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Finding David Feeney

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I have a rule when it comes to recently fallen politicians. Don’t stick the slipper in after they’ve left the arena. It’s unseemly and a touch callous.

I figure once they’ve moved, often ignominiously, out of the line of fire, they become non-combatants.

Truth be told, it’s more of a guideline. Happily, readers, in the case of the existentially forgetful and terminally hapless David Feeney, I am prepared to make an exception.

David Feeney resigned as the member for Batman yesterday. Sadly, he misplaced his letter of resignation. He did show the media a bus ticket he has had in his wallet since 1993. He’s going home now. Wherever that is.

Some of Feeney’s colleagues offered trite condolences and tepid expressions of support yesterday but it was impossible not to notice the gritted teeth. In Adelaide yesterday, deputy leader, Tanya Plibersek, said Feeney had made a “fine contribution” to the party but when asked if he was resigning, replied, “I’ll let David speak for himself.”

Praise any fainter than that would be in an induced coma.

In 1983 Batman was the safest Labor seat in the country, safer even than Bob Hawke’s seat of Wills just across St George’s Road. Batman has been in Labor hands since 1934, save a brief period when former Labor member for Batman, Sam Benson, was expelled from the party over his continued support for the Vietnam War. Benson won the seat as an independent in 1966 only to lose it narrowly to the colourful former Collingwood mayor, Horrie Garrick in 1969. Horrie, dragged the seat back to the safest end of the Labor pendulum until he got rolled in a preselection barney and was replaced by Brian Howe in 1977.

Now it will go to the Greens in a by-election which could be held as early as March 10. The only thing that got Feeney over the line in 2016 was Liberal preferences. The Libs will almost certainly run dead in the by-election and that will be that for Labor’s long and occasionally illustrious history in Batman.

As we’ve seen in the seat of Melbourne, when Labor loses to the Greens in an inner-city electorate, those seats don’t come back.

Brian Howe was the last genuine local to represent Labor in Batman.

He was a thoroughly decent man who became deputy Prime Minister in the Hawke-Keating governments. While he was Minister for Housing, he spent three months living in public housing to see for himself what the problems were and how they could be fixed. I’d say imagine that from a politician today but we all know it is unimaginable.

Say what you like about Howe’s successor, Martin Ferguson and he has many critics within the Labor Party, indeed to the point where the WA state branch moved to expel him four years ago. In my experience, the vowelless Mar’n was always accessible. When he was a shadow minister I would call him for a quote and a yarn and if you rang early enough, Mar’n would pick up the phone himself. No protective press secretaries or chiefs of staff acting as political bollards.

But the fact remains he was parachuted into the seat in a factional deal that rolled the locals. He wasn’t even a Melbourne bloke. These things matter. A political party can’t keep doing this without losing support from the grassroots and the punters.

When Feeney was elbowed in, in another slippery multi-factional deal that saw him go from the Senate to the Reps — from the vegetables to the animals — the local branches had been treated as door mats again. It was the beginning of the end.

I’ll call it now. Labor is gone in Batman. Ged Kearney might have stood a chance a decade ago but not now. The seat, once the jewel in the Labor crown, is never coming back.

Feeney has been the butt of many jokes and God knows, I’ve written plenty myself. In another time and under different circumstances he would have been a Labor hero. A campaign director with three state election wins under his belt — two in South Australia and one in Victoria where the Bracks government won by a record margin. A big parliamentary career beckoned.

Instead he leaves politics as a laughing stock with the once safest seat in the country about to slip through Labor’s hands.

Feeney is fated to walk the Earth, knocking on doors offering a polite if by now unnecessary political spiel to the punters, “Bill Shorten and the Labor team have some great policies. I’d like a moment of your time to talk about them. Also, is this my house?”

This article was first published in The Australian on 2 February, 2018.

 

442 Comments

  • Penny says:

    Hooray, Tourism Australia has come up with the best ad since the 1980’s. It’s funny, stars the gorgeous Chris Hemsworth (and others) and was the star of the show at the Superbowl. About time and shows the brilliance our advertising companies can come up with if given the right theme and funding. Let’s hope it results in lots of tourists to OZ.

