Humble servant of the Nation

Final Curtin for Julie Bishop, is it curtains for the Coalition?

SHARE
, / 10661 190

In the end all the shouting and stomping was for nothing. Momentum lurched one way and then the other only to be stopped dead in its tracks as Julie Bishop got to her feet in the House just after three o’clock yesterday to announce her retirement from politics.

Everyone could take a breather. The quarrels, scandals and policy missteps would take a back seat. Bishop’s announcement led on all news reports with the day to day entrail examination of federal politics either discarded entirely or run somewhere up the back just before the sport, the weather and the amusing cat that does the ironing segment.

A 20-year veteran of federal politics, Bishop was a minister in the Howard government (Education and Science, Women, and Ageing), the first female deputy leader of the federal Liberal Party (erroneously described as Deputy Prime Minister on both the Channel Seven and Nine News services) and Foreign Minister in the Abbott and Turnbull governments since 2013.

Depending on your view, we have just 78 or 85 sleeps before the next election. Of these, just three have been set aside as parliamentary sitting days. Put that in the nice work if you can get it category.

On the final sitting day but three of the 45th Parliament, Bishop not only halted the tawdry to-and-fro politicking, she cast other retiring pollies into the shade.

Euromoney’s MVP in 2009, Wayne Swan’s valedictory speech where he tactfully neglected to mention the 100,000 or so single mothers he, Julia Gillard and Labor dispatched into poverty, was left to nestle deep in oblivion while Labor’s favourite policy nuffy, Jenny Macklin, might wander off into retirement to try her hand at getting by on the Newstart Allowance, as she once boasted she could but now probably won’t.

Bishop took a near marginal seat to the safest confines on the electoral pendulum. She won almost two thirds of the primary vote in the 2016 election. She enjoyed a three per cent swing on primary vote while nationwide the Coalition lost 14 seats with a 3.55 per cent swing against it.

Depending on your vintage, is JBish the Keith Miller or the Shane Warne of Australian politics, e.g. the best captain we never had? Had she emerged triumphant from the scorched earth of the August 2018 spill, where would the Coalition be now? My best guess is she and it would have enjoyed a significant poll bounce at least in the short term, but we are dealing with fantasy politics here. The truth is, she could only find 11 supporters out of 85 in the party room and once that grim news hit home, her decision to retire from politics was only a matter of time.

Given the stunning personal support she enjoyed from voters if not the Liberal Party room, we can safely say there will be a swing against the Liberals in Curtin at the next election. It may be a beaut, if the Liberals get the politics of the preselection wrong. Worse, it could have a knock-on effect in other seats where margins are much tighter (Andrew Hastie in Canning, 6.8 per cent and Stirling where Michael Keenan is retiring, 6.1 per cent).

The Coalition could lose the next federal election in Western Australia alone. On the betting at this moment, Labor would pick up Hasluck (Ken Wyatt), Pearce (Christian Porter) and Swan (Steve Irons).

Those bubble bound necromancers in Canberra have long thought the retirement of Bishop would allow Christian Porter to seamlessly traverse electoral borders and ensconce himself as lord of the manor in Curtin.

Porter is one of the Liberal Party’s brightest charges, the current attorney-general and a potential leader of the parliamentary party.

We can also safely assume there will be no captain’s picks of candidates in Curtin given the arcane nature of Western Australian Liberal Party which has been fussin’ and feudin’ since I was a lad.

Another retiree from parliament, the National MP for Mallee, Andrew Broad, a man who regarded himself as something of a James Bond of Australian politics — whether it was a Craig, Lazenby, Moore, Connery, Dalton, Brosnan or Woody Allen, I cannot say — did offer something of a scientician’s view of gender and politics in a door stop to SkyNews yesterday.

“Politics,” Broad said, “is very gruelling on people who want to have a family and the very nature of biology is that it’s tougher on women.”

I am not entirely sure what that means but it seems to me that upsetting a good chunk of 51 per cent of the voting public is not an especially solid strategy in electoral politics.

Bishop has called for a woman within the party to replace her. The parachute drop of Porter into Curtin, while eminently sensible, will necessarily and obviously cause headlines and very possibly widespread consternation. It will not be an easy preselection. This is a case of politics pointing to one outcome while logic points to another.

In the end it might not matter, especially if the people of Victoria decide to put the Liberal Party’s lights out a good two hours before the votes start rolling in from the west. But if an unlikely victory is to remain possible or even if furniture is to be saved, what happens in Curtin in the next two months will be crucial to the Coalition’s future.

