Extract from The Guardian
As the drumbeat of discontent grows louder,
politics is increasingly becoming a complicated and messy affair –
just ask Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott
It did not take Tony Abbott long to show he
possessed none of Julia Gillard’s supple backroom arts. Photograph:
Lukas Coch/AAP
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Friday 11 December 2015 19.42 AEDT
The political scientist Gerry Stoker tells us
democracy is designed to disappoint, and he’s absolutely right.
Politics is a deeply flawed business. We want our politics simple,
clean and conflict-free, when inherently it is none of those things.
Democratic politics isn’t a panacea, it is simply a mechanism to
synthesise societal conflict without resort to violence.
Democracy is about “the tough process of
squeezing collective decisions out of multiple and competing
interests and opinions”, Stoker writes in Why Politics Matters:
Making Democracy Work. “Politics is designed to disappoint –
that’s the way that the process of compromise and reconciliation
works. Its outcomes are often messy, ambiguous and never final.”
Stoker also notes one of the great paradoxes of
our age: “Democracy is more dominant as a form of governance than
ever before, but within both established and newer democracies there
appears to be a considerable disenchantment with politics.”
In all western democracies, this is the age of
disruption and of disenchantment. In our consumerist and on-demand
societies, we think we can trade up to a better model of politics.
Disenchantment is powerful enough to have swept Jeremy
Corbyn to the leadership of the British Labour party, despite the
surfeit of punditry suggesting a leftist of such unfashionable
persistence is entirely unelectable as British prime minister.
Corbyn, in parliament since the 1980s, is the insider’s outsider.
The consistency of his dissent is, apparently, a beacon for
supporters tired of endless compromise and repositioning and tough
love for the greater good.
Disenchantment is also the drumbeat of the
presidential race in the United States. Americans are flirting with
political “outsiders” – the most voluble being billionaire
Donald
Trump, who is busily creating a universe where things don’t
have to make sense as long as they generate a headline. Elaine
Kamarck, writing for the Brookings Institution, considers the current
phenomenon of non-politicians:
There is a lot of speculation as to why non-politicians are so popular this time around. Most of it centres on voters’ distrust and disappointment in traditional politicians and on polarisation among the two political parties. The political system is not working very well at all. You have to go all the way back to 2009 in the Real Clear Politics averages of polls to find a point where the same number of Americans thought the country was going in the right direction as thought the country was going in the wrong direction – a time when America was still in the honeymoon phase with their new president, a political newcomer himself. Since then many more Americans have thought the country was on the wrong track.
Kamarck counsels against defaulting to the easy
conclusion:
The logic that seems to be pushing forward the Trumps … of the world is the belief that politics and politicians are the problem. But what if the problem with our politics is just the opposite? Not enough politicians who are good at politics?
She contends that politics once worked to sift out
its own show ponies. The backroom process of securing major-party
nomination for the presidency – a system that prevailed until the
1980s – might have lacked showbiz, but it worked to test core
skills:
Would-be presidents had to wheel and deal their way to the nomination of their party. Those who won had generally shown some ability to put together coalitions and to win the respect of their peers. As the process changed and primaries replaced those awful smoke-filled rooms, a critical element of the nomination process got lost.
This is an interesting thought to inject into the
Australian political scene. Julia Gillard’s failure to secure a
working majority in either chamber at the 2010 election could have
delivered paralysis: a do-nothing parliament. In fact, it delivered
the opposite. During that period, the parliament passed more than 400
bills, some of them big reforms, including a carbon pricing scheme,
the mining tax, plain packaging laws for cigarettes, parental leave
and a Murray–Darling Basin plan.
Gillard as prime minister struggled to project
competence in public. She lacked the default arrogant entitlement of
the “great men of history”. Her private self got lost in the
expanse of bitterly contested public space. She also failed to soothe
or reassure, her mere presence being an affront to harmony for
critics who crouched contentedly in the comfort of her flaws and
missteps, the better to justify their more bizarre misogynistic
impulses.
But while the writhing and the discontent
thundered outside, and the reverse treachery seethed inside, Gillard
proceeded, grittily in the circumstances, with governing and
legacy-building. She was a flawed prime minister in many respects, an
enigmatic character who failed to inspire confidence, but she proved
a master of the head down, bum up, getting it done approach. Ezra
Klein recently reflected in Vox on this public–private phenomenon:
The inside game – courting donors, winning endorsements, influencing the primary calendar, securing key committee assignments, luring top staffers, working with interest groups – makes up the bulk of politics. Mastery of the inside game is hard to assess and so is frequently undervalued, but it’s also determinative – it’s why wooden campaigners like Mitt Romney and Al Gore win primaries, and why no current leader of either party’s congressional wing can deliver an exciting speech. The media often scratches its head over how such weak politicians prove so successful at politics, but the answer is they’re not weak politicians –they’re excellent politicians, but the part of politics they excel at is largely hidden.
When Tony
Abbott succeeded in replacing the riven Labor government, he
quickly demonstrated he possessed none of Gillard’s supple backroom
arts. He achieved the demolition of some of Labor’s policies –
carbon pricing, the mining tax – but his wheels spun on his own
agenda. He arrived in government asserting entitlement and mandate,
including, bizarrely, for things he had neglected to tell the public
about before winning the 2013 election. Abbott hectored the
non-government parties in the parliament, eschewing courtship. As a
consequence, the government’s agenda failed to progress. Delivering
neither a coherent agenda nor certainty in the polls, he was torn
down by his own side.
While the United States flirts with outsiders
as the antidote to its malaise, Australian politics is imposing a
short shelf life on leaders. We’ve developed a vicious coup
culture. Kevin Rudd and Abbott were deposed during their first terms.
Gillard was denied the chance to campaign for a second. It looks
corrosive and highly unstable, and perhaps it is. Perhaps in two
decades, we’ll say with certainty that Australian
politics veered into zero-sum chaos in mid 2010 and never
recovered. It is entirely possible. But I’m not prepared to call
that yet.
Every event of the past five years is connected to
every other event. There’s nothing random about the sequence.
Treachery is nothing new in politics, nor is turbulence a new
condition. There were five prime ministers between 1967 and 1972.
Gough Whitlam could probably tell Abbott and Malcolm
Turnbull what winner-takes-all hyper partisanship and a hostile
press look like, having experienced both in his tumultuous period in
office.
A feeling of semi-permanent chaos and crisis has
visited us before, and politics being a cyclical business, the
national parliament has stabilised to deliver the voters more
productive times. Malcolm Fraser stabilised after Whitlam by talking
big but sitting tight, and Bob
Hawke stabilised after the vacancy of the Malcolm Fraser years by
jolting Australia into modernity.
There is one constant in politics: success breeds
success. The question is: what will Turnbull do? Can he find his own
circuit breaker, and more importantly, will we let him?
• This is an edited extract from Katharine
Murphy’s essay The Politics We Deserve, published in the current
summer edition of Meanjin
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