    • Penny says:

      And on another note a sad, sad loss to those who care greatly about all creatures great and small, RIP Dr. Hugh Wirth a fantastic animal advocate for the RSPCA. I remember listening to him on ABC Radio in Melbourne on Saturday mornings.

      • Boadicea says:

        That is sad. Lovely man.

      • Bella says:

        One of the most important Ivory investigators in the world into the illegal ivory & rhino horn trade has been found murdered in his own home in Nairobi.
        Esmond Bradley-Martin was at one time UN Special Envoy for rhino conservation & his most recent achievement was helping persuade China to shut down it’s elephant ivory trade just last year.
        Money is the root of all evil Penny.🌍

        • Boadicea says:

          I think i saw him on TV not so long ago, Bella . Big money involved. I guess he must have always been looking over his shoulder. Sad

        • Milton says:

          Yes, I read about that in the NYT, Bella. Still not sure whether it was a robbery that got nasty or something more sinister as he ruffled a few feathers. His safe was open and empty. Interesting bloke and the leading expert in that horrific and senseless trade.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Come To Australia! Experience the thrill of meeting a lunatic waving a very big knife on a lonely outback track?
      Yeah, that should work.

      Travel hint. For a sense of local atmosphere view the movie “Wolf Creek.”

      • Penny says:

        JB, it is certainly the best ad for Australia since the 80s. Remember that terrible “where the bloody hell are ya” with the lovely Lara Bingle?….who I hear you say? I do hear a lot about Wolf Creek, must rent it before we travel down the West Coast of Australia this year

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    At the Superbowl in the USA, Mr Insider, the Philadelphia Eagles have stunned the New England Patriots, scoring a late touchdown to win Super Bowl LII 41-33 in a thriller in Minneapolis. POTUS Trump declined a pre game interview given to all Presidents due to an ongoing dispute over his perception the US Flag is being disrespected by some players, hence the “kneeling” protest going on with players.
    https://tinyurl.com/yau45lxh

  • Boadicea says:

    Dwight:
    I’d be interested in your rellie’s on the spot assessment from Cape Town.
    My nephew still lives there and is highly critical of the mishandling (or no handling at all) of the water storage. Mind you, he is highly critical of the ruling ANC – as are most over there.
    Despite forecasting lower rainfall and dropping dam levels a couple of years ago, and a growing population, nothing was apparently done to prepare for this. Dam walls were not raised as advised, and no serious desalination was initiated. No new dams were built.
    There is no way the city should be on the verge of running dry
    Melbourne, for instance, built the desal plant well in advance when the storage reached something like 30%. Qld too. So far they’ve been lucky – they haven’t used it. But maybe one day they’ll be glad they did it.

    • Trabvitch says:

      Hi Boa,

      I am in Cape Town at the moment, and it is very educational chatting to people here about what is going on. As you said it is mishandling of the water supply issue, as well as having no new infrastructure being built and a huge influx of people into the area. Another thing I heard is that the ANC don’t give a damn about Cape Town anyway, given that the DA now run the city…
      On the other hand, with the election of Cyril Ramaphosa as pres of the ANC (and the Guptas apparently right out of the picture) a bit of optimism is creeping in here, and people are thinking that the country may be turning the corner. There now is a large and growing non-white middle class who have largely grown up in the post-apartheid era and who have the same aspirations that most of us have – good government, a good job and lifestyle, and bugger the ideological crap. As a final note it will be interesting to see what happens at the State of the Nation address tomorrow!

      Cheers,
      Trabvitch.

      • Boadicea says:

        Thanks Trab!
        The push to oust Zuma looks a lot like the Mugabe standoff at the moment!
        I have never been back to Africa – was happy to leave and let the rightful owners take over. But it’s really sad to watch at the moment. Cape Town has to be one of the most beautiful cities in the world. That’s probably why I love Hobart – many similiarities – with the dominant mountain and all. The last thing I did before getting on a plane out of there was to sit on the summit of Table Mountain and log it into the memories.
        As you point out, that’s the hope. The post-apartheid generation – and to install a stable government – which is the biggest challenge!

