Humble servant of the Nation

A reminder of Labor’s history of stuffing up golden situations

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The final sitting day in the parliament yesterday provided a timely reminder that Labor has a long and illustrious history of finding itself in golden situations only to totally stuff them up.

Forget the next three years, Bill Shorten and Labor could turn the dumpster fire that is Canberra at present into an inferno that could engulf it and everyone in the general vicinity in less than 12 weeks.

In other, brighter circumstances it might be the kind of efficient service delivery the punters expect from government.

Presuming Shorten and Labor win the next election (and that requires a sizeable leap of faith if not logic after yesterday’s shenanigans), one can only speculate what disasters will come its way in government. My best guess is Shorten will do a Nick Greiner, establish a federal anti-corruption commission only to find multiple members of his cabinet and ultimately himself, ensnared in it, providing an alternative meaning to the term “conviction politicians”.

In what stands as an extraordinary political achievement, Labor managed to disappoint everyone across the political spectrum yesterday — people who vote Labor, people who don’t and people who were thinking of voting Labor but now probably won’t.

It was as if the tactics committee met, handed Shorten a ball-peen hammer and told him to belt himself over the head with it, on the basis that it would feel better when he stopped.

The telecommunications access and assistance bill became law yesterday, passing through the Senate 44 votes to 12, after being waved through the House with bipartisan support.

It is, of course, a bill of the government’s making. It is a disaster, created by legal minds with little or no apparent expertise in technology. The problems with it are numerous but the biggest lies in the fact the law would require technology companies to target a single device or small number of devices, but only in a way that does not introduce a “systemic weakness” that impacts all users.

The techs I have spoken to say this is all but impossible and may lead to tech companies feeling obliged to leave the country rather than run afoul of this putrescent law. One of our most prolific and profitable industry sectors may leave our shores in droves. Well done, everyone. Throw another log on the dumpster fire.

The other major problem with the bill is it is yet another intrusion into the privacy of the citizenry. Predictably the response from the government and the opposition is of the tedious, “if you done nothing wrong, you have nothing to worry about” kind.

Labor’s favourite urger on Twitter, member for Gellibrand, Tim Watts, lectured a clearly unnerved Twitterdom on Tuesday night in an effort to bring some calm. “Wait and see our amendments,” the young MP promised. In the end Labor dropped its amendments altogether and waved the bill through.

It is a dreadful piece of law and by Labor’s own admission will need to be amended early next year, leading to the obvious question, and one that remains unanswered, why wave it through the lower house at all?

Timidity and cowardice

The old maxim that any day when the political debate turns to border security is a bad day for Labor seems to have Bill Shorten and his front bench spooked.

Labor is everywhere and nowhere on this issue. Jelly nailed to a wall.

Timidity and political cowardice are never far away with this mob.

The day started with Prime Minister Morrison facing a humiliating defeat in the parliament, with Labor and the Greens supporting a crossbench bill which would leave the decision on refugee repatriation to Australia entirely in the hands of those with medical expertise. Instead it was Shorten and Labor who were left pink-faced in embarrassment as the bill was filibustered to within an inch of its life in the Senate.

Everything Labor sought to achieve did not happen and everything it did not want to happen came to pass.

News reports today indicating Labor has softened its policy stance on refugee policy lends strength to the prevailing view that Labor is soft on border control while Shorten et al have simultaneously upset Labor voters who were hoping for a more humane policy response.

Faced with the prospect of multiple triumphs in the parliament in the morning session, all Shorten could do was lament the scoreboard at the end of the day. Win-win had become lose-lose.

As the House adjourned for the Christmas break, it was difficult to determine who felt more relieved — Scott Morrison or Bill Shorten. The only good news for both men is the parliament will sit so rarely in the New Year, they may as well call in the caterers and hire out both chambers for weddings, parties, anything. Maybe a funeral or two.

The focus in recent times has naturally been on the Morrison government and its travails. There appears to be no way out for the government, that is until we pause and turn our gaze to Bill Shorten and the Labor opposition.

And when we do, we are drawn to the conclusion that it would be madness to underestimate Labor’s capacity for political self-harm.

This column was first published in The Australian on 7 December 2018.