This column was first published in The Australian on 22 February 2019

190 Comments

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    All Aboard the Kim Jung-un Express, Mr. Insider.
    The country’s official KCNA news agency released images of Mr. Kim setting off from Pyongyang for the high-stakes nuclear meeting with POTUS Trump, which will take place on Wednesday and Thursday in Hanoi the Capital of Vietnam.
    I am expecting an Invitation to visit the White House may well come out of this meeting, something many in the past would never have expected.
    http://tinyurl.com/y2zc6ahw

  • Boadicea says:

    Tony Burke refusing to say whether or not he supports Adani – that is seriously pathetic.
    Labor are going to have to stop fence-sitting on crucial issues – otherwise they could find themselves losing the unlosable election.

  • Dismayed says:

    Looks like the seats the Lib. ladies are walking away from are going to the cons blokes. You don’t have a”woman” problem if you have any woman. Oh and the way Georgina Downer of Melbourne is campaigning in the SA seat of Mayo against former Liberal staffer R. Sharkie will probably further strengthen Sharkie’s position. Apart from the long term Liberal spin Dr appearing in her ads whoever is advising Downer are doing a terrible job. she puts people offside with every effort.

  • Tracy says:

    I have trouble remembering the name of our current foreign minister, environment minister………wish I couldn’t remember the rest of them on occasion.
    This is actually a bad dream and I’m going to wake up and the adults are actually in charge and doing what they are supposed to do with honor and integrity😂😂😂😂

    • Bella says:

      “Honour & integrity” are long gone Tracy.
      I’ve just heard that Morrison’s government want to start a climate change fund (on the eve of the election) with $2M of taxpayer dollars that by rights should be taken from the big polluters not us.
      I expect zero action or results from a government who have spent the past five years trashing climate change & blithely tossing around a lump of coal in parliament.
      Just more lies to add to their very long record of lies.

    • JackSprat says:

      Bit like the Australian cricket team Tracy

  • Dismayed says:

    Recessionberg called out for lying again. Now JBish. has high heeled it out of town he will probably be leader of the cons after the election if he scrapes in and why not they continue to elect bald face liars to their highest posts.
    https://thenewdaily.com.au/money/property/2019/02/23/housing-tax-scare-campaign/?utm_source=Adestra&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Sunday%20Best%2020190224

  • Dismayed says:

    the apprentice rorter, oops, porter is following in the footsteps of Grand daddy and daddy. the young apprentice wrecked WA’s budget when he was treasurer, took it from healthy surplus with virtually no debt to record debt and deficits and blew the proceeds from the mining boom he complained about the GST and raised mining royalties every year knowing it would reduce the WA GST share he was rewarded with a ride to the feds. He is a train wreck in every portfolio he touches. So there is no doubt he is destined for higher honors in the cons ranks. oh he is another christian for convenience.

  • BASSMAN says:

    The election will be won or lost in Qld. Bishop, as hopeless as she is (plagiarism…remember dat? Saber rattling with Putin over the downed plane, no real achievements to name bar the fashion stakes and parties). For the Looters this election is about saving furniture and without a doubt Bishop J would have saved more furniture than The Prophet. She is being lauded as our best Foreign Minister-she would not hold a candle to Gareth Evans. I am concerned that The Prophet on such a short gig may get PM pension for life, offices and cars, free trips for he and his Mrs-does he qualify for all this. Abbott did and he was no in the chair long. The rorts continue and Shorten along with Labor have hardly landed a glove on the Liberals.
    Cormann – rorted airfares to Broome with his family
    – also his $37,000 use of a VIP jet for personal political use
    – a $3000 trip for his family to Singapore via Hello
    World company which was given a contract worth
    hundreds of millions with the govt and is also large
    political donor to the Liberals. Cormann obviously likes flying
    (as long as he does not have to pay)

    – ‘end of entitlement’ Man Hockey is in this up to his
    gonads as well. He has over a million bux worth of shares
    in Hello World Travel.

    – Michaelia Cash who has been in Witness Protection for 6 months
    has refused to provide a statement to the police over her office
    raiding union buildings-her legal fees alone so far have cost tax
    payers $300,000.

    – A $423million contract to Paladin. A beach shack company with
    no corporate base to roam around Nauru as ‘guards’. NO TENDERS
    were used for this huge contract. Ditto just like the Barrier Reef
    contract for half a billion. Paladin is paying its staff $5000 a year while it
    pockets $40million a month. RORT!!

    – the granting of jobs worth hundreds of millions of dollars to Liberal
    mates last week prior to the election in addition to the 80 jobs ALREADY
    handed out. No doubt all of these contracts jobs and rorts will result in a
    windfall in party donations come the May election.
    There has never been a more corrupt rorting looting government.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Too long, Bassman. Please.

