The opinion poll prime ministership is a modern Australian disease. Not only does it suggest an ailing in the
Westminster system, but a profound contempt for the democratic sensibility on the part of party representatives, hacks
and the industry that supports them. Prime Ministers are merely the icing, to be whipped off and replaced on going
stale. Little wonder that the Australian politician can never be permitted to be an authentic representative, ever
hostage to sentiment and the astrological deceptions of polling.
This conditioning is so total it has even bewitched the journalistic classes, who have also done their best to feed the
complex of the short-term prime minister. Twenty-four hour news tends to do that. A veteran ABC journalist let it slip
on Monday morning that the elections were about the party strategists, the politicians and the polls. It was easy in
such an assessment to avoid the Australian voter, whose relevance has declined as the influence of party brokers has
risen.
A canon of politics is that support expressed with fervent enthusiasm in the public domain is bound to reverse behind
closed doors. Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has the firm support of numerous members of his front bench, expressed
publicly. This is exactly why he should be worried. Such enthusiasm could be lethal.
Even potential challenger, the one-dimensional oafish Peter Dutton of the Home Affairs portfolio, has claimed Turnbull
has his support, though he has left a tantalising morsel for political observers. “If my position changes – that is, it
gets to a point where I can’t accept what the government is proposing or I don’t agree – then the Westminster system is
very clear: you resign your commission, you don’t serve in the cabinet.”
Finance minister Matthias Cormann has attempted to adopt the “nothing to see here approach” while giving the Canberra
press gallery every reason to presume that something is afoot. He claims to have heard no talk about conservatives
pressing Dutton to mount a challenge to Turnbull. This, despite four 5.30 morning walks with Dutton, a fellow hardline
conservative with whom he keeps on good terms with. To Sky News, he claimed that, “We are both very committed to the
success of the Turnbull government and to wining the next election.”
Turnbull had done himself no favours. He remains weak but more to the point, has appeared to be weak. He took his party
to the last federal election and received a thumping which imperilled his majority. He has been unsuccessful holding the
sniping conservatives within his ranks at bay while embarking on an obsessive campaign to wound the opposition leader,
Bill Shorten. The latter aspect of this strategy failed to materialise in the last round of by-elections which saw no
Coalition gains, notably in the Queensland seat of Longman. As Queensland promises to be critical in any future election
for the fate of the Coalition government, strategists are getting tetchy, eyeing Dutton as a form of insurance.
Turnbull also failed to hold on to the National Energy Guarantee plans that were hammered out last week, wanting to
please worried backbenchers that energy prices would not fall while wedding the government to a carbon emissions
reduction target of 26 percent set by legislation. The version cheered on with premature enthusiasm was the version that
was subsequently torn up. (The term used here is “consultation”, a political version of euthanasia.)
What will take its place remains to be seen, but the environment is bound to find a subordinate position in any such
scheme. Climate sceptics remain irritations with purpose. The current form of the plan has been watered down: instead of
legislation, the target will be set by an executive order of the relevant minister. The Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission would also tailor a report to parliament on the impact on prices as a result of the reduction.
Former prime minister, the deposed Tony Abbott, is excited. The great disrupter smells blood and revenge, and even
though he is unlikely to take Turnbull’s place in the event of any leadership challenge, he is having a vicarious
thrill. After the party meeting on August 14, Abbott landed a right royal blow, suggesting that “most explanations of
how the NEG (as it stands without price targets) might theoretically get prices down sound like merchant bankers’
gobbledigook.” He is seeing the leader of his party being readied for execution. Fitting – Abbott was himself knifed by
Turnbull in 2015 as being of questionable competence, notably on matters economic.
The media vultures have done little to stem the tide, parasites finding value in the speculation fanned by the Coalition
dissidents. Newscorp has willingly supplied the soapbox, effectively arming them with weapons of sabotage. With each
suggestion of a leadership spill come manuals – one supplied by The Sydney Morning Herald – on how to approach a prime
ministership that awaits early termination.
As this week goes on, this may have simply been another spat in Turnbull’s unsteady term, wishful thinking on the part
of the rabblerousers whose world view is markedly clipped. But a prime minister without authority can only ever be a
prop for other forces who will, eventually, seek his removal. This state of affairs again shows the decrepitude of
Australian politics, marred by a special form of impermanence mired in revenge, provincialism and ill-gotten gains.
Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne.
Email: bkampmark@gmail.com
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