    • Boadicea says:

      Taps off now pushed out to May I believe. Hopefully Winter rains will help.
      I see the ANC are asking Zuma to quit.

  • Boadicea says:

    It does not sit comfortably with me to hear that Robert Doyle has had a nervous breakdown.
    I don’t care what he allegedly has, or hasn’t, done – no one deserves trial and assumption of guilt by media before the matter has been dealt with by those qualified to do so.
    This really has to stop. The colateral damage is just awful. The HR department of the organisation involved should be dealing with these matters in confidence.

    • Penny says:

      I agree Boa. The fact that he has been hospitalized speaks volumes to me. Let the investigation take place without the media being all over it.

  • Dumb As A Plumb says:

    Who is David Feeney Jack?

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    Liberal voters will still have to turn up for the muster. If the Greens are so “on the nose” for them, this is their chance to show it.

    • Lou oTOD says:

      No self respecting Liberal would put their nose anywhere near the Greens JB, but then agan who knows. After all, it took a Brown to get the Greens going.

    • Razor says:

      I think many of them will be happy to either donkey or vote for an also ran just to sit back and watch the left tie themselves in knots. This is a diabolical issue for Labor and getting worse.

      • Dismayed says:

        1% swing towards Labor at the next Federal election is all that is required.

        • Razor says:

          Swing schming…….they need to win seats and no swing is uniform. They need to retain or gain seats in regional Queensland. The inner city latte’ ones are already theirs or the Greens. WA seems to be getting over their hate for Colin Barnett as well. WA is a resource state they know what a leftist Green oriented government means.

          The Coalition with use Labor’s campaign tactics next time round. Expect to hear lots about electricity bill and what his renewable energy target means for power prices. Just saying…..

          • Dismayed says:

            HAHHAHA. The last WA Labor government left a record surplus that Barnett, Porter and the seat sniffer busby turned into record debt and deficit during the biggest boom ever seen. Again you admit all you cons have is personal attacks. You are obviously ignorant to the FACT John Howard introduced the RET. The nations knows that you cons will run on the usual divisive race hate and demonization of minority groups along with the same lies on power, health, education etc. You really are out of touch. You disgust me and prove all that is wrong with your dishonest ideology.

            • Razor says:

              You did not refute one point I raised. Interesting.

              I said Barnett was on the nose

              I said Bill was raising the RET nothing about who introduced it.

              Labor is famous for attack adds, let alone mediscare so I reckon it’s an eye for an eye.

              • Dismayed says:

                sigh. waste of time. you are poison and wilfully ignorant. As I said last time I have refuted and disproven just about every piece of rubbish you post and as you have done here you change the story. Pathologically dishonest and cowardly. No surprises.

                • Milton says:

                  “…As I said last time I have refuted and disproven just about every piece of rubbish you post…”.
                  HAHAHAHAHA…. delusional, no surprises.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Oh my goodness! We’ll have to pay more for our fuel in order to save the planet.
            Aw, bugger that for a joke.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    With your indulgence Mr Insider, the latest Newspoll figures just in and PM Turnbull now records his 26th Consecutive Negative one, now just 4 away from ex ousted PM Tony Abbott who clocked up 30 before Turnbull outed him citing Abbotts 30 Consecutive Negative Newspolls. Now back to Feeney.
    https://tinyurl.com/ydykxfqc

    • Boadicea says:

      It’s the poll on the day that counts , HB. These ones just sell newspapers.

    • Dwight says:

      Chris Kenny has 1 April picked for the 30th.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Henry, there are negative newspolls and there are negative newspolls. Not all negative newspolls are equal. Thirty negative newspolls for a yobbo like Abbott is a horrendous portent, but for a gentleman like Turnbull, a mere bagatelle of a hiccup. I think the correct ratio in terms of significance would be about seven to one.
      If Turnbull returns say 200 negative polls consecutively we might begin to worry.
      It’s a class thing. You could plaster Turnbull in cow dung but his gold plating would show through.
      Stop fretting. All is well.

