Humble servant of the Nation

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

SHARE
, / 10359 190

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

  • Tracy says:

    Footy tips Jack, Wednesday kick off this week

  • Dismayed says:

    alex hawke coalition mp reckons the reason boys are struggling in schools is because of the feminist movement. The coalition and the right whingers need to create conspiracy theories to mansplain away their own paranoid delusions.

    • JackSprat says:

      Actually Dismayed, there is getting to be a lot of anecdotal evidence that boys are struggling with identity and roles.

      And there is even more about gender fluidity amongst primary school kids.

      • Dismayed says:

        Why is this the fault of feminists? Are you like the guy I worked with who blamed the teachers because his young lad could barely read and write? you have been exhibiting the same weak ass excuses and looking for conspiracy theories and shadows to blame as alex hawke. What are you guys afraid of, the future or losing another 1% of the entitlement you feel you should have?

  • Dismayed says:

    How much more ridiculous can the trainee treasurer Recessionberg get? He is claiming the IMF have given the Nation a big tick on economic management . It warned about low wages growth and declining living standards. Recessionberg sees this as a positive? The IMF did however give support to Labors Negative Gearing, Capital Gains tax and Franking credits changes. So by extension Recessionberg supports these by hailing the IMF report?

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    The Polls coming thick and fast now, Mr. Insider and one here today from the Guardian, the Essential Poll, shows Labor leading the Coalition 52-48.
    At absolute worst, if the 6 points lead of Labor in the Newspoll and imho very bridgeable by the Coalition as we get nearer the Election.
    ScoMo yet to fire his big guns, “never fire till you see the whites of their eyes”, good advice when the British fought the Zulus and good advice now.
    https://tinyurl.com/y5t24zu9

    • Jack The Insider says:

      I’m down in Victoria atm where some 4.5 million voters are and they either haven’t got a clue who ScoMo is or they do know and despise him.

      • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

        LOL, now that is one fabulous survey Mr. Insider, on par with my Brisvegas one. Stand aside Newspoll we are coming through. Cheers

    • Trivalve says:

      Mate, Morrison is a dickhead and is going to get flogged. If his lips are moving, he’s lying. Or simply talking shite. So are you.

      Please excuse the ad hominem, one can take only so much.

  • jack says:

    i may well be way out of touch, but I think that’s unlikely, it looks to me like the public has made up it’s mind and will take a change in it’s stride.

    As to how they will go, well, I never thought Bill was PM material, but you never know.

    of course, he may cock it up from here, but it would take some effort.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Twas a wonderful time in Australia, Mr. Insider for those that can remember, 47 years ago now and Gough Whitlam and Labor were about to sweep to power.
    Who can forget the famous “Its Time” Campaign Jingle, linked.
    As a 21yo I voted for Gough which didn’t go down well with my Folks here in QLD they being devotees of Joh Bjelke-Petersen.
    Sadly Gough’s time as PM was short as he had brought with him some of the very old time Labor people like Rex Conner etc. we al know what happened.
    Salad days.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqMCZBjvmD4&t=14s

  • BASSMAN says:

    Leigh Sales failed MISERABLY interviewing Morrison on climate. Every time he said we are ‘meeting our emissions’ she should have said this is mainly because of renewable energy projects in wind and solar which his party has continued to oppose (especially wind) from day one and nothing to do with his mob’s inaction on climate. She could easily have produced a graph to show how emissions have soared since Labor’s price on carbon was abolished. Going back to the dark policy of Direct InAction is madness. It cost us $2.6billion last time and was paid for by the taxpayers NOT the polluters as under Labor’s scheme. This resulted in the highest carbon price in the world of $120 a tonne when compensation was taken into account. Labor has squibbed on to this again though by not introducing an ETA which even Abbott supported with a column in this paper in 2009. Study after study has proven beyond doubt the best way to tackle this problem is via a price on carbon which even Greg Hunt supported!

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      See that Guardian Essential Poll out today BASSMAN only 4 points in it fellow, ScoMo breathing down Bills neck. Cheers

    • Razor says:

      Emissions have soared because Labor governed just after the GFC and businesses were not operating at full capacity. Emissions declined across the world Bassy. The Coalition have come in and restarted business. People have moved on from a carbon price as the certificates have become a rort. People prefer solar to wind. Wind towers are an environmental eyesore and kill wildlife. Why are you worrying about this anyway? According to JB and others we will be dead in 12yrs as it is too late or is that just some green fear mongering?

    • Bella says:

      The government’s new climate policy isn’t credible Bassy, he just needs to be SEEN to address climate change. No mention of new coal mines & precious little of renewables. It’s an absolute joke.
      He can’t seriously think voters believe anything he comes up with now.

  • Bella says:

    It sure doesn’t seem like Morrison’s into rock & roll now does it….😜
    must be all those hymns…🙊

  • Dismayed says:

    Many BBoomers here should review this series of economic charts. Warning if FACTS offend.
    https://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2019/02/myth-smashed-avocado-generation/

    • Trivalve says:

      Ah yes…I recall in Boomer Indoctrination School when we were all coached in greed, hate and screwing-the-next-generation-101. Those were the days! Just slavering at the mouth laying plans to wreck our children’s lives and theirs too. Never has an entire generation moved in lock-step so beautifully! And in every country in the world too! To hell with gen whatever – we own ze fun!

      And we’ll spend your inheritance too, on a Winnebago perhaps. Watch and weep!

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Oh rubbish! No need for coaching in something that just came naturally.

      • Dismayed says:

        I wont be getting any inheritance. I paid for mine to be seen off.T he BBoomer gen. prospered off the back off their parents who went to war, had jobs for life, universal education provided universal health care then good old teflon John and costello structurally indebted generations to come with every tax concession and outright rort they could find and create. The BBoomer gen will go down in history as the most selfish whingeing self entitled to EVER walk the earth. No generation will ever be showered with such government, taxpayer excess and no generation would dream of asking for or expecting it like the BBoomers do.

      • Mack the Knife says:

        Why does Dismayed hate people older than himself? Or more to the point, seemingly anything that breathes. With the aid of a mate from S.A. we worked out who this prick is. He was an asshole back when, and it’s glaringly obvious he never grew out of it. Pull your head in Dismayed, you only missed out on being a baby boomer by a couple of years anyway if I calculate right, you GenX shit for brains.

Leave A Reply to Dismayed Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published.

PASSWORD RESET

LOG IN