Humble servant of the Nation

Daniel Andrews: so popular, even John Howard’s praising him

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The result of the Victorian election has been analysed to within an inch of its life. Federal factors, state factors, good leadership, leadership in a vacuum. One thing we can conclude with certainty is that Dan Andrews is the most successful political leader in Australia at present.

He is a formidable politician. We know this because his opponents now acknowledge it.

Andrews has gone from socialist ne’er-do-well, painted as a cartoon villain in so many op-eds last week to being extolled by John Howard during an interview with Leigh Sales on 7.30 on Tuesday night.

“Can I give credit where it is due, I think Daniel Andrews was a very good campaigner. I think he is an extremely good communicator. He explains things clearly, simply and well …” Howard said.

High praise.

The previous titleholder was Annastacia Palaszczuk who went from minority government in Queensland in 2015 on the back of a 12 per cent swing, to forming majority government in Queensland in 2017 with a four-seat net gain.

Dan Andrews’ triumph in Victoria with votes still being counted points to a nine-seat net gain and swing towards Labor on primary vote of 4.6 per cent with the Liberals (-5.9 per cent), Greens (-1.6 per cent) and Nationals (-0.2) all down.

Elsewhere in the states there are new governments in power who are yet to return to the people to have their appeal and their records tested. In New South Wales, the thumping majority won by Barry O’Farrell in 2011 was cut back in 2015 under Mike Baird by 15 seats. Gladys Berejiklian faces a tough fight to hang on in the 2019 state election on March 23 next year and will almost certainly lose seats.

Federally, no government has been returned with an increased majority since the Coalition under John Howard in 2004.

This makes Dan Andrews the undisputed king of electoral politics in Australia. While there have been calumnies (notably the ‘Red Shirts’ scandal with allegations of electoral fraud) and missteps along the way, his first-term agenda has been substantially carried out. The plan for a second term, how to get there and why was effectively communicated.

In the campaign, Andrews assiduously avoided attack politics. He chose to rise above it for the practical reason that the majority of voters are turned off by the schoolyard name calling and petty derision commonplace in politics elsewhere.

Basic stuff, really, for any political party seeking to find its way into government and stay there.

Maybe we need not look much further at the reasons for Andrews’ success. But I want to tell a story that I thought was best left until after the Victorian election lest it be thought I was trying to sway voters. We are beyond that now and the dust has settled.

I’ve had dealings with the Andrews government, not as a journalist but as an advocate on behalf of Denis Ryan. Many will know the story. Denis was a detective with Victoria Police based in Mildura who sought to prosecute an outrageously prolific paedophile priest only to find corrupt forces within VicPol turn against him. That was in 1972. He lost the job he loved and was left battered and bruised by the encounter.

Denis Ryan’s story was told by me in 2013 in the book Unholy Trinity. The assertions of police corruption and wilful ignorance within the Catholic Church were proven in the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse in 2015.

The Andrews government had no legal liability to compensate Ryan. The statute of limitations had long since lapsed. I could only appeal to their sense of decency. I had meetings with ministers and almost endless streams of correspondence with various apparatchiks, chiefs of staff, media advisers. Former ministers in Labor governments were recruited to lobby current ministers.

Denis waited.

It was only when Premier Andrews stepped in that the wheels started turning. His intervention accelerated the matter to the point where the 87-year-old hero to so many in Victoria and across the nation received his compensation within a matter of days. After 46 years of waiting for justice, it was all done and dusted in less than two weeks.

The undisclosed amount was not a lotto win for Ryan. It was enough to buy him digs in a retirement home in Mildura and see his needs taken care of for the remainder of his life. He can enjoy a holiday now. That’s the strength of it and despite being owed millions, that is all Denis wanted.

I often said to Labor ministers, “If you want to have a good day in politics go and stand next to Denis Ryan. Shake his hand and see him right.”

I thought they might be swayed by the thought of a good news story. An election was looming. A government could always do with a good news day.

Remarkably,  Andrews did not seek to make a virtue out of it. Neither Andrews nor any of his ministers went up to Mildura to stand on a flat bed truck and hand Denis an oversized presentation cheque in front of a gaggle of media, in an attempt to squeeze a vote out of it here and there. Instead it was done quietly. Without a fuss.

