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Australians face their starkest choice at the ballot box in 50 years. Here's why

  • Written by Mark Kenny, Professor, Australian Studies Institute, Australian National University
Labor leader Anthony Albanese.

You first have to lose an election on principle if you want to win one on principle.

This was how Labor rationalised the miscalculations that led to its “Don’s Party” disappointment in 1969[1], followed by the 1972 triumph[2] of the “It’s Time” campaign.

Half a century later, the idea of sticking with unpopular policy seems romantic, unthinkable. Principles are not just old-hat in an era of professionalised politics, but absurd.

Swamped by voter-attitude metrics[3], modern democratic leaders are not leaders in the traditional sense. Rather, they are followers. Followers of market researchers and media proprietors who disabuse them of ambitious conceits like national leadership, or anything that might tempt them to make changes based on electoral judgement, the national interest, or even ideology.

Still, a few months ago, one starry-eyed fool (to wit, this author) described the looming 2022 federal election as the most important national choice to be put before voters since that 1972 hinge-point.

If it was an invitation to Labor leader Anthony Albanese to paint in bold brushstrokes, he didn’t receive it.

Read more: If the polls are right, he may soon be the next Australian prime minister. So who is Anthony Albanese?[4]

Instead, Labor’s risk-averse policy presentation has largely mirrored the reform-shy government it seeks to replace. This makes for the least policy-divergent choice in the 50 years since 1972.

The 2022 election more closely resembles a velodrome match-sprint where the two riders have almost stopped on the banked section, each terrified of leading off and being overtaken in the final dash for the line.

Whitlam’s re-imagining

The 1972 comparison gets even harder when you look at former Prime Minister Gough Whitlam’s first month in office.

He promised to establish diplomatic relations with Peking (now Beijing), following his audacious trip[5] to “Red China” in 1971. Imagine this (or any) opposition making a play of similar foreign policy gravity today.

Whitlam’s bold Australian re-imagining, which historian Stuart McIntyre later characterised[6] as “a nationalism attuned to internationalism”, kick-started a lucrative economic co-dependency that has propelled Australian prosperity to this day. Hungry for commodities and services imports, China’s staggering growth has also insulated Australia through global shocks like the Asian Financial Crisis, Global Financial Crisis, and COVID-19.

While the Coalition would no doubt have come to it eventually, Whitlam acted without hesitation or American permission. Crucially, he backed his capacity to explain it to the country, despite the danger of being tagged as soft on communism. Again, leaders taking decisions and then relying on their persuasive powers to win arguments seems fanciful amid the timidity of contemporary politics.

A shot of adrenaline

In those first days, Whitlam also ended conscription, withdrew from Vietnam, granted independence to Papua New Guinea, and set about ratifying long-deferred international conventions on basic labour conditions, racial non-discrimination, and nuclear weapons proliferation.

With his pared back, don’t-frighten-the-horses agenda, Albanese might have less to do over a whole term, and Whitlam was only getting started.

Read more: Gough Whitlam: a man for his times whose mark is on our times[7]

Before his government crashed, Whitlam would end the White Australia Policy, scrap royal honours, appoint the first women’s adviser, reform draconian divorce laws, champion multiculturalism, dramatically ratchet up funding for the arts and humanities, abolish university fees, revive urban development, and more.

To a slumbering post-war Australia, it was a shot of late 20th Century adrenaline and the results were startling. Australian historian Manning Clark described it as the “end of the Ice Age”.

But in 1975, it ended in ignominy[8]. As McIntyre later observed, “the golden age was over”.

History rhyming, not repeating

So far, the case for equivalence between 1972 and 2022 is not obvious, right?

But what if it is not Labor that now represents the radical option but the status quo? What if changing governments offers the safer, more conventional course for nervous voters? As Mark Twain noted[9], history doesn’t repeat itself but it often rhymes.

Labor leader Anthony Albanese.
Labor leader Anthony Albanese speaks to the media at a Perth hospital on day 36 of the campaign. Lukas Coch/AAP

Labor’s 1972 manifesto was inspiring, but it was the urgency with which its modernising promise was articulated after 23 years of Coalition rule that had impatient voters energised. The McMahon Coalition government was a no ideas factory in the lead-up to the 1972 election, although it did not exhibit the insidious corrosive streak of its modern-day equivalent.

This is the rhyme. While the 2022 election is not about the magisterial reform possibilities of an incoming government, it is about the urgent need to rescue longstanding governing norms around transparency, accountability, ministerial standards, trust and the honesty, and of course, the viability of the public service.

It is in this critical sense that the two elections might be compared.

Divide and dither

The radicalism absent from Labor’s 2022 manifesto is made up for in the unspoken but no-less transformative erosion of standards by the government. The Coalition is primarily intent on the political dividends of division, on courting the applause of media vassals, religious conservatives, and a populist Nationals rump.

