Humble servant of the Nation

Shorten’s cunning stunt

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We should be grateful to Labor, Bill Shorten and Chris Bowen for one thing at least. They have switched the Canberra vaudeville to off at least for a few days and taken the nation to a place where we can once again discuss the relative merits and deficits of government and opposition rather than standing aghast at the tawdry comings and goings in the nation’s capital.

Indeed, it was such an abrupt departure from the freak show that one cartoonist, musing on the difficulties of drawing a cartoon on the humour free zone of franking credits yesterday, took to social media to implore Barnaby Joyce to “do something.”

Let’s start with what Shorten’s announcement isn’t. It isn’t taxation reform in any substantial way. The Australian taxation system is and will continue to be unnecessarily complex and complicated, an ongoing garden party for accountants and lawyers but dismally incomprehensible to almost every other Australian.

A week or so ago I joked that Shorten’s media advisers should instruct him to have a long lie in, go into the office late, take the rest of the day off and continue to do so until the next election. Cynically, this is perhaps Shorten’s best pathway to the Lodge.

Before the last election, Labor determined to get a lot of policy into the public domain and while they fell short of forming government, the view is the party’s strategy was the right one. After the 2013 landslide win for the Coalition, Labor’s policy rollout in 2016 put them within one seat of forming minority government.

The Shorten tax proposal is more of the same with an eye to the next federal election.

As Adam Creighton observed in today’s Australian, “Australia’s tax system is shockingly tilted in favour of older, wealthier people, with little justification. Without a proper overhaul, in an era of stagnant wage growth and elevated house prices, that only fuels resentment.”

Labor’s proposals mine that resentment deep and hard. The government’s rhetoric then and now of a Shorten-Labor faux class war does not paint even half the picture. The old resentments between haves and have nots certainly exist and are palpable in the electorate but they find deeper expression across generational divides, among those who despair about housing affordability in the major capital cities with inflation stalking tepid wage growth.

Put succinctly, if by soulless marketing demographics, Shorten’s approach pits Baby Boomers v the rest — the Millennials, the Gen X-ers, the Gen Y-ers and whatever other absurd monikers the marketing folk attach to people these days. Whatever, the iron laws of arithmetic tell us there are more of them than there are of the boomers and in politics, that is enough to win elections.

The take home message is that Labor believes self-funded retirees do not as a rule vote Labor and the political consequences are likely to be minimal. Little downside, lots of upside is the prevailing view within the party at this point in the political cycle.

Labor’s proposal pushes the government further into a corner. Malcolm Turnbull knows he cannot get his company tax cuts through the Senate and has gone to a Plan B of personal income tax cuts but these will come at the expense of adding to the budget deficit and with it, the government’s claims of superior economic stewardship become sorely tested. Ongoing personal tax cuts of any impressive magnitude are almost impossible to fund without wholesale tax reform. The government will be left to tinker at the edges, leaving a benefit to average wage-earning folk of the packet of Chicken Twisties and can of diet Coke variety.

Bear in mind, the 2018-19 Budget will almost certainly be the Turnbull government’s last before the next election. A half Senate election is due no later than 19 May, 2019 (the Reps by 2 November, 2019) and one very much doubts the Turnbull government would create a circumstance where the punters would be obliged to trudge off to the polls twice in one year. Just as likely is a federal election in the latter part of this year.

To paraphrase Black Adder, Bill Shorten has “a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel.” And without wanting to press the Vaudeville activation button, that weasel is Chris Bowen. Bowen is cast from the NSW right, an economic policy wonk and Keating acolyte. While he is invariably across his brief, it is his skills as a salesman that often fall short.

The reforms-that-aren’t approach is bold, and boldness or courage is not always rewarded in politics as it often veers into callow stupidity when the numbers are scrutinised and fall short or the government of the day spends each and every day picking the policy off to the point where an opposition is left befuddled and paralysed with embarrassment.

But if Chris Bowen can pull it off, Labor has just taken a step closer to forming the next government.

 This article was first published at The Australian on 14 March 2018

575 Comments

  • smoke says:

    a regulation problem orright….sheesh, sort out these unproductive money flows ffs

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EC0G7pY4wRE

  • Dwight says:

    Now there’s a life lesson. Be truthful to FBI agents, even if you were the deputy director. Saw a report where the OIG has canned 17 other agents in the last couple of years for “lack of candor”. McCabe is just the highest ranking.

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      Politics brutal in the USA now Dwight, many falling including FBI persons who most likely thought they had a job for life. Cheers

      • Dwight says:

        Henry I think the big question to ask is “why”. McCabe tossed away a 20-year distinguished career. Strzok will go soon, already in disgrace. Why would these people do this? What possible reward was worth the risk? Or did they think the Clintons would cover for them should she get elected? That’s the best guess.