The payment did not have to be made and without the intervention of Andrews, the request for compensation may well be gathering dust on someone’s desk deep in the bowels of a minister’s office in Spring Street. Dan Andrews chose to compensate Ryan without any hullabaloo, any rough politicking. He just did it.

From someone who has been an observer of government for a long time, seen them come and go — some good, some less so — it was impressive.

Some might say the Andrews government did what any government should do and they’d be right, but the fact remains there were eight state governments in Victoria from both sides of the divide that should have acted but did not.

Ryan was made a Member of the Order of Australia on Australia Day this year for his services to “child protection investigations”. He was named Mildura’s Citizen of the Year, the award bestowed upon him on the same day.

After he received his compensation, another award came his way. Denis was to be made a Freeman of the City of Mildura.

He personally invited Premier Andrews to attend the ceremony. Andrews replied in writing days later.

Dear Mr Ryan,

I am sorry I cannot be there in person to see the conferment of your latest title, ‘Freeman of the Rural City of Mildura’.

But I cannot think of a more deserving recipient.

While others chose to hide the truth or avert their gaze, you instead shone a bright light on one of our darkest chapters.

Your courage of conviction, and your relentless pursuit of justice, have changed our nation for good.

On behalf of the Victorian government and the Victorian people, thank you.

Yours sincerely,

Dan Andrews

Politicians come and go. And Dan Andrews one day will certainly go. The how and the why is a long way from being determined. As Paul Keating said of a life in politics, “Everyone goes out feet first, the only difference is whether the pall bearers are crying or not.”

There is perhaps another truism. In politics as in life, decency goes a long way.

This article was first published in The Australian on 28 November 2018. 

637 Comments

  • Dismayed says:

    I see SMarsh tuning up beautifully as usual for the first test with a duck. Head also collected a duck. Darcy Short making a nice 74 against the Indians in the warm up match. D.Short should be in all of the Australian teams. Stoinis made M.Marsh look very ordinary. Plenty of young quick’s doing well again in the Sheffield Shield round.

    • Dismayed says:

      the minister for idiocy and the resources companies reckons if you have a day off school you end up on the dole. the cons would not know leadership if it smacked in the face. No Surprises. Fair dinkum. Give em heaps.

      • John O'Hagan says:

        Canavan is going to be unemployed before any of those kids are. And given the long game he seems to be playing by insulting the next generation of voters, his party may well stay that way well into the future. He’ll make a great opposition leader for mine!

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      I did like the “Beam You Up Scotty” one Mr. Baptiste. Cheers

    • JackSprat says:

      While all the well heeled Anglos go off to save the world because they have been told it is going to hell in a hand basket, their mates from immigrant families are off studying, getting into selective schools and the cream of university places that have give good future job prospects.
      Daddy’s money is only going to take them so far.
      The depth of stupidity is the pre-school who used 4 year olds, yes 4 year olds, to hold up political placards about Nauru.
      Then there was the teacher who stated that she would make sure that her class would never vote Liberal – got stepped on by the left-wing education union probably because they do not want the public to know what is gong on in the schools – not because what she did.
      I guess that if many of your teachers have never achieved academically and along with that critical thought processes and they are underpaid so anybody with a brain would never contemplate going into the profession, this is what one can expect.

      • Milton says:

        There’s always a job waiting for them in the Union’s, JS. Even after the unions get rid of jobs. Sadly it’s not good news for the females as they are less represented in that mob % wise than they are in the liberal party. Different strokes for different folks, I suppose.

        • Dismayed says:

          little milton do you understand what a union is? It represents “Working” people. What an absolutely ridiculous comment to suggest unions want to get rid of jobs. No Jobs no unions. Stop parroting the paranoid rubbish you read and see in and on Newscorp media. Perhaps you are actually projecting your alt right policies?

          • Milton says:

            The Angry Inch – How can they be working when they are out on strike? Or do they mainly represent them when they are not working? Make up your minds. Anywho we have more jobs now and less union membership, what does that represent.

