Wentworth Blues: Another Nail in the Scomo Coffin
Wentworth Blues: Another Nail in the Scomo
Coffin
A
sign of desperation before the firing squad is jitteriness
and the desperate sense that history needs revision. You
were not the one responsible for the debacles and the
cockups; everybody and everything else was. You knew who
was guilty, and needed to tell everybody about it. You
bluster, you boast and you stumble; you look more buffoon
than statesman; more clown than king.
Australian Prime
Minister Scott Morrison, along with his deputy Josh
Frydenberg, had just witnessed an event without modern
parallel in Australian politics: a by-election swing against
the sitting government without peer, the unlosable seat that
slipped through the fingers of the conservative
establishment. More to the point, a seat in Sydney with a
conservative pedigree stretching over a century had fallen
to an independent, the former Australian Medical Association
President Kerryn Phelps who managed to tick the necessary
boxes of a social progressivism alloyed to the centre (think
climate change, an appropriately adapted energy policy,
lukewarm humanitarianism).
Morrison’s nerves were
less those of Leonidas’ three hundred Spartans at
Thermopylae facing the Persian forces than a cavalry charge
before modernised panzer divisions. Beside him was the
Liberal’s candidate, Dave Sharma, who seemed to become a
puppet at points, drawn to the prime minister, then held
tightly to avoid escape. “Today,” he explained, “is a
tough day.” The prime minister droned, he explicated and
he, tediously, hoped that his troops would be regenerated by
a tonic of Liberal values.
It did not take him long
to move into a manic exposition about the greatest threat of
all: the Labor Party’s Bill Shorten. Ignore, suggested
Morrison, the bloodletting in his own party, or that the
previous prime minister had held the seat of Wentworth and
was currently gloating in New York with a Cheshire Cat’s
grin. Ignore the near fastidious bankruptcy of his
government on matters environmental, on the humanitarian
catastrophe unfolding on Nauru, on the dangers of fiddling
with embassies, notably when involving the Israel-Palestine
issue.
Then, just before dashing for the exit, he suggested that those values held by his
own party were those shared with the war ravaged
participants of the Invictus Games. “Tonight I had the
great privilege of joining those, and I don’t want to make
a political point of this, at the Invictus Games but
Invictus is all about the indomitable spirit. But you know
we’ve got an indomitable spirit in this party.”
For all Morrison’s tawdry and pedestrian efforts,
he claims to be rather good on the marketing side of things,
better briefed on the more instinctive side of the voters.
He was part of a tourism campaign that produced the vulgar tits-and-bum “So
where the bloody hell are you?” campaign. He mined
prejudice as Immigration Minister, becoming the standard
bearer for the “Stop the Boats” policy of the Abbott
government. (Refugees in detention centres in perpetuity
good; refugees finding their way to Australia risking
drowning, bad.)
In a vain effort to seduce the
Australian voter, he has attempted to make analogies that
would be far better kept at a gathering of withered,
porridge-fed minds. Forrest Gump was recruited. “With
independents,” Morris condescendingly lectured those on the
Wentworth electoral roll, “you certainly don’t know what
you are ever going to get.” It all had to with that
“good old box of chocolates - you never know what you are
going to get when it comes to voting independent.”
Another contemptible effort on the prime minister’s
part to mollify estranged Australian voters came through
Twitter, featuring a video where he discusses the “Canberra
bubble” and its hermetic repellence. “The Canberra
bubble is what happens down here when people get caught up
with all sorts of gossip and rubbish and that’s probably
why most of you switch off any time you hear a politician
talk.” With jaw dropping incredulity, he proceeds to
explain that, “What’s important is that we have to stay
focused on the stuff that really matters and is real.”
In discussing that reality, Morrison puts one foot up
as he leans against his desk, ever workmanlike, and throws
candied optimism at his pretend audience. The job figures
have been excellent; and the legislation reducing the
company tax rate for small and medium businesses to 25
percent has been passed. “We’re just gettin’ on with
it.” Except in areas where he is not, a point that Phelps
hammered home during her campaign.
The Canberra bubble
is vogue for politicians watching the rapid demise of their
job prospects. “Outside the Canberra bubble,” tweeted Nationals MP Darren Chester back
in August, “there’s 25 million Australians dealing with
real issues today. I’m appalled and bitterly disappointed
with the events in Parliament House today.” Chester could
not wait to return to Gippsland “and spend time with some
normal people.” Notably, his own party is considering
going the way of the Liberals in what will feature the
beheading of yet another leader in federal politics, this
time the cadaverous pale-sheeted Michael McCormack. His own
reality - survival before the bull of Barnaby Joyce’s next
charge - is to increase his credentials by bribing the electorate: some 16 projects
funded by the $272 million regional growth fund.
The
gruesome reality for “Scomo” is that Shorten need merely
hibernate till the next federal election, a bear waiting
nature’s call to awake and feed. Forget dull, data heavy
policy announcements, the yawn promoting press conferences,
the debates that induce both soporific tendencies and
amnesia. Forget the sloganeering from ALP President Wayne
Swan, who boasts that the current cohort has the most
comprehensive suite of policies any opposition has ever had.
Perhaps, and here the Labor Party have form, the suicidal
impulse that seems to manifest a few weeks prior to an
election, can be averted. This is a government that has
been generous to a fault in gifting the opposition the next
electoral victory.
Truth be told, Sharma was composed
and chivalrous, even if he did feel, subsequently, that the
former member of Wentworth might have done better. (A
Turnbull letter of endorsement? A smile of approval?)
Qualities of graciousness and sporting acknowledgment are
alien in the modern Australian political scene, and it is
perhaps appropriate that he was rehearsing for his repeat
performance come 2019, when the Morrison government risks
being buried without honours or much fanfare.
No one
needs to be romantic or even hopeful that this result will
shatter the withering seal that is Canberra. Phelps is
sincere enough to wish for a change in Australian politics,
though it is clear that such desires can be misplaced.
Canberra draws in fecund idealists and leaves them barren.
It chews them, masticates over them, and spits out the
undesirables. It also encourages the massacre of leaders in
deranged orgies of bloodletting, witnessed by media
spectators with ringside seats.
The current state of
politics is corroded beyond recognition, picked bare by the
party apparatchiks, focus group philosophy and a staleness
that has turned many voters into the mould of apathy and
disgust. Should the new member of Wentworth be firm,
resolutely irritating for the voters of her seat, she would
have at least taken that first step to make Parliament do
something it has long ceased to do: be
representative.
Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth
Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT
University, Melbourne. Email: bkampmark@gmail.com