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National Times

Whatever it takes

July 7, 2010

Opinion

One of the many brutal lessons that Kevin Rudd should take from his short tenure as Prime Minister is that the style of political management adopted by Labor Premiers is not suited to national government.

In broad terms, State Labor's style of government is defined by an obsessive focus on the management of the daily media cycle to the point of manipulation, with shameless spin and personal vilification of opponents being the standard tools of trade.

Or as Labor luminary Graham Richardson put it so succinctly, Labor will do "whatever it takes" to retain power.

Some of the more skilled exponents of the Labor style have been Labor premiers Peter Beattie, Bob Carr, Steve Bracks, Mike Rann and Brian Burke.

Some Labor Premiers enjoyed relatively long tenure from the embrace of this formula.

However in a now familiar pattern, the factional bosses decide when a Premier's time is up. A change to a "new" leader is engineered and presented as a "new" face of what is magically a "new" government.

Running a state government is enormously challenging and difficult;however by definition it does not involve the range and complexity of issues confronting a federal government on a daily basis.

The pool of media in State press galleries is generally far smaller than the Canberra press gallery.

It should be far more difficult for a prime minister to seek to gloss over issues and problems through a total reliance on media spin.

Kevin Rudd was a skilled media performer who used the full range of State Labor techniques to build his popularity as Leader of the Opposition.

However, it eventually caught up with him as he tried in vain to talk his way out of the fundamental failings of his government.

At this early stage of the Gillard Government, it appears that the new prime minister has adopted the Labor standard, reminiscent of the early weeks of Kristina Keneally's installation as the first female Premier of NSW.

The focus was on glossy magazines and photo opportunities to distract the public from the unsightly dumping of a sitting prime minister by the factional bosses.

It is clear there is much more effort being put into presentation than into substance.

Take for example the announcement of a "deal" with the mining sector.

It was carefully stage managed, even to the point of letting the media know that champagne was delivered to the Cabinet room to celebrate the end of negotiations.

Ms Gillard announced that her deal on the mining tax lowered the rate, lifted the threshold, excluded all minerals bar iron ore and coal, exempted over 2,000 mining companies leaving just over 300 companies in the net, and yet that it would still collect $10.5 billion of the original $12 billion in tax revenue.

The numbers simply beggared belief but Labor knew it was enough to fill the 10 second grab on the nightly news and make a headline splash across the morning newspapers. Mission accomplished.

Days later, the Treasury conceded that it "massively underestimated" the take from the original super tax which would have been closer to $15 or $20 billion.

So the tax grab is still about the same because Treasury increased the forecasts for higher commodity prices.

As Treasury Head Ken Henry said "it is certainly convenient for the government".

Labor's announcement yesterday of new measures on border security has taken spin to entirely new levels.

Ms Gillard castigated those who suggested that seaworthy boats should be turned around and described any such policy as a "kind of evil".

Yet that is precisely what she espoused in 2002, "We think that it is important, important from a humanitarian perspective and important from a security perspective, that we do everything we can to disrupt people smuggling. And we think turning boats around that are seaworthy, that can make the return journey, and are in international waters, fits in with that."

Kevin Rudd's announcement in November 2007 that if he were elected, Labor would turn back seaworthy boats was defended vigorously by none other than Ms Gillard.

Ms Gillard also announced yesterday that she was in talks with East Timor's President Ramos Horta about "the possibility of establishing a regional processing centre for the purpose of receiving and processing of the irregular entrants to the region."

Yet this contradicts her own policy position in August 2007 where she vowed to close down all offshore processing and she maintained her absolute opposition to offshore processing - right up until yesterday's announcement.

However as Ms Gillard was the architect of Labor's failed border protection policy and has defended it for years, she can't now have it both ways.

She either didn't believe what she was saying then or she doesn't believe what she is saying now.

The now well honed strategy for Labor's re-election is to hoodwink the public into believing that the Rudd-and-Gillard Government is somehow different from the Rudd-now-Gillard Government.

Whatever it takes.

54 comments so far

  • A failed Shadow Treasurer, and key member of the Howard regime, which (never forget) existed only to support its mates such as ludicrously rich mining magnates and steal votes from One Nation, and which supported its eleven-year term ENTIRELY on spin, lying to the Australian public, getting caught out lying about refugees AND WMDs and expecting Australians to be grateful for it, displays a record amount of chutzpah even for her in writing this cheap point-scoring waffle. The bigger question is why the Herald is giving this piece oxygen in the first place.