        The Clinton’s leave ruined people in their wake–have since Bill was governor of Arkansas.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    I say BASSMAN, I came across your Mar 15, 9.32pm post and noted that you listed 8 instances of government expenditure cuts either planned or already effected. I was sorry to see that the deeming changes have cost you a quid mate. Same thing happened to me. But I took the philosophical view that ‘what goes up must come down’ and besides, I still manage to get 3 feeds a day if I’m lucky.

    But just as an aside and apropos nothing you have referred to above, did you know that pigs have 12 teats?

  • wraith says:

    @ Boa
    And then the South African government has the cheek to be offended. WTF? We have seen it all before, and it is not pretty. Bloody Horrifying actually. I think it should be made well known that we will offer asylum, and not be ashamed of doing it.
    cheers.

    • Tracy says:

      My cousin and her husband had a successful cabinet making business taken off them in Zimbabwe, their kids were “collected” from school to encourage them to part with it, the only people it really hurt were the 20 employees.
      They started again in the UK and won’t be going back, SA seems determined to go down the Zimbabwe path, tribalism and corruption a disastrous mix

    • Boadicea says:

      Indeed Wraith. It’s appalling to watch this unfold – when South Africans, of all colours, held so much hope when Zuma was booted out. This is an awful setback – I still can’t believe it.

  • Huger Unson says:

    How’s your cache of canned food, Jack?
    DHS and FBI characterize this activity as a multi-stage intrusion campaign by Russian government cyber actors who targeted small commercial facilities’ networks where they staged malware, conducted spear phishing, and gained remote access into energy sector networks. After obtaining access, the Russian government cyber actors conducted network reconnaissance, moved laterally, and collected information pertaining to Industrial Control Systems (ICS).
    From https://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/alerts/TA18-074A

  • Mack the Knife says:

    Far be it for me to poo poo the seriousness of the current topic, which is important to many, but when you look at what is happening around the globe, read mainly the northern hemisphere, the problems discussed here with brain farts our low rent, small minded political minatures come up with just seem laughable. Billy, Bowen, Lee Rhiannon, Malcolm, Potato head, sheesh, give me a break. How boring is Australia?
    When I think about Trump, North Korea, Putin coming up for another election and pounding his chest with hypersonic missiles, Britain trying their best to derail him, Saudi threatening to develop the bomb, still conventionally bombing the crap out of Yemen by the way, seen the planes heading there lately on a daily basis, Iran, still a possible problem, though local. What have I forgotten? Oh, mass shootings in the US (had a few good arguments with a couple of good old boys about that lately), Nerve gases & spiking meals in restaurants (yes or no? good spy story), world hunger, drug resistant bacterial infections, climate change, possible magnetic pole flip (how the hell am I going to drill a horizontal gas well if that happens?), the disaster that is Africa, and not getting any better, the used plastic problem, NSW & Victoria re-cycling industry a disaster and has been for a while, pollution causing burn-offs in Indonesia and Malaysia etc, etc, etc.

    But Boadicea, don’t you and your Tassie friends go burning any dead wood now, that would be a catastrophe for the environment.

    • Mack the Knife says:

      Oh, did I forget Syria, the disaster that is Iraq post-Saddam, the Kurdish / Turkey blackmail question, the EU mess with Brexit a big ?

      Just goes on and on, “we live in interesting times” doesn’t seem to cover it anymore.

      • Tracy says:

        Junker giving his “monster” Selmeyer a nice new promotion, or two
        I dare anyone to imply the EU isn’t transparent and democratic, well Junker does anyway.

    • Penny says:

      I agree with all that MtK….and there’s also been a cyclone hit Darwin, but no-one down south seems to give a rats..Pretty messy from what I hear and another one said to be looming next week.
      We’re flying in to Darwin in 3 weeks, let’s hope it’s all right by then. I know that probably makes me sound self-interested but we have an apartment there!!

      • Dwight says:

        Got a picture texted this arvo from my friend in Darwin–showed some debris in her backyard, but the lights are on, and the wine was still cold, so she’s fine.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          Copped a belting though. Saw some footage last night.

        • Penny says:

          There’s talk of another one hitting next week, Thursday or Friday…..this time a Cat 4. There is signicant damage caused by fallen trees. Stories from friends (who stupidly didn’t take it seriously and went out in it) show just how complacent Darwinites have become about cyclones.

    • Boadicea says:

      No worries MtK! 😁
      Very good friend is an emeritus PhD in oceanography and climate science and has studied both here in Tassie for 30 years. He tells me that as long as I’m not ripping out old growth forests i can have my fire. But we will have a coffee and discuss the why’s and wherefores of carbon release!
      Dead wood is being burned off everywhere at the moment – we don’t need catastrophic fires as we had two years ago.
      All good!

