Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Saturday, 24 May 2025
Our political ruts have shaken loose. Will parliament adapt to the new normal?
After Labor's big win, there has been little focus on what a government with a huge majority should do with it. (ABC News: Matt Roberts)
Link copied
It's
all too easy to get stuck in ways of thinking about how the world
works, often without even realising the presumptions that frame our
assessments of the world.
Sometimes it takes a series of shifts in the underlying fabric to jolt us out of the ruts, sometimes just one seismic shift.
There
are plenty of these familiar ruts in the way we think about Australian
politics, and about how it is reported. And the same is often true for
economics.
A most obvious
political rut is that the "two" party system is an inevitable feature of
our politics, and that those "two" parties are the Australian Labor
Party on one side of the fence and the federal Coalition of the Liberal
Party and Nationals sits on the other side.
There
are other ideas whose echo you can still feel in the dynamics of
politics, even if they aren't said out loud all that often.
These include the idea of the "natural party of government" (the Coalition); and that Labor is a bad economic manager.
These
ideas really took hold during the long 23-year reign of the Coalition
until 1972 during a benign economic period, and then in the often
chaotic days of the Whitlam Government which followed, amid the oil
shocks of the early 1970s.
But they still resonate today.
The Coalition's election loss means political assumptions need to be re-evaluated. (ABC News: Matt Roberts)
The seats paint a stark picture
Wrapped
up in the package are associated assumptions such as: the Coalition
represents a wide range of electorates from the cities and the bush;
that it is a "broad church" at the centre of politics; and that it has
links with the business community which suggest it is part of the
"establishment", for those voters who feel reassured by that idea.
And now, in 2025, what do we see?
A
group of parties that is almost wiped out in our capital cities in
terms of parliamentary representation, that is being challenged by
independents in the bush because voters don't feel they are properly
represented; that has not just declining membership but major structural
problems in its organisations which have been taken over by religious
and other groups in some states; that has been pushed toward the fringes
of the conservative right; and that has a fractured relationship with
most of the business community bar the resources sector (and even that
was ruptured by a thought bubble gas policy during the election
campaign).
But it has taken a
particular sort of self-induced idiocy in the past week to really start
to make people see the Coalition for the fractured beast it is.
Consider
the numbers in the House of Representatives as posted by the Australian
Electoral Commission on Friday (with the nail-biting count for the seat
of Bradfield between a Liberal and an Independent down to a margin of
just four votes).
Labor has 94 seats and the Coalition 43.
But
within that Coalition total, the Liberal Party has just 18 seats, the
merged Queensland Party — the LNP — has 16 seats, and the Nationals (NSW
and Victoria) nine seats.
That
is, the Liberal Party nationally has just a couple of seats more than
the Queensland party (a very different beast) and the Nats have the same
number of seats as the collective independents.
The Coalition holds less than one-third of the seats in the House of Representatives.
We
have lived through a long period of very thin majorities, and even
minority governments. But also seen the balance in the number of seats
swing wildly so you can never assume it will always be thus.
But
the last election campaign exposed the true decline in the quality and
capacity of the parliamentary Coalition — as well as its underlying
party machines — to do politics and to do policy in a way that means it
can't be assumed this is just a temporary flesh wound.
Yet
its representatives seem to keep talking as if the issue is about
carving up the spoils of office and power when they are largely
irrelevant for at least the next three years.
Will the Coalition provide any helpful input to policy discussions in the next parliament? (ABC News: Matt Roberts)
The death throes of fringe parties
The
Nationals argued this week that they were taking a stand on high
principle — or at least on four demands. These were: support for nuclear
power; a $20 billion fund for the regions; breaking up the powers of
the big supermarkets; and improved regional telecommunications
guarantees.
Think about the
origins of some of these policies. We can never be grateful enough to
LNP senator Matt Canavan for putting on the public record that the
Coalition's support for nuclear power was only ever designed to get them
out of a tight spot on emissions reductions while it continued to
support coal-fired power.
And
its "die on a hill" support for this noble principle this week had
dissipated to a possible fallback position of "it would just be nice to
get rid of the moratorium on nuclear" by week's end.
