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.
John Alexander, now contesting the Federal seat of Bennelong, telling the ribald jokes many years ago for which he has just apologised for Mr Insider. I am tipping Kristina Keneally to take the seat on December 16th.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqCycTd0GN4
Funny how that video suddenly pops up out of the blue
Clip has been deleted already but can tell you it was not his best moment at all. Cheers
Not excusing it HB, the SMH has gone quiet on Keneally when they used to be quite eager to hold her to account for what went on during her premiership.
Gawd, Jack, 20-year-old bad jokes re-surfacing. I’ve got a suite of grovelling “regrets” at the ready, for a small fee.
I *sincerely* hope (and pray) there isn’t a clip of Turnbull smirking at the “Is it bigger than the bread bin?” gag from The Office.
Truly pathetic from Shorten. Bloody hell – why would Alexander even want to return to this circus.
Bella – re your 21/11 @11.23pm, Bill has his shortcomings just like any other politician, irrespective of their ideological leanings.
Butter probably doesn’t melt in his mouth either.
All the best
Carl
The Ashes about to commence, there may be some disharmony in this household over the next couple of months depending on whose winning/losing.
It is rather confusing with my family background , maybe it’s best I sit this one out or sit on the fence …
Re the fence “thing” take a cushion.
Well I’ve learnt through all this that I’m a dual citizen too. Don’t think I’ll bother with parliament though!
It’s not fair really , I was born here it makes me feel half Australian …
Australia – a land of dual nationalities and conflicted loyalities.
ABC’s Antony Green the man to watch on Saturday night re the QLD State Election, Mr Insider. My money is on sitting Premier and giant slayer (anyone remember Campbell Newman) Anastasia Palaszczuk, “travelling” nicely as the field is about to round the corner into the home straight. Go Anastasia you good thing, wipe that plastic smile off the LNP wally Tim Nichols!
I’m not so sure HB. My kids live in Qld and are pretty disillusioned with Anastasia. I think they voted Labor previously, but they will probably revert back to voting Green – mainly because of the Adani thing. (They are both ecologists).
Be proud you’ve got smart kids Boadicea, they’re thinking of their and their children’s future planet.
Thanks Bella. Yes they do make me proud.
Wonderful your kids living in my fabulous home state of QLD, Boadicea. Anastasia has played a very clever move on Adani making sure north QLD and South QLD are happy with her “statements”. She is a very shrewd operator indeed. Cheers
Yes, my ekderx aughter lives on Stradbroke Island HB. They enjoy a simple lifestyle up there – beautiful spot – bit way too hot for me other than the Winter months.!
Jeepers I must wear my glasses,when typing, especially on my phone which switches words when I’m not looking!
BRADMAN:-all of this sabre rattling by our cricketers is not good. Slagging off at the Poms all of the time, ridiculing them, saying the Poms will not win a test and degrading them is not a good for the game or our up and coming youngsters. FFS all the Poms have to do is get Warner and Smith cheaply and the rest will collapse like they always do. On top of this, Warnie is calling for a bodyline approach. How about everybody shutting their pipes and just doing the business before we are all scraping the egg of our faces? Less talk and no sledging.
Your ‘Fee For Service’ acronym seems out of place Bassy. Or was it something more degrading?
shabby huh?
Groan! Evil is in the eye of etc etc….attacking the man instead of the theme….carry on but please replace your policemans hat. Poms have dug in like I thought they would on a pitch that suits them.
C’mon aussie.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2qJLi5y2d2w
looks a good Ashes series,
both the captains are verging on greatness, an opener each in the same category, attacks pretty good,
it just might come down to whose also-rans play better.
Not far away from the first nut. I only know this because there are 12 ads running one after the other on Ch.9 at the moment. England’s batting looks suspect with too much reliance on Cook and Root in particular. Doubts remain over Australia’s batting, too but it looks a little stronger. The thing that sets the two sides apart is the bowling. Australia’s is exceptional while as Punter says England’s best is behind them.
Not to mention the endless repeats of the same ball, but silence is golden I’ve turned the sound down.
HAHHA Idiots are still calling for new coal fired plants defying the fact it is not needed and would cost more for QLD. oxymoron’s -clever cons.
http://reneweconomy.com.au/queensland-election-energy-numbers-say-no-to-new-coal-17496/
Dismayed, you’re a champion. You have a good brain, you use it, and you use it well. We could have done with a million like you forty years ago, and it may just have made a difference. But that’s unlikely, the money would have just pushed back harder and bulldozed us all into shallow graves.
We, the stupid men, born into captivity, have grown into even more stupid old men have sold yours and the younger still generations into oblivion.
Watch this video, “The Whole Story in 23 Minutes, ” to the end for the big picture.
Live passionately, intensely, in the moment, be excellent.
https://guymcpherson.com/
And give ’em heaps, and I mean give ’em heaps.
I say JB, not sure if you have digested all of the contents of your climate guru, Guy McPherson’s Oslo visit link. So I was wondering if you had noticed a reference in the blurb associated with the sale of his doom and gloom books, an offer to purchase “mugs, tote bags, iPhone cases” and ostensibly associated tatty paraphernalia, probably made in China using power from coal-fired power stations.
Irony at its best eh? And why would one wish to purchase such items anyway, if the end of the world is nigh? Or am I missing something me old mate?
https://www.lookhuman.com/design/344848-i-believe-in-climate-change-because-i-m-not-an-idiot/mug
Are you missing something? Half a brain?
Oh dear! Seeking refuge from reality in a heavy duty plastic coffee mug. One lump or two me old mate?
Seriously this coalition is a disgrace. Forget little Billy Shorten stealing ideas the coalition are stealing from future generations.
http://reneweconomy.com.au/esb-modeling-confirms-neg-designed-to-shut-door-on-renewables-74093/