    • Milton says:

      She’s not been lauded as the best Foreign Affairs minister, Bassman. Downer is ahead of her in that parlour game.

      On other news, aren’t Sri Lanka the deliverer’s of joy and merriment.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Bad news for you Hot Tip BASSMAN, we QLDers don’t like Shorten, he has as much appeal here as a dropped Pie outside the MCG! Cheers

      • BASSMAN says:

        Not news to me son. I have been decrying Shorten on this blog for 7years. I am no fan.
        He is hopeless.Especially as a tactician. Has not mentioned the massive debt the Looters have run up or that our unemployment is much worse than it was when Labor was last in govt during the GFC. I hope he has something left in the bottom drawer to go after Morrison with-his pre-selection rort? The missing money when he was head of tourism?

    • Razor says:

      Qld will be important Bassy along with Western Sydney. They will need to pick some seats up to offset loses in Victoria. Tomorrow’s Newspoll will be very interesting. If it mirrors IPSOS then the panic in Labor will be huge. A negative campaign on boats, retiree’s tax, negative gearing ad the RET may save some furniture! How about a Coalition minority government with Bob Katter holding the balance of power.

      • BASSMAN says:

        As I said, Qld is the most important state for Labor. W.A. is in it but not as much. As I alluded in the previous blog, all the commentariat fail to mention that Labor may lose seats. Dunno why nobody ever mentions dis. This needs to be factored in. Shorten is keeping a very low profile which I guess is a strategy of sorts. At the last election Alan Jones said Labor would lose a swag of seats in Western Sydney-How wrong was the parrot? The franking credit scare may not work. The 8% of the population who benefit most (subsidised by the other 92%) all vote Liberal anyway.

      • Bella says:

        The coalition AND croc-hating crazy Katter holding ANY power after this election would be an insane scenario for Australia mate. Surely you jest.
        There wouldn’t be a twig left to conserve anywhere after they’ve torn it down, ripped it up or sold it to foreign interests. 🤐

    • smoke says:

      do a blog bloke….I’m dinkum too, coz verifiable facts keep coming up.. link to here when u can

  • Boadicea says:

    As always, she was dignified and gracious in her resignation. Good on her. Big kudos for not hanging around to listen to Scott and Bill’s farewells. That said a lot – without her saying anything further!

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Top read as always Mr Insider and while I wish Julie Bishop a happy full Retirement she has done the Coalition a big favour by opening up the seat to a new fresh face thus a “renewing” effect.
    I personally feel the Coalition will win the upcoming Federal Election as from my many “soundings” there is just no real “groundswell” for a Shorten led Labor Party to come to power. Labor yes, Shorten, no, and we shall soon find out if I am right.
    The Cash Splash Budget in April combined with the attack on Labors weak link, Shorten, I do believe will focus the Punters come May.
    The Border Protection issue of recent times has already exposed a weakness still in Labor and boy oh boy hasn’t the Coalition made inroads there.

    • Milton says:

      I didn’t and don’t think it a good look for the Liberals for Bishop to be reasonably visible, up the back behind the PM, during question time, Henry. Not that she isn’t good, but because she is and thus a reminder of the unseemly past of knifings etc. Not sure whether they get a say as to where they can sit but Abbott is practically in Siberia and next to that joystick, Kevin Andrews! Never mind, there are only a few more sitting days.
      Re borders, Henry the voting public tend to have a short memory on most things, so despite the ads that will inevitably be rolled out, will they provide the same sugar hit as they have in the last week or so? But you’d like to think a budget surplus and some coin thrown around could add a positive (for Liberal) on top of the negative (for Labor). Still, I don’t share your confidence that the coalition will win but I don’t think it will be a landslide. What I don’t want to see are some batty, embittered independents or Greens, on miniscule votes, determining outcomes in a hung parliament. If labor are to win I hope they have the numbers to rope themselves.

  • Milton says:

    Totally agree that Porter has potential down the track, provided he stays in the game. And we will never know how Bishop would have gone but I think she’s a far superior communicator than Plibersek and all the Labor hopefuls.
    Also, I can’t believe that I read that Morrison asked Bishop for Tina Arena’s number as he wanted to call her and let her know that he, ScoMo, would be at her concert. wtf! By the end of the election he could find himself on the stalkers register. Get your own numbers, Scott as Julie doesn’t owe you.

Leave A Reply to Dwight Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published.

PASSWORD RESET

LOG IN