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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

  • Dwight says:

    Kakoschke-Moore? I think I should put my hand up, just so I can resign later when I remember the second passport in my passport case.

    • Dwight says:

      ““At that time I had no knowledge that Singapore was a colony at the time that my mother was born, Senator Kakoschke-Moore said.”

      Guess they really don’t teach history in school anymore. Sheesh.

      • Trivalve says:

        They don’t

        • Carl on the Coast says:

          But they teach important stuff, like colour display spectrums caused by light dispersions during a rain shower.

        • Dismayed says:

          Your kids must have gone to different types of schools than mine. I can assure you over the last couple of years history has been a subject of discussion in the Dismayed household.

        • JackSprat says:

          Considering the number of functionally illiterate kids coming out of the system, one wonders what they do teach,

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Functional illiteracy. Hopefully.

          • Trivalve says:

            Worse, i keep hearing about functionally illiterate teachers. And when their failings are pointed out, ‘nah, doesn’t matter does it?’

            This info comes first hand, nightly.

          • JackSprat says:

            There is a spiral to the bottom.
            And many teachers try to avoid external testing like the plague – no need to wonder why.
            i have a friend who used to be a head mistress – long retired now. She was teaching her grand daughter grammar and got told by the teacher that “we do not do that anymore”.
            I get her gripes about lack of discipline in all areas – academic, self, respect for property.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            TV “Just as long as they are smart enough to operate the machines and remain incapable of critical thinking……”
            Saint George.

  • wraith says:

    Nothing to see here ladies and gentlemen, we would prefer you all to just look the other way.
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2017-11-22/gina-rinehart-awards-barnaby-joyce-40-thousand-dollars/9178612

  • Boadicea says:

    A radical thought bubble :
    I would say Malcolm’s days are limited. Even more so if Alexander loses his seat.
    Looks like they will lose the next election anyway – not sure anyone sane is putting their hand up to take over.
    Why not put Abbott there to cop the flack and be the scapegoat?
    He certainly wants the job!

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Its a long time since I have seen so many rumblings of discontent re a PM, Mr Insider, but daily now every tabloid is running a story on how utterly hopeless is PM Turnbull, now down 23 consecutive negative Newspolls. He’s a politically dead man walking and only awaits “someone” to consign him to the Political dust bin of history. Thanks for coming Malcolm.
    http://tinyurl.com/ybl7jr2g

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Fake news coming from John Alexander who is desperately trying to win the seat of Bennelong from a raging refreshed Kristina Kennelly, Mr insider, as we read he shared a picture of himself and four volunteers “chatting to local residents” on fixed line telephones.The problem was, the phones weren’t plugged in, and commenters noticed right away. and Twitter and Facebook lit up. I am calling the score so far 30-Love, Kristina’s way. John will have to up his game or maybe call for new “balls” if he is to have a ghost of a chance.
    http://tinyurl.com/y9v4rtbo

    • The Outsider says:

      Good one, Henry!

      Nobody could accuse the LNP of being plugged into the electorate.

      I reckon that KKK deserves a shot at representing the good folks of Bennelong.

  • The Outsider says:

    Re US politics, it’s good to see a number of prominent federal Republicans disown Roy Moore, in the wake of the sexual allegations against him. It’s a pity that Alabama Republicans haven’t taken a similarly principled stand.

    Hopefully, Moore will be thrashed at the upcoming election and there’ll be a trend away from Steve Bannon-supported candidates.

  • The Outsider says:

    I can’t say that I’m overly excited about the prospect of a Bill Shorten-led government. However, anything’s better than the mess we’ve been witnessing over the last four years, or so.

    I’d be curious to learn about the LNP MP who’s threatened to resign unless Malcolm Turnbull is replaced with a “true conservative”. Good riddance to the MP, I say. One good thing about the Turnbull Government is that some of the more extreme elements within it, e.g., Eric Abetz and Kevin Andrews, have been rightly marginalized.

    Interesting times ahead, particularly if the LNP puts up tax cuts at the election.

  • Tracy says:

    So the old bastard resigned under threat of impeachment, bit of a shame really.
    Just seen bits of Abbott’s yak with Credlin, he used the words “ego” and “putting themselves first”……….guess he would know.

  • Boadicea says:

    So Mugabe has resigned. I wonder where they will ship him to? Surely he can’t hang around. But nothing would surprise.
    The people are celebrating – but it’s worth quoting a news source, viz:
    “the overthrow of Mugabe is not as a result of the protests of an oppressed nation – but rather the squabble amongst the ruling elite over the succession”
    That’s pretty ominous. The “ruling elite” were Mugabe’s henchmen who were totally complicit in the injustices metered out on their people.

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