      • Mack the Knife says:

        Used to be a rule of thumb here, dead ironbark for firewood, but it has to be dead for 10 years or more, no soot, lots of heat.

        • Razor says:

          Great for cooking a camp oven to MTK. Only one better for coals and that’s gidgee.

        • Milton says:

          Ironbark is the go, Mack. knowing how to start and keep a fire going is a plus as well. hell, some fires not only warm a house, they also heat water, cook meals, dry clothes and possibly scare off evil spirits.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Voting commenced in South Australia and the Federal seat of Batman, Mr Insider. May the best team/person win. As the old saying goes “vote early and vote often”, something the oldies did do many moons ago.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Hoping Ged can get up in Batman. She’s a good candidate. Libs in minority govt in SA but damn hard to predict.

      • Penny says:

        Agreed JTI, Ged would be an absolute asset to Batman

        • Jack The Insider says:

          She got home and as HK Jack told us a week or so ago, she would have enjoyed the support of the old Znorthcote SL firm from the 70s. The Greens in fighting would not have helped. Looks like Libs will form government in SA and probably will get the 24 to form a majority.

          • John O'Hagan says:

            An odd feature of the result is that (AIUI) the swings went the opposite way to the trends most pundits were going on about; that is, swings went to the Greens in the blue-collar north of the seat towards Reservoir, and to Labor in the hipsterised southern parts towards Northcote. So that particular narrative didn’t play out, although that won’t prevent it from being retold anyway.

            • jack says:

              Always hard to know the cause of these swings in voting, but Jack is right, the old warhorses of the SL were out in force in Northcote in a way they haven’t been for a good while.

              I think the march to voting Greens is largely a result of continuing demographic change spreading north, and what happened south of the hipster proof fence may be a result of the resurgence of interest and support from those old stalwarts.

              This might be a start of reversing the trend or it could be personal to a good candidate. Ged’s family has deep connections to old Labor and to the Labor players of the 70s 80s 90s.

          • Penny says:

            Probably time for a change in government in SA, but Jay Weatherill does get a big tick from a lot of political commentators for the fact that he did stick up for South Australians and make an effort to look at alternative energy.

            One of the funniest things I have seen this morning is MT saying the vote reflects confidence in the governments energy policy…..umm what energy policy? Then he closed his eyes., perhaps saying a small prayer.
            And I thought the line was when State Labor/Liberal parties get in “this election was fought on State issues only”

      • Penny says:

        Yaaay Ged…..

  • Boadicea says:

    That stuff going on at Trinity Grammar is getting interesting. It deserves a column from you, Jack!

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Have discussed it with others. Find it a bit boring tbh.

      • Penny says:

        I agree, how long can this go on for? A matter for the Trinity stakeholders and that’s all. Who seriously cares?

        • Carl on the Coast says:

          Penny – “Who seriously cares?’ …….. What ?! No solidarity in the pedagogic creed?

          Brownie, his students and parents, past and present cares. As do the parents at Santa Sabina in NSW with gender fluidity being eased into the curriculum.

          It appears a sense of illegitmate historical revisionism appears to be taking hold throughout our centres of learning.

          • Penny says:

            I still don’t care Carl, sorry….oh and by the way you will find there is no solidarity in the pedagogic creed , we all have different opinions on what works with students. There is definitely no solidarity in the Universities ai have worked at overseas Carl, it’s every Professor for themselves.

      • Boadicea says:

        Quite silly. These parents pay a fortune for their kids to experience discipline, and strict uniform rules etc.
        The kid pitches up with inappropriate hairdo and gets a fringe cut.
        Jesus when i look back at the discipline the nuns metered out on us that’s nothing! Hair grows FFS. The kid was probably being a prat.

        • Dismayed says:

          $30K per year plus $5 million per year taxpayer funds. this coalition have again cut overall education spending but ensured the Private schools get much more than the Public system. who was talking about class warfare?

      • John O'Hagan says:

        Agree. A storm in a fancy taxpayer-subsidised Wedgwood teacup.

    • BASSMAN says:

      Marist Brothers used to do things like that…and much worse!

      • Boadicea says:

        Indeed Bassy. I had a terrible time with the nuns.

        • BASSMAN says:

          Releasing their repressed sexual anxieties like the Micks.They were such cruel bastards.They used to deliberatel pick on slow learner kids to answer difficult questions and then beat them up for not knowing the answers…..sadism

  • Dwight says:

    Bill’s always been a cunning runt. I’ll just let that sit there.

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