/50 whether the civil war precedes the nuclear war.
Then again the civil war could deteriorate into a domestic nuclear war.
Nails it for me. Renewables 1.1% of world requirements!
https://business.financialpost.com/opinion/peter-foster-another-report-reluctantly-admits-that-green-energy-is-a-disastrous-flop
Peter Foster the Bai-Lin tea con artist?
Yes Razor, flopping from fossil to fantasy indeed.
Maybe I lack perspective and maybe this is the wrong forum but can our humble servant please have a word to Fox Sports and suggest that in their cricket broadcast rather than show a gratuitous crowd shot or a shot of the flying FOX showing a scene of the FOX rover can we just have a quick ad so as to remove the reason for having that annoying ad-free watermark. I thought I’d learnt to live to watermarks but how much real estate do they need?!
Highest spending % of GDP source MYEFO
1996-97 26.3% Libs
2010-11 26.2% Labor
2013-14 26.0% Libs
2014-15 25.8% Libs
2015-16 25.8% Libs
2017-18 25.7% Libs
2000-01 25.6% Libs
2001-02 25.6% Libs
1997-98 25.3% Libs
2017-18 25.5% Libs
JTI’s twitter feed is full of interesting stuff.
Top 10 tax to GDP ratios of govt as per MYEFO
2004-05 24.3 Howard
2005-06 24.3 Howard
2000-01 24.2 Howard
2002-03 24.0 Howard
2003-04 24.0 Howard
2006-07 23.8 Howard
2021-22 23.8 Morrison
2007-08 23.7 Howard
2020-21 23.5 Morrison
2019-20 23.3 Morrison
Source: MYEFO
Anyone else noticed that since the fat felines from ABC 730 have taken their well earned break (again) the quality of the show has dramatically improved? Pertinent, balanced and well researched stories were not what I expected.
I like Leigh Sales as an interviewer. Leans to the left but gives to both sides equally hard.
No, it’s about the same. You’ve finally caught up.
anning? abbott dutton, canavanaglio these are the brightest the cons have got? No wonder they always feel persecuted and hard done by. abbott suffering from attention deficit disorder comes out with another down right stupid comment attacking the Police in Vic. The cons still think that by lying constantly about all matters it will lift their election result. We know their supporters here think so..
Bloody hell another one!
https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/regional/mps-marriage-breakdown-revealed-as-federal-election-looms/news-story/5b48d7fb32024415c2e1e5b154f65da5