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

  • Dismayed says:

    No room for the 2 best performed Australian short form batsmen in the ODI squad WTF is going on? No Darcy Short, No Chris Lynn? But Handscombe? gets selected FFS. Somehow Siddle gets selected again he took a couple of wickets with full tosses late in his only T20 game since the shield stopped where he hardly took a wicket? Stanlake is not up to top level cricket he is out of gas after 2 overs. There are at least 10 quicks in the country at the moment asking WTF? Hohns and Chappell have to be removed for the sake of Australian cricket.

    • JackSprat says:

      Alice in Wonderland stuff Dismayed.
      Big mistake was eying the ashes instead of setting the #1 priority to demolishing India.
      Methinks that, behind the scenes, there is a lot of discord and cronyism..
      The succession from a hard nosed captain in charge to the coach in charge is now complete – just as was predicted back last century.
      There is no hard nosed leader in the winds – maybe we should pay Warnie a million bucks a year so he can become coach, selector and replace the whole of the useless lot that have let CA become a bloated rudderless organization.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Yes, as far as the Green’s Senator Waters’s coal Bill is concerned, its just a drop in the bucket. It wont wash.

  • Trivalve says:

    Or someone else. But tell us about these white Chinese Nossy?

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Put a big wall around Queensland.

      • Bella says:

        Great idea JB but the problem we have is those desperate southerners flocking to live here every year. It’s endless!
        I reckon they’re over that ridiculous 9pm daylight & want to see the stars again. Poor souls. 😄

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          You’re right Bella. Those Southerners must be really desperate to want to live there. Still, the exodus is raising the IQ of the southern states and Queensland so it’s a good thing.

    • Bella says:

      I can’t get that link Razor but if it alludes to the Qld government’s proposed ‘clean-up-the-environmental-mess-you-made’ laws that will be enforced before any new coal mine approvals advance toward that dirty green light, why would Bill Shorten choose to intervene?
      Word on the street is that Adani’s on the ropes bigtime. Finally. 🤐

    • Perentie says:

      Hands up if you subscribe to the Courier Mail?

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    What a disgusting ungodly bunch of heathens the Catholic Church is Mr. Insider as we read: “Over the past four months, Roman Catholic dioceses across the US have released the names of more than 1,000 priests and others accused of sexually abusing children in an unprecedented public reckoning.”
    A pox on the Catholic Church and others like them.
    https://tinyurl.com/y8txxubj

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    China lands an unmanned Spacecraft on the dark side of the Moon. Well, now let’s see the USA, 6 successful Manned Moon Landings and China one on the dark side, unmanned. A lot of catch up to do there China!
    What say you to that Mr. Baptiste you lovable Anarchist and USA denouncer you?
    https://tinyurl.com/yd8s96r6

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      I say the US claimed to have made an unmanned landing in 1966, just after the Soviets.
      Therefore the Chinese should be able to land men or women on the moon within three years.
      Right?
      Tell me when someone travels more than two thousand kilometres from the surface of the Earth Henry. Now that would be astounding!

    • Bella says:

      Six!! Mate, you get so excited with this stuff hey? 🚀
      I still think the 1969 “giant leap” was never the real deal but each to their own Henry Donald J Blofeld. 😕💚

  • Razor says:

    I hope the allegations against John Setka are incorrect as he holds significant sway over the soon to be PM. Let’s all remain calm and let the courts make a decision. It would be far too easy for people to jump to conclusions and assume he is just another CFMMEU thug.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      What sway does Setka have over Shorten? Any suggestions of influence are for the most part fabrications made by people who don’t understand the union movement or the Labor Party.

      • Razor says:

        Setka controls the Victorian branch of the Labor party. Part of the left. Shorten is of the right. Shorten needed their votes and support internally to get where he is. He particularly needed them at the recent conference. Do you really think a he doesn’t owe them?

        https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2018/may/28/bill-shorten-defends-shutdown-of-refugee-debate-at-victorian-labor-conference

        From the guardian no less. The CFMEU protecting Bills achilles heal.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          Setka does not control the Victorian branch of the Labor Party. That is a bizarre statement. The construction industry is rife with problems and a politicised royal commission certainly didn’t get to the bottom of them. The CFMMEU is only one player, a significant one, sure, but the RC studiously avoided the organised crime element. Why did Gatto not give evidence, for example, or some of the standovermen in Sydney? The Libs are obsessed with this but only so far as the industry’s relationships with organised labour. This business of painting Shorten as a socialist (Cormann does it all the time. Joyce tried to pull it the other day) amounts to scare tactics at their dumbest. Joyce seems to believe we are headed to a Green-left future but the Green vote hasn’t changed. The Coalition have vacated the centre of Australian politics and will pay a heavy price for it.

      • Razor says:

        In respect to not understanding the Union movement or Labor. I cut my teeth under Kev Hooper and my father and two of his brothers were AWU and TWU delo’s. One uncle very close to Hughy Williams. I voted Labor until I was about 25. I’ve also voted Labor since then. I’ve been a Union member all my life and was a delegate for about 10yrs.

        I only dislike one Union and that’s because they are the most corrupt bunch of cowards in Australia. They care little for their workers in central Qld.

      • JackSprat says:

        I believe they have 2 seats ( or 10%) of the voting rights on the National Executive – must count for something

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Yes, you’ve gotta give it to Beijing. They’ve landed a “probe” on the dark side of the moon to check out the extent of the green cheese that’s available. The Chinese have developed a taste for dairy, and so they’ve snuck in the back way to avoid adverse comments from the non-believer on here that such a Luna landing is possible.

    Keep an eye out in your local deli or supermarket for the oriental ‘Lunar Luxury’ soon to be available. Not too sure about Aldi.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Such a landing is easily possible but neither you nor I believe it is possible to land humans on the moon or get anywhere near the moon Carl. Right?

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Yes, I reserve the option of being skeptical JB. Just as I do about much of the ballyhoo being presented re AGW. We live in a duplicitous world me old mate, where shysters abound.

        Trust you’re having a good New Year.

    • Boadicea says:

      Hopefully they’ll start buying up the moon and leave Tasmania alone

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