  • Boadicea says:

    smoke:
    I read the link you attached re Elon’s gift of 50,000 solar panels and batteries, curious as to who they would be given to.
    Social welfare housing apparently – which is good.
    Reading on, I was really astonished to learn that a couple living – presumably simply in welfare housing – with their grandchildren, were paying $900/qtr for electricity! They say they do not use a dishwasher or aircond either – because they couldn’t afford to. Well that’s for sure.
    Holy cow, how can electricity be so expensive for a simple household.? Unbelievable seeing they were not using the power hungry appliances.
    I have a dishwasher, hot water heated via electricity (which is expensive) and use other power carefully. I don’t leave lights on unnecessarily etc. My power bill is $200/qtr average. Four times less than the SA couple!
    Well the couple referred to are now very happy because they can have the dishwasher and aircond.
    But how do those without solar afford those kind of bills?

    • Dismayed says:

      The figure quoted is ridiculous. With teenagers, aircons, hair dryers, dishwasher fridges etc etc the average 4 person household in SA pays $500 per quarter.

      • Boadicea says:

        It was astonishing. Maybe they were into hydroponics

      • Penny says:

        Have to say I thought the figure was exceptionally high. Even in Darwin where power bills are extraordinarily high (now that does have to do with hydroponics) the bill is generally around $400 a quarter

        • Razor says:

          Not sure the last time you paid for power here in OZ Penny but I’d wager a bottle of what you fancy the price is closer to the $900 than the $500 for the family quoted. Actually with teenagers and aircon $900 would be pretty reasonable.

      • Razor says:

        Is that with rooftop solar Dismayed? Because if it isn’t you’re dreaming!

          • Dismayed says:

            usual out of date propaganda flawed assumptions from you. the article actually states ” “I know the most expensive prices are in Europe, US prices are much lower and the only other contender is Japan but I know prices are higher in Europe” Your pathological dishonesty highlights itself again. Oh that $500 is before you take away the feed in tarrif which drops the price again. You got nothing but smoke billowing from your outdated stacks.

            • Razor says:

              You idiot the feedin tarrif only applies if you have paid for Solar. That’s the whole point! it’s $900 without it and what if you cannot afford the solar? All you have done is agreed with my post at 2.22pm.

              • Dismayed says:

                NO. Its $500 without it and $350 after the feedin tarriff Idiot. You as usual have been proven and wrong and as usual are tyring to change tact. Pathologically dishonest and cowardly. No Surprise.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            And did you read the reasons given in the article? You will note that the prices for electricity in SA with it’s tiny population and vast distances is barely above that of Germany and Denmark, and not much above NSW.

            We’re being ripped off by the multinational energy companies Razor. In every field, aided and abetted by the conservative gougers and little helpers like you.

    • Bella says:

      Jay Wetherill is leading the country yet again in the fight against climate change; doing what any decent PM should be doing.
      Turncoat & Frydenberg on renewables?
      Mals own home covered in solar but the Libs big fossil-fuel donors pay the government to screech like a pair of puppets to scam the public into believing their lies about big, bad renewable energy.
      It’s way past time they worked in the interests of OUR future, not their own.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Depends on how many TV’s you have going 24/7 and how big your dope crop is. You’d be even more really astonished if you knew how much electricity my grow lights chew up.
      My bill would be astronomical if I didn’t pop over the fence and plug a lead into my neighbours weatherproof outlet.
      Also many welfare households run mechanical bulls for party rodeos , pinball machines and carousels, which they call merry-go-rounds. It all ads up, especially if a couple of the kids hobby weld and or do blacksmithing.
      No I don’t think $900 per quarter is extraordinary at all. You can get that back from one plant.

      • Boadicea says:

        That did occur to me, JB. ! I didnt really want to suggest it. Well the solar and batteries should increase profits no end.

      • Boadicea says:

        PS: I think the “really astonished” you write should be in quotes, Sir. Your sentence doesn’t read too well otherwise?
        See, I’m learning lots from your gramnar lessons these days 😁

  • Barry Box says:

    To use the Aussie vernacular Jack bloody Feeney is a drongo.

  • Dwight says:

    I think Kudelka’s cartoon mixing this story with the missing files was pretty clever.

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