1,429 Comments

  • Wissendorf says:

    Those pining for a Labor Goverrnnment have forgotten a million unemployed and interest rates of 17%. I couldn’t vote for the Liberal rabble, and the Greens are a Party of nothings, so I my only choice is to vote for an Independent. I think there’ll be a lot of voters doing the same. I’m wishing it over already. Australian politics is as boring as watching grass grow.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      The big problem Wissendorf is that it will be Bill Shorten leading this Government. I don’t know of anyone who is looking forward to that.
      Mr. Insider has written quite a few Blogs on how “unloved” he is.
      Labor with a more in touch Leader, yes but with Bill, they won’t get my humble vote. Cheers

    • Dismayed says:

      Howard as Treasurer gave the country 22% interest rates 12% unemployment and 10% inflation. Howard as PM taxed and Spent at the highest rates ever seen until abbott/turnbull/morrison calamity came along. Howard and Costello spent $340 billion of $360 billion unbudgeted for tax revenues from the mining boom and locked in multiple Unfunded tax concessions and rorts that the Nation could not and cannot afford. They left infrastructure bottlenecks due to cuts and had cut funding to Health and Education to the bone. A healthy well educated populace leads to Productivity gains and economic improvement. Under NoWorkchoices Productivity Fell for the only time in the last 30 years. Labor by following Treasury advice saved hundreds of thousands of people from losing jobs and apart from the coalition and Newscorp are lauded the world over as having the Worlds best response to the GFC. Labor experienced massive revenue reductions due to the GFC and left a debt at 12% of GDP $178 billion Net $260 billion Gross. In the last 5 years Debt has more than Doubled during better economic times to almost $600 Billion. Spending has been above 25.5% of GDP until this year Tax has been above 24% of GDP until next year. See how it works? As Bloomberg has stated about the disastrous for the world trump. You can have an opinion but you cannot make up your own facts. No Surprises Fair dinkum. hold onto to what you have.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Yeah yeah, thats when the Australian Labor Party controlled world wide interest rates eh Wiss?
      Once again Labor will be picking up the pieces after this bunch of clowns have had their go.

      • Boadicea says:

        They will enjoy spending the surplus until they get voted out again JB. It’s the natural cycle.

        • Dismayed says:

          The proposed surplus will not materialise until 2019/20. Under the next government assuming commodity prices hold and trumps actions dont send the world economy into recession which is a better than 50/50 possibility. Your comprehension of the economy is virtually non existent. No surprises fair dinkum.

        • cponzi says:

          trruuly?….what surplus?

    • independent says:

      Clearly put no argument

    • Boadicea says:

      I’m lucky, Wiss. I’ve got Andrew Wilkie. He’s not too bad. I’ ll go with him

  • Wissendorf says:

    Happy New Year Jack. Sitting at the air terminal waiting for an already late flight to announce another delay, and with no further reading material readily to hand, and despite a strong aversion to reading on my phone, I pulled up your blog and did a census. Of the 958 posts in this thread, 210 (20.88 %) are from just one person. I admire your perseverance mate. I’m about to email JackHK and see if we can’t get a beer in while I’m in his region. His advice of ‘Patience and Perseverance’ was spot on, and I’d like to meet him and say thanks. I won’t be posting while I’m on the road this time – bit dodgy I think – but I’ll still have the odd read somewhere along the track.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Too dodgy! Ah the exciting secret life of Wissendorf! I’ll be over on the Tibetan border organising a bit of the old drugs for guns and cigars deal for Kimmie, Wiss . So drop in fr a cuppa and a chin wag. Just ask for “The Quiet Australian” and they will organise a chopper.
      Whoever made 210 posts (you do have too much time on your hands Wiss) I can only say “Well done that man!” Such passion and work ethic.
      I realise, and you hint at it, most of the contributions would be well below your standards (and mine) of haughty particularity so I commend you on your own forbearance.
      Anywho, as one serious scholar and gentleman to another, and to everyone else, have yer best lap around the Sun yet, and “whop it up ’em!”

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IAsuFpJ4cnk

    • Penny says:

      We know about that one poster Wiss, , it becomes really tiresome, but it’s a New Year so I will be a bit more tolerant. Have fun in SE Asia, it’s pretty good here in Penang atm. Hope you catch up with JackHKG…

    • Razor says:

      A dismal performance indeed Wiss……..

    • Razor says:

      I might also add Wiss it will only get worse in the lead up to the election when the nightly e-mail comes out with the talking points for the day.

      • Dismayed says:

        I would guess razor you are the only one on this blog connected to political party. You are also probably the only one living off taxpayer funds. Your inferiority complex is out of control. Then again you do choose to defend the indefensible and down right ridiculous coalition. In your case “It Is Difficult to Get a Man to Understand Something When His Salary Depends Upon His Not Understanding It”

        • Razor says:

          That’s an extremely uninformed comment even for you Dismal. My job depends on me being honest, incorruptible and working hard to look after others. In fact my tenure is more secure under a Labor government than a Coalition government. I don’t need to feel inferior when I know I’ve done more for people than you could ever hope to achieve. According to you your lot in life is to pollute the planet.