            • Dismayed says:

              little milton. Strikes and industrial actions are still are record low levels have been for 10 years. You are obfuscating again because you have been shown to be WRONG again. It must be hard going through life like you knowing when you make a comment you will be proven wrong. You are reverting back to your bad old ways of tying to change the story every time you get called out. Sad mad little milton. What a waste. No Surprises.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Well said JS, a top post.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    POTUS Trump and the delightful Melania Trump arrive in Argentina, Mr Insider for the G20. Take note, Mr. Baptiste, this is not an ELVIS Karaoke.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tSDXBxI-mf8

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    When pit bulls go bad. This from a guy who once said he would take a bullet for Donald. Oh I get it! Semantics, I took them a bullet for Donald, and a few spares.
    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-11-30/michael-cohen-guilty-plea-and-trumps-reasons-to-be-antsy/10570016

    • Bella says:

      It appears the orange one is in a real spot of bother in his enduring attempt to get around this investigation.
      I saw Trump boarding AF1 clinging onto Melania’s hand off & on, both were awkward as all get out.
      I reckon Michael Cohen overpaid his dues & the Don has sweaty palms for good reason. Or bad.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    And just a reminder to all those who are averse to “silly names” Blinky Bill, with or without his magic pudding*, still remains a representative symbol worthy of veneration by most Aussies in the know.

    * substitute magic tax increases as appropriate.

  • Trivalve says:

    Please allow me to rehash this one Jack, particularly in the light of a certain minister’s characterisation of Adani as a ‘little Aussie battler’ Just what the…?

    I am struggling with my vocab. There’s a word or phrase out there that perfectly describes the behaviour and responses of the Coalishun lately and I just can’t crack it. ‘Denial’ is close but it’s off the mark. I mean, everything they say, every answer they give, every action they propose flies in the face of reality, of observable fact. Everyone one can see what’s happening but they plough ahead with, not lies per se, but refutations of clear evnts and comments. Today’s effort by Andrew Hastie is a good case in point: https://twitter.com/abcnews/status/1067722969856667648. The Victorian election debacle is another. Now I see somewhere that the devil is to blame! Morrison and Frydenburg are the prime suspects. the rest of the circus is simply running around like a kindergarten where they broke into the storeroom and stole all the red cordial. It’s fascinating and gruesome all at once. If only it wasn’t the government of our country that was concerned (and how’s this ten sitting days before May caper? Pathetic and supremely gutless.)

    The adults in charge!

    Can anyone solve my vocab problem?

  • Wissendorf says:

    I’m surprised the Red Shirts scandal appears to have carried no weight. MP’s refusing to answer Police questions about a shonk using taxpayer funds should have surfaced. Maybe the Press weren’t trying.

    Dwight –
    GBP 3% for the playoffs
    Bills 4.7% for the playoffs
    We’ve both had a bad season. GBP had a had an injury induced shocker last Monday that I think has ended their run. Bills have played shit all season. (Sigh) There’s always next year.

    Bassman
    (from previous topic) a giga anything is a billion of them. A gigabyte is a billion bytes. A gigabanana is a billion bananas. A gigaton is a billion tons. 1,000 gigatons is actually 1 teraton but doesn’t sound nearly as scary.
    For the record, Greenland ice, and all other ice, water, and everything in the water cycle is measured in cubic kilometers (the second largest commonly used scientific volumetric measurement; the biggest is the cubic light year). All liquids are measured volumetrically. You don’t buy a 2kg bottle of Coke, it’s a 2 litre bottle of Coke. You don’t buy petrol by weight. Greenland contains 2,850,000 cu km of ice. Hence 1 teraton, as a fraction of the total is 1/2850th. The period Jean “The Pants Wetter” Baptiste mentioned was five years, thus ice loss averages 200 cu km per year. Using the simple maths 2,850,000/200 = 14,200 years, the time it will take to melt all the ice in Greenland.