As
one Coalition source noted this week, no-one had heard of the $20
billion regional future fund until about four weeks ago (though there
had been a similar fund pledged by Scott Morrison in government as a way
of getting the Nats to sign up to net zero… which of course they also
have talked about dumping).
The
powers of supermarkets? Yeah, well that's been going on for a while as
an issue with no clear path to being fixed, despite numerous
parliamentary and regulatory inquiries about it.
And
improved regional communications? Really? Yes, it might be important.
But it was something upon which the Nationals — and particularly Barnaby
Joyce — blackmailed John Howard about 20 years ago with some success,
in terms of pushing Telstra to lift its game.
But does anyone remember the Nats talking about this issue in any conspicuous way in more recent times?
Habits
in the media mean that the overwhelming focus of much reporting since
the election has been on the future of the Coalition as if it really,
really mattered, and as if the disputes were about matters of serious
policy substance, instead of dismissing the brawling as the death throes
of what are now effectively a group of small fringe parties.
After
Labor's landslide win, parliament looks very different and it might be
the crossbench independents, not the Coalition, pressing the
government. (ABC News: Brendan Esposito )
Government has big issues to deal with
There has been very little focus on what a government with a huge majority might, or should, do with it.
This
week's Reserve Bank decision has highlighted just how different the
underlying dynamics of the political and policy discussion will be in
this term of government, even before politicians, and changing
parliamentary numbers, get involved.
We've already been introduced to the "shock of the uncertain" coming from the United States.
But
the rates decision — and perhaps even more importantly the language of
RBA governor Michelle Bullock — shows the economy at a pivot point that
will transform what we are talking about.
The
first term of the Albanese government was framed by the need to deal
with a global inflationary shock, and by the need to rebuild a
government administrative sector that was often failing not just voters
but government capacity to put policy measures in place.
What
has often been overlooked, or derided, in those policy constraints was
the view of both the government and the Reserve Bank that they wanted to
minimise the cost to employment of dealing with inflation, and the
government was also trying to address the long decline in real terms of
wages, particularly for the lowest paid.
This was always an ambitious cluster of aims, to say the least.
This week's Reserve Bank decision confirms they have collectively achieved it, not just broken the back of inflation.
"The
board's strategy over quite some time has been to bring inflation down
while avoiding a sharp rise in unemployment," Bullock said this week.
"This is consistent with our dual mandate of price stability and full employment."
RBA governor Michele Bullock flags new challenges for the economy.
While
inflation has been the dominant challenge, the government's room to
manoeuvre on policy has been constrained and it has overwhelmingly been
the RBA that has had the most power over the economic levers.
That
now changes. That's not to suggest the government goes wild with
spending. But the risks that will be most front of mind will be
different: the risk of a slowing economy; the need to maintain — and
convey — stability and confidence, particularly given what else is
happening in the world.
Deloitte
Access Economics' Pradeep Phillip told 7.30 this week: "What we're
seeing now is a pivot from managing the cycle with things like inflation
to dealing with the structural issues of the economy."
There's
also the question of what is happening elsewhere in the world. As the
RBA's Bullock observed: "There's now a new set of challenges facing the
economy but with inflation declining and the unemployment rate
relatively low, we're well positioned to deal with them.
"How
the tariffs will affect the global economy are going to depend on a few
things: where tariffs will settle following negotiations between the
United States and its major trading partners; how the other trading
partners respond; the extent to which global supply chains are disrupted
by the increased barriers to trade; the degree to which trade can be
diverted and the impact of uncertainty on business, investment and
household spending."
Habits have to change
There's
some legislation for the government to pass in coming months. But there
are big individual issues to be dealt with, from a new net zero target
to an overhaul of environmental processes and energy market reform.
Many of the systemic changes started in the last term have to be bedded down or put into action: from child care to aged care.
And
finally, lots of people will be wanting to see if the slow process of
ramping up housing construction will finally bear fruit.
Will
the Coalition provide any helpful input into any of these discussions?
Or will the crossbench independents be the more thoughtful ginger group
to be pressing the government?
We have all been shaken out of the ruts of habit by this election. Let's hope our parliament is able to think outside them.
No comments:
Post a Comment