          • Dismayed says:

            another ridiculou and deliberately dishonest comment from you razor. over the years of this blog show one comment, if you can, where I have sated my, according to you, “lot in life is to pollute the planet”? You will not be able to because that is just another dishonest attempt by you make up your own facts. I will admit to helping bring energy to millions of people in numerous countries. You are always making comments about supplying power and providing jobs. You know “looking after” people and helping them look after themselves. I have you covered in the “helping” people by about 100 million since you want to again highlight your inferiority complex. usual weak effort from you.

            • Razor says:

              You work in the fossil fuel industry. You are polluting the planet apparently! You are earning your money by polluting the planet thus imperiling the lives of those 100million.

      • Boadicea says:

        Yep.

  • Mac says:

    “1,2,4,8,eleventy, 22,26,35……”

    Peter Dutton counting to 43.

    Thanks for the year Jack. I hope everyone gets what they want from this one.

  • Milton says:

    Despite the sanctions, Kim Jong-un appears to have stacked on a few kg’s over x-mas. He too may decide to head to the moon, if only to weigh a little less.
    Be resolute with your NY resolutions, Kimmie and lay off the tubs of Ben & Jerry’s!

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Don’t you worry about that Milton he and Donald are meeting again quite soon. He has a clear choice, either to toe the line or disappear in a Mushroom Cloud. Cheers

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      A snide and mean comment Milton. Kimmie may be slightly overweight for his height but he still has a 1.4 m vertical leap , runs the 100m in 10:03 , and could thrash ten of you with one hand tied behind his back while playing three Grand masters at chess.
      Clearly you are jealous of this extraordinarily talented handsome famous young man, an ornament to Socialism.
      Your hero, the idiotic fat guts capitalist running dog POTUS with the world’s worst rug isn’t exactly what you’d call svelte now is he? But do you hear me making fatuous gratuitous remarks about that?

      Try

  • Dwight says:

    Happy New Year Jack, or as my wife and kids say, C новым годом! 2019 will be interesting here in FNQ. At least I’ll never be bored. Hope the Insider clan is off to a good start.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Thank god we sold out of the Gold Coast a couple of years ago. 23 feet the article says, we would have been way under Mr Baptiste. Cheers

      • Boadicea says:

        It’s not going to rise that much HB, in the immediate future. Even climate scientists are not game to put a number to it. May not even happen. As my friends in the game say – science is never exact.

        • Dismayed says:

          Is that CWAnnie back in here??

        • Razor says:

          Precisely Boa. The IPCC keeps winding its modelling back. It’s a religion for some. Nobody can even say what effect natural variability has. They are relying on modelling that covers a pinhead in time when the entire history of the planet covers acres.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Ah FFS! Buy a brain, find a mind! That pinhead is the climate in which humans have evolved and are able to survive!
            Look at this image. That is all the water we have , spread thinly over parts of the planet . It is now absorbing about 93% of the extra heat trapped in the atmosphere over and above pre industrial levels, equal to the heat yield of 5 Hiroshima sized bombs every second.
            Dont worry about water levels rising , the issues is methane from ice melt and water vapour in the atmosphere.
            When the train hits you the pathologist wont be able to say exactly what caused death, the science isnt really exact enough.

  • BASSMAN says:

    Milton says:
    DECEMBER 31, 2018 AT 12:17 PM………..please give us a date when the world will end under a Labor govt. on top of that totally unresearched crap. U are better than dat Milt. This is easily the worst govt since Federation easily out doing McMahon. Er Newspoll? With Turnbull…2 points diff…without him…ten points diff! One tires of hearing from senior Liberals that Malcolm was ejected because he had taken the party too far to the left. Where is the evidence for this? Turnbull retained all of Abbott’s hard right policies on emissions, refugees, climate, tax cuts for big business, renewable energy and the hard right’s demand for a plebiscite on SSM. One could hardly call this ‘a move to the left’. The confusion is the Liberals have no idea what their ‘base’ or the ‘centre’ is that they keep saying they represent!

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Due to a lack of Funds, we will not be receiving an “uplifting” message today, New Years Day, from the Queens Man in Australia, big Pete Cosgrove, Mr. Insider.
    Pete who so loves the Taxpayer $$$$$$$$$$$’s says he’s not getting enough to perform his “vital” functions and the Australia Day Honours coming up may also suffer.
    This folks is sadly what happens when a Public Official has been on the Taxpapers “feedbag” way too long. Strewth.

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