Humble servant of the Nation

Wentworth, you’re stepping in it

SHARE
, / 16562 362

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

  • Milton says:

    Assange a “cat’s-paw” who helped deliver Trump. A hero of the left who hides in a bedroom.
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/mar/29/ecuador-julian-assange-wikileaks-embassy

  • Milton says:

    Rudd blames Murdoch for our coup culture, as well as an article by Peter Hartcher. The sad bastard has never managed a cohesive line of argument in his life. Like when he wrote a thesis for The Monthly bemoaning neo-liberalism whilst conveniently ignoring its principle instigator, Paul Keating. Rudd shouldn’t be in the papers, he should be in therapy. He’s responsible, as is his party, for the deaths and detentions of thousands, many of them children, yet continues to give advise on the matter. He also lambasts Swan yet never sacked the dud. He needs to make an apology for himself.
    ps. Who can forget those embarrassing days when he’d politicise the Dept. of the Treasury by rolling out Ken Henry to standby during a press conference. Terrible stuff.

  • BASSMAN says:

    DUTTS in FULL FLIGHT…like a dog with a bone…“If you want to see children in detention, vote for Labor. If you want to see deaths at sea again, vote for Labor. If you want to see those 17 detention centres, reopen, vote for Labor,” the Home Affairs Minister says. SCARE! SCARE! It won’t work anymore Peter. The mob have worked you out.
    Dutts quickly forgets the over 300 that drowned on Howard’s watch, the 600 more that died as a consequence of his blocking of the Malaysian option along with Abbott. Abbott? Oh that was a mistake he fessed up. Just ‘hard politics’ like the carbon tax lie.

    • Razor says:

      Actually the mob are listening Bassy. Electricity Bill has one term if the boats start again. I can tell you for a fact they are poised and waiting in Indonesia! Little Billy will have to keep his left hand very busy pushing the lovies away and hold firm or he’s gooooorn!

      • Milton says:

        One term anyway, Razor. The unions will tighten the squirrel grip for starters and then his half thought out bubbles on negative gearing and other nonsense will finish him off. Abbott would have had his party remove him a good while back and instead Turnbull turned him into a contender. Shameful and a lot scary.

      • BASSMAN says:

        Electricity Bill eh? Wholesale electricity prices have double under who? The Looters of course. Much cheaper when we had the price on carbon.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      You seem to be engaging in a few flights of fancy yourself BASSY. Make sure you keep that sleeping bag well zipped mate.

  • BASSMAN says:

    BODHISATTVA…..YOU SAY:-“The detainees will at last be taken off Manus and Nauru”- Tes but only at the expense of trashing New Zealand Foreign Policy by creating a 2 tiered society-those that CAN take a holiday, visit relatives and those who cannot. What about those with relatives in Oz. Are Dutts and Morrison gonna split the families (as he has done for years) by leaving half of a family here and sending the rest to NZealand? Cruel Looters! And here we have Dutts again ranting that a few refugees who arrived in leaky boats are ‘a threat to our national security’. What tripe. What utter crap. Sharks and cars are more dangerous. More people die from falling out of bed!

  • BASSMAN says:

    Paul Kelly must be embarrassed….The sexual abuse inquiry instigated by Julia Gillard is probably one of the most significant of this generation. It was shameful at the time that Paul Kelly (once the doyen of journalists) in The Australian described it as a “a serial exercise in populist politics and policy ignorance” (The Australian, November 17th, 2012). As editor at large then and now, he must be highly embarrassed and ashamed by the success of the National Apology.

  • Secret Squirrel says:

    I notice Peter King , a victim of MalTurn’s branch stacking, has been out and about a lot lately. I suspect he may be making a move to stand for Wentworth once again at the next election.

    Also, I presume Phelpsy is going to get a pretty good pay packet from the AEC money for votes scheme. I wonder if she’s going to make a big donation to GetUp?

  • Wendy Crofts says:

    I am looking forward to my Electricity bills coming down so far all we have got is talk from the government and no action the bills are the same.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Dear Wendy, have you seen any Pigs Flying of late? Cheers

    • BASSMAN says:

      I just wish I could understand my bill. That would be a great start!
      The consumer magazine CHOICE recently tried to sort out the best deal on electricity. They had a couple
      of Ph.D’s two engineers a scientist and some consumer advocates. They spent days on the task and still had difficulty coming up with the best option so how the F are poor dumbos like me and the little old lady next door gonna work it out. The government and all their scientists should be working it out for us.

  • jack says:

    Leigh Sales and Warnee,

    brilliant, he was a great great cricketer, compelling to watch and just about saved Test cricket, and the interview is a gem, she really gets to the guts of his talent.

    of course she got a bollocking from the ABC types in advance as he is not suitable fare for their delicate sensibilities.

  • jack says:

    a very very NYC clip
    tinyurl.com/ycphatn7

Leave A Reply to jack Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published.

PASSWORD RESET

LOG IN