I have a rule when it comes to recently fallen politicians. Don’t stick the slipper in after they’ve left the arena. It’s unseemly and a touch callous.
I figure once they’ve moved, often ignominiously, out of the line of fire, they become non-combatants.
Truth be told, it’s more of a guideline. Happily, readers, in the case of the existentially forgetful and terminally hapless David Feeney, I am prepared to make an exception.
David Feeney resigned as the member for Batman yesterday. Sadly, he misplaced his letter of resignation. He did show the media a bus ticket he has had in his wallet since 1993. He’s going home now. Wherever that is.
Some of Feeney’s colleagues offered trite condolences and tepid expressions of support yesterday but it was impossible not to notice the gritted teeth. In Adelaide yesterday, deputy leader, Tanya Plibersek, said Feeney had made a “fine contribution” to the party but when asked if he was resigning, replied, “I’ll let David speak for himself.”
Praise any fainter than that would be in an induced coma.
In 1983 Batman was the safest Labor seat in the country, safer even than Bob Hawke’s seat of Wills just across St George’s Road. Batman has been in Labor hands since 1934, save a brief period when former Labor member for Batman, Sam Benson, was expelled from the party over his continued support for the Vietnam War. Benson won the seat as an independent in 1966 only to lose it narrowly to the colourful former Collingwood mayor, Horrie Garrick in 1969. Horrie, dragged the seat back to the safest end of the Labor pendulum until he got rolled in a preselection barney and was replaced by Brian Howe in 1977.
Now it will go to the Greens in a by-election which could be held as early as March 10. The only thing that got Feeney over the line in 2016 was Liberal preferences. The Libs will almost certainly run dead in the by-election and that will be that for Labor’s long and occasionally illustrious history in Batman.
As we’ve seen in the seat of Melbourne, when Labor loses to the Greens in an inner-city electorate, those seats don’t come back.
Brian Howe was the last genuine local to represent Labor in Batman.
He was a thoroughly decent man who became deputy Prime Minister in the Hawke-Keating governments. While he was Minister for Housing, he spent three months living in public housing to see for himself what the problems were and how they could be fixed. I’d say imagine that from a politician today but we all know it is unimaginable.
Say what you like about Howe’s successor, Martin Ferguson and he has many critics within the Labor Party, indeed to the point where the WA state branch moved to expel him four years ago. In my experience, the vowelless Mar’n was always accessible. When he was a shadow minister I would call him for a quote and a yarn and if you rang early enough, Mar’n would pick up the phone himself. No protective press secretaries or chiefs of staff acting as political bollards.
But the fact remains he was parachuted into the seat in a factional deal that rolled the locals. He wasn’t even a Melbourne bloke. These things matter. A political party can’t keep doing this without losing support from the grassroots and the punters.
When Feeney was elbowed in, in another slippery multi-factional deal that saw him go from the Senate to the Reps — from the vegetables to the animals — the local branches had been treated as door mats again. It was the beginning of the end.
I’ll call it now. Labor is gone in Batman. Ged Kearney might have stood a chance a decade ago but not now. The seat, once the jewel in the Labor crown, is never coming back.
Feeney has been the butt of many jokes and God knows, I’ve written plenty myself. In another time and under different circumstances he would have been a Labor hero. A campaign director with three state election wins under his belt — two in South Australia and one in Victoria where the Bracks government won by a record margin. A big parliamentary career beckoned.
Instead he leaves politics as a laughing stock with the once safest seat in the country about to slip through Labor’s hands.
Feeney is fated to walk the Earth, knocking on doors offering a polite if by now unnecessary political spiel to the punters, “Bill Shorten and the Labor team have some great policies. I’d like a moment of your time to talk about them. Also, is this my house?”
This article was first published in The Australian on 2 February, 2018.
“There is no avoiding the simple mathematics that if Turnbull succeeds in pushing between 25 and 60 million tonnes of subsidised new coal into a flat world market [and] by focusing on … jobs in North Queensland [Senator Canavan, and Adani operative Palaszczuk] has ignored the fact that his plans will destroy them in southern Queensland and NSW. Minister Canavan’s billion dollar support for the Galilee coal basin is not just playing state against state, its mate against mate.”
“In buying a 99-year lease over the world’s largest coal port my investors considered all of the likely market risks. But the risk we couldn’t factor in was the sovereign risk that an Australian government would seek to distort the market by subsidising a new competitor into existence.” – Jonathan van Rooyen, general manager investment at The Infrastructure Fund.
“Such a large investment would likely erode confidence to invest in coal elsewhere, with negative implications for investment and production in the Hunter region, traditionally Australia’s largest thermal coal exporter” – Adrian Hart, associate director of construction, maintenance and mining at BIS Oxford Economics
Job creation will occur primarily at the offices of Adani’s tax haven in the British Virgin Islands.