    Fools who mis-state or over-state or deliberately mislead the environmental case make it harder for those with a genuine environmental concern to engage the uncommitted and gain an audience for genuinely concerning data. If they don’t know or understand what their talking about they should just stf up. I’ve pointed out J”TPW”B’s error previously and he ran away, but his constant errors are a good source of humour.

    • BASSMAN says:

      I am learning more every day
      Thanks Bald

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      What a load of garbage. Clearly the rate of melt is accelerating alarmingly, astonishingly, so to make the extrapolation that the average rate over a given period just past is the rate to make your calculation on is just plain idiotic.

      The whole point you deliberately or foolishly overlook is the fact that so much ice has been lost so quickly, and that however long it takes the ice to melt doesn’t matter. The fate of humanity does not rest on the fact that Greenland has ice left to melt, the melting ice is the canary down the mine, indicating how much heat the oceans have absorbed over and above the pre industrial rate.

      Why don’t you try thinking for yourself Wiss instead of regurgitating the denial bilge of paid coal shills. Start off referring to the active graph, right hand side bar of the attached link, if you have two neurons to rub together it should discourage you from you trite twitting.

      https://www.skepticalscience.com/ocean-and-global-warming-intermediate.htm

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        ” …. the melting ice is the canary down the mine …”

        And I must admonish you on your own “trite twitting” JB. Please try to keep up with the latest issues regarding animal welfare .

        Canaries haven’t been used in mines for over 2 decades.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          This will be futile………………..
          It was not intended to imply the Greenland ice sheet is an actual canary Coal…………. Um, no, all I can say is you are brilliantly qualified to be an AGW denier.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      I say Wiss, firstly let me say I do enjoy and appreciate your obvious knowledge and understanding of scientific volumetrics as they apply to the present debate concerning the so called AGW. I also find the mature, unemotional and well reasoned approach of your delivery to be quite refreshing.

      Thanks to your good self, I am now able to better understand why there may well be a biological correlation and causal link between me old mate JB’s “wet pants” syndrome and his personal obsession with non-combustible greenhouse gasses.

      I look forward to your future posts.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        I appreciate your need Carl, you get a bath every time you try wrestle your weird take on the science into something resembling credibility. Keep ’em coming. You’re on a hiding to nothing. I have no doubt some of your posts will be going viral soon, used as evidence by the concerned young that they are up against incorrigible idiocy that requires a redoubling of effort. You could be doing a lot more for AGW awareness than you ever could by any other means. So lets have your take on this…………………..

        https://skepticalscience.com/agw-denial-explained-2.html

        • Carl on the Coast says:

          Yeah JB, I noticed the authors in your link highlighted and acknowledged in their material that there was a “sometimes-maybe- legitimate scientific endeavor going on …”.

          I must say they’re spot on with that. Especially an emphasis on the “maybe”.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Oh for God’s sake, the authors were actually observing that at least some of the idiotic AGW deniers had enough intelligence to acknowledge (sarcasm here) “that there was a sometimes legitimate scientific endeavour going on.”

            Was there anything else you noticed in the link?

  • Hardacre says:

    Bravo to all involved in this.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Yes, I see that Cow Dung shares have taken a hit on the Bombay stock exchange’s NIFTY 50 index on the back of the latest news out of the Galilee Basin.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Call it cow dung or bullshit Carl, your efforts alone should keep the stocks buoyant. Get this into you old coal shill dinosaur.
      read:https://www.theguardian.com/environment/climate-consensus-97-per-cent/2016/oct/31/coal-doesnt-help-the

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        You making stuff up again JB?
        The link you offered simply contained the following advice: “Sorry – the page you have requested does not exist.” The Guardian.

        Quite appropriate I thought.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          The article does exist and it destroys your ridiculous and cynical posturing that coal will help the poorest. It wont, it makes them poorer whereas renewables are making wonderful improvements in the lives of the worlds most disadvantaged.
          I don’t know why the link didn’t work and no doubt you have no interest in making honest enquiry. When I’ve got some time I will give you heaps on this very subject, unrequested and regularly. No, no, don’t thank me it will be my pleasure.

          • Carl on the Coast says:

            Yes JB, according to Reuters, July 27, 2018 @ 9,03pm, the “poor” folk in India saw a rise in their country’s thermal coal imports by 8%, while their coking coal imports rose by 13% as at 31 March 2018.

