Humble servant of the Nation

Wentworth, you’re stepping in it

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The denizens of Wentworth gather tomorrow at polling booths to determine the fate of Israel, the Iran Nuclear Agreement, the future of Judeo-Christian civilisation and the proposed skate park at Rushcutters Bay.

Fortunately, most Australians will not be obliged to ponder such weighty matters (I’m on the fence with the skate park). One thing we can be certain of is a seat the Liberals retained in 2016 with the sitting member receiving 62 per cent of the primary vote, will go to preferences for the first time since 2004.

In speaking to a number of Wentworthians this morning, the prevailing view was one of utter exhaustion and occasional wild-eyed fury at a process that had stuffed their letter boxes with political bumpf and dragged them away from the dinner table with robocalls from the nation’s politically outspoken. The only notable absentee on the hustings was Bill Shorten who remains despised.

Fearing a heavy loss in the by-election, the Prime Minister weighed in with a thought bubble about getting the removalists in to lumber the desks and chairs on to a truck in Tel Aviv and have the phones diverted to Jerusalem.

Perhaps this should come as no surprise coming from a man who has supported five different AFL teams by my count and has the scarves, jumpers and baseball caps in his walk-in wardrobe to prove it.

This loose affinity to matters of great tribal significance will not play well in Melbourne where one’s football team is decided virtually at birth and changing allegiances is not permitted. Ever.

But in Wentworth, I suppose, it is no great sin. After all, the former member for Wentworth, now of no fixed address, had difficulty remembering the name of the AFL team that kick a footy around in his electorate, nor the NRL mob that do the same, despite the fact Rooster headquarters were less than a scrambled field goal snap away from his electoral office.

I always imagined the former PM wandering into the SCG and proclaiming, “I sure like footy but where are all the ponies?”

Missing you already, Malcolm.

The 16-candidate ballot for Wentworth contains more than your fair share of nut jobs, weirdos and narcissists. All socio-political bases appear to be covered. Earth, wind, fire, death, taxes, vegetable rights and casual sex for money. All the colours of the ‘bow.

Obviously, in Wentworth, the arts are represented, too, predictably by the Arts Party. It’s just as well. In Wentworth over the last six weeks, too much burnt umber has been barely enough.

There’s even a Katter Australia Party candidate, Robert Callanan, who would have rolled his sleeves up and regaled Wentworthians with horrific tales of Filipino banana imports but was pulled up after it was revealed he had until recently been a director of a company that shared an ABN with a swanky Sydney brothel.

Apparently, Bob the Hat’s mob don’t go for those sorts of big city shenanigans and told Callanan to tell his story walking. Alas, his disendorsement came too late for the printing of the ballot and Callanan and the KAP remain entwined on the ballot and appear right up there on top to suck up the donkey vote.

I have to say I’m a little envious of all the attention Wentworthians have received. The most excitement we ever had around my electoral neck of the woods occurred when Angry Anderson was preselected as the National Party candidate. How I had longed for the short, bald tattooed one to turn up at my local polling booth in a styrofoam Batmobile. Alas, I would be disappointed, and Anderson was never seen or heard of again.

All nuttiness aside, it will come down to three in Wentworth. It’s fair to say the Liberal candidate, Dave Sharma received the ultimate hospital handpass when he was preselected. It is also fair to say he fumbled it and has failed to get a kick since.

The big-ticket independent candidate, Kerryn Phelps, doesn’t seem to stand for much at all but has pledged, if elected, to go to Canberra and fight like hell for erm, not much at all.

The Labor candidate, Tim Murray, remains cheerfully optimistic, but this may only be due to the fact he hasn’t had to share a minibus with Bill Shorten for the last month.

The prevailing view of the Twitter idiocracy is Labor should be running dead in Wentworth, or more precisely, running deliberately third and thus gifting the seat to Phelps on preferences.

Honestly, if it was a horse race the stewards would have the swabbed the lot of them to within an inch of their lives.

Individual seat polling is unreliable but from what I’ve seen, I’d say Murray is in with an outside chance to take the seat and to his credit, he has stuck to the task. Politics can be an ugly business but it’s never uglier than when results are contrived through complex preference arrangements with candidates quietly taking a dive.

Win, lose or draw tomorrow, parliamentary members of the Liberal Party will rise on Sunday morning to feel a pervasive sense of despair at a visceral, almost cellular level. There will be an almighty swing against them. Heads will drop. Dark mutterings will be replaced by angry recriminations.

The long trudge to a general election has just got a whole lot tougher.

This article was published in The Australian 19 October, 2018.

362 Comments

  • Mack the Knife says:

    Just watching a film about Ronnie Kahn, food waste warrior. Pretty amazing how much goes to landfill and a north Qld banana farmer reporting 30% of his crop gets mulched and put back in the paddock because supermarkets won’t accept any blemishes on the fruit. Unreal. She is trying to stop the $10 billion waste and get it down to at least half that figure. The ABC reported the figure as $20 billion though, wtf?