    Oh, how oddly apt, my security code for posting this comment is "HATERS". You said it.

    Commenter
    feverpitch96
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 7:37AM
  • Given the headline, I thought you were going to be writing about your own side for a change.

    zzzzzzzzzzzzz

    Commenter
    jofek
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 8:05AM
  • A comedy piece, surely.Ms J Bishop would have to be the case book study in factions and tokenism.
    Ms Bishop, you are very lucky (politically ) that you are one of the girls , and from WA, otherwise you know that you wouldnt be where you are.
    What fairy tale non sense to believe that the LNP doesnt have factions. Of course they do.

    Commenter
    SlartiBF
    Location
    the bush
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 8:36AM
  • Julie, what you have to say re. the government's position on boat people is valid, however you leave out the fact that it was your own Howard government that turned this whole unimportant matter into an electorally divisive, demeaning squabble. Neither is this the only xenophobic mess that JH dragged Australia into. It would have more resonance with the Australian people if your side actually left the wedge politics behind and tried to reach a bipartisan agreement with the government on these ( manufactured ) contentious issues instead of seeking to divide and conquer. Do you really want the electorate perpetually divided and drifting further down the path of amerikan social dysfunction just so that your side can get a better than even go at power? After all, if they are as incompetent as you claim, the voters will throw them out soon enough. Try to think of your country rather than a fleeting political advantage.

    Commenter
    BillR
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 8:38AM
  • Please Julie, drop the ingenue act. Weren't you part of the government that took over a Tasmanian hospital, just because it was in a marginal seat? And an opposition who changes leaders and climate change policies every other week? And what was the reason for discarding Brendan Nelson and Malcolm Turnbull if not "whatever it takes" to win the next election? Because, if I remember rightly, they were both touted as very able leaders with vision and the full support of their deputy. Speaking of which, did you support Turnbull's policy on climate change before you supported Abbott's? Do you actually have any principles, or do you just do whatever it takes?

    Commenter
    PotKettle
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 8:41AM
  • Too true Julia, well put. A do nothing Labor government, with another do nothing Labor PM.

    Addicted to spin, addicted to spending, addicted to tax. All the hallmarks of Labor's wasteful incompetence.

    Bring on the election, bring in the Coalition to truly get Australia back on track!

    Commenter
    CJ
    Location
    NSW
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 8:42AM
  • Well, Ms Bishop one thing is clear, this analysis, crudely attempting to link state and federal political behaviour, demonstrates that you do not have whatever it takes. Your article overlooks a litany of conservative premiers in this country who were engaged in corruption of mind numbing proportions. Askin and Jo for two. BTW, labour did not invent political spin. They learnt their art in doing so from the Howard government who developed a 'politicised' senior bureaucracy that was in defiance of long standing Westminster tradition to have an independent civil service. As a consequence the federal public servant numbers soared. It is galling to you I am sure to see Gillard and company doing what you did but better. They spin you have spun.

    Commenter
    des
    Location
    sydney
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 8:52AM
  • Just sour grapes Julia for being outpoliticked and looking another term as opposition in the face!
    Your party released its attack dog Abbott late last year and has since opposed just about every policy Labor has proposed. You are a senior member of a party that has shown a relentless, selfish opposition to everything with a single goal, to restore your own power.
    Barely a policy has materialised of how you can make our country a better place, your criticism simply exudes self service!
    Time to do some hard work Julia and replace your negativity with some original ideas and alternatives.
    We deserve better from our parliamentarians.

    Commenter
    Danger Ranger
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 8:54AM
  • Despite both sides of politics long blowing this issue out of proportion, it is breathtaking hypocrisy from Julie Bishop in this piece of drivel.

    Ms Bishop, have you taken the time to look at your own 'Dear Leader's' policy? Have you listened to his hysterical rantings? If you think that Labor is adopting a 'Whatever it takes' position, then I can only assume that you would agree that your own party's stance is 'Whatever it takes, and then some'.

    For someone of your undoubted intelligence, you constantly opine simplistic views that simply ape other people's thoughts, and seek to tap into populist views without taking the time to think of an opinion with substance.

    Until you develop some well thought out principles of your own, may I suggest you go back to giving 'Twiggy' Forrest some more cuddles.

    Commenter
    AllanB
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 8:55AM
  • "Whatever it takes."
    Yes - agreed. Better spin.

    Commenter
    matilda
    Date and time
    July 07, 2010, 9:03AM

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