Morrison’s approach can be described as divide and dither.

It finds its expression in the Coalition’s reflexive recourse to politics over policy – frequently at the direct expense of the national interest such as in the weaponisation of climate change[10] and more recently, the attempts to weaken[11] the outward presentation of domestic bipartisanship on national security.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison
Prime Minister Scott Morrison visits a Tasmanian paving business on day 39. Mick Tsikas/AAP

The former is a classic of the genre. Morrison’s hollow embrace of net zero by 2050[12] ahead of Glasgow last year was greeted by political insiders as a triumph of prime ministerial skill, when all it really did was expose how utterly pointless the Coalition’s decade-long negation had been. Moreover, it brought no revision to interim targets nor adjusted any other policy architecture.

It’s real aim – in which it was successful - was the neutralisation of a Coalition stance that had morphed into a clear electoral negative. It just didn’t count on the rebellion from its

The latter, national security, was tickled along last Friday[13] in Defence Minister Peter Dutton’s ultra-earnest press conference transparently called to (re)frighten voters about a Chinese “warship” that was “hugging” Australia’s north-western coast at a distance of 400 kilometres.

Manufactured wars and textimonials

Divide and dither revels in manufactured culture wars over transgender teens[14] and identity politics, fumes about supposed attacks on faith, and white-ants efforts to build support for a First Nations Voice in the Constitution.

Witness the government’s pillorying responses to anti-discrimination campaigners with dismissive throw-aways like[15] “all lives matter”.

Read more: 'His beating heart is a focus group': what makes Scott Morrison tick?[16]

Divide and dither’s existence was spectacularly laid bare in a series of explosive “textimonials” regarding Morrison’s character from his own colleagues – people much closer to him than voters, including Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce. These described him variously as a “hypocrite and a liar[17]”. A New South Wales Liberal senator called him a “bully with no moral compass[18]”.

It’s there, too, in the vicious campaigns against[19] “fake” independent women – simply for standing for office. In a democracy. The Liberals’ refusal to acknowledge and address female under-representation has invited the very rebellion it now faces from high-calibre female candidates in safe Liberal seats.

The overall impression is of a government shamelessly enabled by a pseudo-independent media[20] that makes no serious attempt to govern for all Australians.

No change means no consequences

In light of these multiple failures, in opting for no change, Australian voters would be saying there is no cost for governing like this.

Labor leader Anthony Albanese
Albanese has not had an ambitious campaign, unlike his predecessor Bill Shorten, who lost the 2019 election to Morrison. Toby Zerna/AAP

The Coalition’s take-out would be – keep misleading and pork-barrelling[21] and fomenting useless culture wars.

Keep stacking boards[22] and cutting taxes for the rich and emaciating the public service[23]. Keep denying an anti-corruption commission even as its need becomes ever-more pressing.

Psychologists would call such a verdict “learned helplessness” – an acceptance that such corruptions are inevitable, and no more than we deserve.

Accountable government, national unity, evidence-based policy, and democratic accountability are all on the ballot at this election.

It is not 1972, but the choice might be equally stark, despite Labor’s timidity.

References

  1. ^ disappointment in 1969 (theconversation.com)
  2. ^ 1972 triumph (www.abc.net.au)
  3. ^ voter-attitude metrics (theconversation.com)
  4. ^ If the polls are right, he may soon be the next Australian prime minister. So who is Anthony Albanese? (theconversation.com)
  5. ^ audacious trip (theconversation.com)
  6. ^ later characterised (www.cambridge.org)
  7. ^ Gough Whitlam: a man for his times whose mark is on our times (theconversation.com)
  8. ^ it ended in ignominy (theconversation.com)
  9. ^ Mark Twain noted (www.owu.edu)
  10. ^ weaponisation of climate change (theconversation.com)
  11. ^ attempts to weaken (www.smh.com.au)
  12. ^ net zero by 2050 (www.industry.gov.au)
  13. ^ tickled along last Friday (www.theguardian.com)
  14. ^ transgender teens (www.sbs.com.au)
  15. ^ dismissive throw-aways like (www.news.com.au)
  16. ^ 'His beating heart is a focus group': what makes Scott Morrison tick? (theconversation.com)
  17. ^ hypocrite and a liar (www.theguardian.com)
  18. ^ bully with no moral compass (www.skynews.com.au)
  19. ^ campaigns against (theconversation.com)
  20. ^ pseudo-independent media (theconversation.com)
  21. ^ pork-barrelling (theconversation.com)
  22. ^ stacking boards (www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au)
  23. ^ emaciating the public service (theconversation.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/australians-face-their-starkest-choice-at-the-ballot-box-in-50-years-heres-why-183217

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