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-06-06/food-waste-bill-tackled-by-ozharvest-founder-ronni-kahn/9831746

    • Bella says:

      It’s a huge problem to tackle without the growers agent and the big supermarket’s assistance & support when it’s needed.
      People are too precious about perfection and I for one am not choosy especially with staples like mangoes, bananas, berries & melons that I buy straight from the farm gate or the country markets. Tractor loads of interestingly shaped carrots & tomatoes are sold for a song.
      Everyone should help our farmers even if you have to drive further to do that. Ronnie Khan is a champion.🍓🍅🥝🥕🍉🍌

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    The Latest Newspoll reveals a massive drop in support for Morrison Government, Mr. Insider.
    In fact, it tells us ScoMo and his dysfunctional band of misfits will be no more come the Federal Election, including many of his Ministers like Dutton.
    The joy of this coming event is tempered by the stark fact that “Bruvver” Bill Shorten will be PM.
    https://tinyurl.com/yb9bxjzn

  • jack says:

    if I may correct myself, perhaps Julia G didn’t cause a by election, but i recall a swing away from labour of a but under 20%.

  • jack says:

    As to Wentworth a few observations if I may.

    Both Bob Hawke and Julia Gillard resigned from parliament after losing the Prime Ministership in the Party Room mid-term. At the subsequent by elections the swings against the governments were 19% or so.

    Haven’t spent much time in Sydney over the last ten years but did live in Wentworth for a long time. It’s not Eden-Monaro, thats for sure, but it’s not on Mars and I don’t think no lessons can be learned from it.

    I suspect it is the gayest, most Jewish electorate in Aus, and there are plenty of the very rich, and quite a few of the very very rich, but thats not everyone who lives there.

    That said, I think Nick Cater has a point about power prices and nature’s aircon. It’s a lot hotter in summer and colder in winter in Western Sydney, it is in Melbourne for that matter as well. I doubt that power bills are a really big issue in Wentworth, but then our tenants pay the power bill so i might be wrong.

  • jack says:

    Winx has drawn six, will be interesting to see how the two overseas horses go, she seems to have the locals covered.

    How was the ride from the Irish fella in the Caulfield Cup, he’s drawn 17 on the top weight, who misses the start by two, six or seven wide at the winning post the first time, still gets to one out one back, an 11 meeting suspension ample reward for that, gets a nice spell while they dawdle up the hill, spots the early move and goes with it and hangs on for the win.

    an 11 out of 10 effort that.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Can’t imagine her losing the Plate. Funny things happen at MV but I reckon the os horses might will struggle with the peculiarities of the track more.

      • jack says:

        Love the Valley, the climb from the school and nice camber on the bend sorts the good ones out from the others much more than Caulfield,

      • Razor says:

        Top weight may go close. I didn’t like Winks last ride. I just want her to win but for the first time I have a niggling doubt, particularly at Moonee Valley. Of all the metro tracks in Australia it doesn’t suit her regardless of her record there. You have to be up to be in at the Valley.

  • Milton says:

    I don’t think i’ll rush out and buy Rudd’s My version of History, part 2, as a brick is doing a fine job of keeping the gate open.. Surely he’s got another book or 3 in him.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Now there’s something you might like to put on your bucket list Milton. Read a book! There’s a first time for everything.

      • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

        Break it down, Mr. Baptiste dear Milton is a fellow QLDer and we have many Books here which we do read, from time to time.
        I might add in Milton’s defence I personally have seen him reading a Form Guide as well so “diversity” in our reading activities here in QLD is rife! Cheers P.S. Milton I am not adverse to accepting a small Remittance from you for this stirling defence of your good self against Mr. Baptiste’s outlandish charge!

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          When you say “many books” Henry ……………………………………
          And don’t give me that old horse s**t, I’ve seen ’em at the track in QLD, 60% of the time the form guide is upside down.
          Give ’em heaps.

        • Milton says:

          If that’s your best defence, Henry then I’m looking for a new lawyer.

      • Milton says:

        I find books a bit wordy, Jean. Why can’t I just link like you or ”cut and paste” like chicken little? And besides, with the world going to imminent shit in a bio-degradable hand bag, what’s the point of starting Kevin Rudd’s magnum opus(es) if I won’t find out how it ends?

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Good point. I cant imagine you getting through a whole book in ten years.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          PS Nothing but your ineptness is stopping you from linking or the cut and paste Milton. You couldn’t possibly lower the tone of your posts.

        • Boadicea says:

          I’ve decided to have a go at War and Peace . I’ve never met anyone who has finished it – my cousin says she started it 30 years ago and is still going. Character building I reckon.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Nah! It’s not too bad, just think of it a s three books in one folder.
            Your cousin took 30 years! Jesus , are you all retarded?

            Give ’em heaps.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            One thing you will appreciate from the characters in War and Peace is what a splendid idea the Russian revolution was.

  • jack says:

    a very New York clip that arrived in the inbox

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MDBgOyEN2OU

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    Here are some scenes, polling day Wentworth 2018

    https://climate.nasa.gov/vital-signs/carbon-dioxide/

    Ooops sorry, wrong link.

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    Goodoh. Suggestions?

  • BASSMAN says:

    Tony, Dutts….come out of hiding wherever you are You are needed by the Labor Party.
    They miss your daily wrecking interventions. Barnaby too-hurry up and get back to Leader..let’s have more in-fighting and disunity.

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