Razor says: February 7, 2018 at 7:21 pm “We’re getting ripped out by multi-national electricity companies JB because the climate change guff opened up a nice little earner for them.” This proves you refuse to accept facts. Transmission costs account for 60% of all Power bills. Green schemes etc in total account for 6% of costs of bills. The other running cost of business account for the rest. You are unable to accept fact because it does not fit your dishonest ideology. No surprises.
Razor says: February 7, 2018 at 11:47 am As usual you have to lie to try and make a point. You cant help yourself. Pathological dishonesty is your true trait. Adani do not have finance for the scam and the Australian taxpayer should not have to pay for it. Each job will cost over $190,000 per job to taxpayers. Where is your thoughts for the 50000 who have already lost their jobs because your coalition would not support the automotive industry for $250 million a year which was adding $20 billion a year into the economy.
I am not against Private Health I just don’t believe the industry should be subsidised $6 billion per year. I am not against Private education but I don’t believe they should be funded at the level they are. Both Health and Education services should also be subject to GST. Gas is the transition fuel. coal has 2 maybe 3 decades left that is it. the adani scam is the worst thing for the coal industry in this country. Fully automated and would cause job losses in other coal regions.
I believe that coking coal for steelmaking will required long into the future.
This years Tool of the Year or Tooly award goes to……………wait for it………wait for it…………stop fretting Dismal you got runner up………goes to Justin Trudeau!
You’d think his school teacher would have taught him better than this!
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/the-times/justin-trudeau-proves-hes-a-man-of-the-peoplekind/news-story/0ed09997c37e7ce71a1858e282af7639
Good god Razor what a shocker, “Peoplekind” instead of the old “Mankind” and that’s why POTUS Trump is so popular he calls it for what it is and it has resonated with the people. Justin needs to find his gonads imho. Cheers
I think hes gone mad? How ridiculous
Maybe he’s growing up a little?
“Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau admits he shouldn’t be making stupid jokes in public after a quip last week prompted the scorn of conservative commentators in the United States and elsewhere.”
Naw, he’ll revert to form.
revert to form??? jerkkind?
Just how desperate are the mad right to draw attention away from the mad POTUS?
Anyhow Razor old boy, this should you leave you conflicted if secretly aroused.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4702136/Greens-senator-poses-Canadan-PM-Justin-Trudeau.html
Lost your sense of humour, Razor?
Wasn’t said in jest TO.
‘Bundle of Joyce’ one of the commercial channels put on their banner this morning. Quite liked that. (Fluke).
It was quite well-known hereabouts during the by-election that Barnaby had let a stray tadpole go. Still surprised it was kept quiet for so long.
Sorry, it was the dreaded Tele. How could I miss that?
Jeepers, JB. Maybe Elon will put a man on the moon 💫
Dear sweet Mr Baptiste is waiting for Kimmie or Vlad to do it then it CAN be done, Boadicea we know where he’s coming from. Cheers
Er no, unless that man is dead. The Russians were planning on having a go at it in 2030 ish, but I doubt it. It’s not as easy as they made it look.
Regarding the extra-marital affair that appears to be raising some eybrows around the place, one is reminded that Barnaby Joyce ain’t no Bob Hawke.
Spot on Carl old Bob was a trouser man indeed wasn’t he mmmm I like Barnaby. Cheers
Is.
Not much of a red herring to see in that post Carl.
Has anyone found David Feeney yet Jack?
JB, your apparent ignorance of the health value of the humble onion is akin to the stupidity exhibited by those who recently ranted that the US’s hurricane Irma was nature’s revenge on Donald Trump.
A regular dose of raw onions scavenge the free radicals from your body and thus reduce the risk of gastric ulcers. That’s why I suggested our Dismayed may consider ingesting a feed of them every now and then. It may assist in clearing up the SOL he occasionally appears to present with on here.
How do you get it so a about face every time? I said there was nothing wrong with but the bloke made himself look like a clown, I mean a bigger clown, by doing it.
I’m British but I feel bad about it so let me stay in Parliament? Sheesh.
Indeed, very sad story – but she’s still ineligible to sit in parliament…..
Well if he gets re-elected he’ll have to swear allegiance to the English Queen. Go figure.
If it is genuinely the case that Susan Lamb cannot secure paperwork required by British authorities from her parents because of the circumstances of their marriage breakdown then it is one more argument towards an amendment of s44.
I keep saying it: this thing is going to keep biting until everyone accepts the need for a referendum. It’s not about letting lazy pollies off the hook from their obligations – it’s about ensuring that Australians can sit in their own parliament without their eligibility being torpedoed by the vagaries of foreign law.
It’s not like it’s an issue undeserving of a referendum. I mean, most referendum calls are about matters that range from irrelevant to downright strange. At least this is a matter of substance. Or have we become a country so obsessed by the trivial that we just don’t have the seriousness of mind to deal with substantive matters?
Good comment, TBLS.