            You may not be aware me old mate that the thermal coal is the stuff they use for power generation. It plays an important role in getting the “poor” folk off the cow dung they use for their cooking, etc. You may recall I mentioned it in my post at 8.12am on 30 Nov and for which you had such an erratic and disingenuous reaction to.

            You’re obviously not interested, but Ill mention it anyway, there are over 750 million folk in India living below the poverty line and I’m more than confident they would be very grateful to know that we are helping them raise their standard of living through the use of good, clean Aussie coal. And I’m also sure they couldn’t give a hooty-toot whether or not a few ice cubes fall of a cliff at the South Pole.

            STOP PRESS! I’ve just received advice from Reuters that India’s total coal imports for August alone was 17.7 million tonnes.

            • Jean Baptiste says:

              You are bloody hopeless. I am sure the poor of India saw their countries coal imports rise, and they probably saw large jet aircraft carrying millions of first world passengers over their heads too.
              This is the reality Carl
              https://www.vox.com/2016/10/25/13309076/energy-poverty-coal

              And no doubt some of the poorest Indians are aware that Bollywood stars live opulent life styles. That really is the worst sort of behaviour, pretending to have an interest in the poor in order to justify your efforts to remain as comfortable as you can.

              • Carl on the Coast says:

                What on earth has Bollywood got to do with cow dung JB?
                And if your last para is an attempt to have a crack at my personal situation, then I’d be genuinely disappointed that you would stoop so low.

                However, if I have misunderstood your comment , then I’ll continue to regard you as me old mate, me old mate.

                Over to you.

                • Jean Baptiste says:

                  Oh Gawd! Give me strength! You said the Indian poor saw coal imports increasing as if inferring they were benefitting from it. Slippery stuff. They know of Bollywood too and that doesn’t help them either.

                  There has always been plenty of coal about, and suddenly coal is going to change the situation of the poorest? Give me a break.

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    Oh how civilised are we great Christian nations when our children are forced to take to the streets to plead for their lives.
    And our PM wants the children to “learn” and not be activists. I think that’s how we got to this point in the first place Mr PM, blind acceptance and a paucity of critical thinking.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Congratulations JB!

      Your 7.48am comment deserves to be held in perpetuity as a special attachment to the catalogue of JtI’s esteemed blog records as being the most nonsensical statement ever offered this side of the last ice age.

      Exalting about the deliberate indoctrination of the youth of our nation in order to callously subdue and snuff out their option of critical thinking and expression is the antithesis of the Hegelian philosophy of dialectical reasoning.

      May I suggest that you have you cerebral cortex checked out ASAP me old mate.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        WTF! You’re a madman.

      • Bella says:

        No JB’s comment is correct & nicely worded.
        When have our school children ever felt so disregarded, so invisible to the self-proclaimed christians in government, that they’ve had to gather across Australia in their thousands, because they need to send a powerful message about exactly who will face the serious repercussions of global warming?
        I’ll answer that, never & from what I’ve seen today they’re switched-on & can speak for themselves.
        Morrison comes across as a dunce to me but he must have a scattering of brain cells to knife his way to the top so why can’t he understand that these kids wouldn’t have to be activists if he cared one iota about their futures instead of his own.

        The LibNats will remain deliberately ignorant because they’ve got loops like Canavan who post tweets expressing sadness for the Queensland fire victims then, in the next sentence, express his very exciting “good”news about his dirty Adani mine announcement!
        Seriously, JB’s reference to a “paucity of critical thinking” could well sum-up this guy perfectly.

        A sign I saw today said it all for me, “WHY CAN’T YOU SEE ME?”
        So why ScoMo? Ah yes, for a second there I lost sight of who the Fibs answer to & it’s not us.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Onya Bella. “Why cant you see me?”
          ” Well kids, I am fat old spoilt brat with a massive sense of entitlement who cant see past the privileges money will buy for me.”

    • Trivalve says:

      They’re learning, and quickly. All about the immobility and intransigence of the status quo for starters.

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