Humble servant of the Nation

Wentworth, you’re stepping in it

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The denizens of Wentworth gather tomorrow at polling booths to determine the fate of Israel, the Iran Nuclear Agreement, the future of Judeo-Christian civilisation and the proposed skate park at Rushcutters Bay.

Fortunately, most Australians will not be obliged to ponder such weighty matters (I’m on the fence with the skate park). One thing we can be certain of is a seat the Liberals retained in 2016 with the sitting member receiving 62 per cent of the primary vote, will go to preferences for the first time since 2004.

In speaking to a number of Wentworthians this morning, the prevailing view was one of utter exhaustion and occasional wild-eyed fury at a process that had stuffed their letter boxes with political bumpf and dragged them away from the dinner table with robocalls from the nation’s politically outspoken. The only notable absentee on the hustings was Bill Shorten who remains despised.

Fearing a heavy loss in the by-election, the Prime Minister weighed in with a thought bubble about getting the removalists in to lumber the desks and chairs on to a truck in Tel Aviv and have the phones diverted to Jerusalem.

Perhaps this should come as no surprise coming from a man who has supported five different AFL teams by my count and has the scarves, jumpers and baseball caps in his walk-in wardrobe to prove it.

This loose affinity to matters of great tribal significance will not play well in Melbourne where one’s football team is decided virtually at birth and changing allegiances is not permitted. Ever.

But in Wentworth, I suppose, it is no great sin. After all, the former member for Wentworth, now of no fixed address, had difficulty remembering the name of the AFL team that kick a footy around in his electorate, nor the NRL mob that do the same, despite the fact Rooster headquarters were less than a scrambled field goal snap away from his electoral office.

I always imagined the former PM wandering into the SCG and proclaiming, “I sure like footy but where are all the ponies?”

Missing you already, Malcolm.

The 16-candidate ballot for Wentworth contains more than your fair share of nut jobs, weirdos and narcissists. All socio-political bases appear to be covered. Earth, wind, fire, death, taxes, vegetable rights and casual sex for money. All the colours of the ‘bow.

Obviously, in Wentworth, the arts are represented, too, predictably by the Arts Party. It’s just as well. In Wentworth over the last six weeks, too much burnt umber has been barely enough.

There’s even a Katter Australia Party candidate, Robert Callanan, who would have rolled his sleeves up and regaled Wentworthians with horrific tales of Filipino banana imports but was pulled up after it was revealed he had until recently been a director of a company that shared an ABN with a swanky Sydney brothel.

Apparently, Bob the Hat’s mob don’t go for those sorts of big city shenanigans and told Callanan to tell his story walking. Alas, his disendorsement came too late for the printing of the ballot and Callanan and the KAP remain entwined on the ballot and appear right up there on top to suck up the donkey vote.

I have to say I’m a little envious of all the attention Wentworthians have received. The most excitement we ever had around my electoral neck of the woods occurred when Angry Anderson was preselected as the National Party candidate. How I had longed for the short, bald tattooed one to turn up at my local polling booth in a styrofoam Batmobile. Alas, I would be disappointed, and Anderson was never seen or heard of again.

All nuttiness aside, it will come down to three in Wentworth. It’s fair to say the Liberal candidate, Dave Sharma received the ultimate hospital handpass when he was preselected. It is also fair to say he fumbled it and has failed to get a kick since.

The big-ticket independent candidate, Kerryn Phelps, doesn’t seem to stand for much at all but has pledged, if elected, to go to Canberra and fight like hell for erm, not much at all.

The Labor candidate, Tim Murray, remains cheerfully optimistic, but this may only be due to the fact he hasn’t had to share a minibus with Bill Shorten for the last month.

The prevailing view of the Twitter idiocracy is Labor should be running dead in Wentworth, or more precisely, running deliberately third and thus gifting the seat to Phelps on preferences.

Honestly, if it was a horse race the stewards would have the swabbed the lot of them to within an inch of their lives.

Individual seat polling is unreliable but from what I’ve seen, I’d say Murray is in with an outside chance to take the seat and to his credit, he has stuck to the task. Politics can be an ugly business but it’s never uglier than when results are contrived through complex preference arrangements with candidates quietly taking a dive.

Win, lose or draw tomorrow, parliamentary members of the Liberal Party will rise on Sunday morning to feel a pervasive sense of despair at a visceral, almost cellular level. There will be an almighty swing against them. Heads will drop. Dark mutterings will be replaced by angry recriminations.

The long trudge to a general election has just got a whole lot tougher.

This article was published in The Australian 19 October, 2018.

362 Comments

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    A Brain the size of a Pea, Mr. Insider or Balls the size of Melons, as we see in this article, up near Darwin a man standing chest-deep in Crocodile-infested waterway!
    Strewth, he was warned by a passing Fisherman but shrugged it off, suspect his knickname is or soon will be “Shorty”.
    https://tinyurl.com/y89ncepw

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      That is my cousin Emile Baptiste Henry. A crocodile whisperer, he is just cooling off, fishing and minding his own damned business. He had to wrestle a lot of feisty crocs before he earned the respect he now enjoys.

      • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

        Emile Baptiste, you say Mr. Baptiste well may I say to Emile, if he is still alive, “you magnificent bastard”. Cheers

      • Bella says:

        He sure is a man’s man JB! Hope he keeps punching on cos that’s some serious water he’s in. 🐍

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          A croc wouldn’t go within 50 metres of Emile unless it harboured an ambition to be a be a pair of cowboy boots in Vegas.

  • Razor says:

    Visit Ballarat yesterday JTI?

    • Jack The Insider says:

      No and didn’t want to stick my bib in in Canberra. Denis Ryan was there. I haven’t yet spoken to him about it as he had to dash off to Melb later in the day to attend a function as he’s been nominated for Elderly Victorian of the Year. I thought Morrison and Shorten spoke very well. While there are many survivors who feel ambivalent about the apology it was necessary and needs to be followed up with an amended NRS (Morrison has pledged to do this) and further legislation across the states in terms of reporting. Any instituion that sits out the NRS should be named and shamed and suffer the financial cost of multiple litigation under common law.

      • Razor says:

        I listened to the apology between Gin Gin and Biggenden on my way home from Gladstone. I thought both leaders spoke tremendously well.

        Mandatory reporting is the key……with a mandatory term of imprisonment unable to be suspended.

        I think all religous institutions, charities and unions should lose their tax exemptions.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          Agreed re reporting and yes, we wanted to ensure better behaviour from institutions who are tax exempt, the threat of losing that exemption would be most effective.

  • Boadicea says:

    When you think about it, this whole Turnbull shafting has produced what would infuriate Dutton, Abbott & co – the detainees will at last be taken off Manus and Nauru!
    There’s always a silver lining 😁

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Dutton must be referred to the High Court asap imho Boadicea to see if he is even eligible to stand as an MP in Parliament. Dutton, of course, was only ex-ousted PM Abbotts “Glove Puppet” and would be nice to see both out on their butts this coming Election, can be done. Cheers

    • Razor says:

      Wentworth is the most unrepresentative seat in Australia Boa. If the Coaltion use it to change immigration or climate policy they will be destroyed in Queensland. They badly need Queensland.

      • Boadicea says:

        Yep. That article by Paul Kelly put the point across very well, Razor.
        I really cannot see the Libs surviving in their current form.
        Today we see Abbott still opinionating about Turnbull. Will that idiot never give up?
        Abbott and his cronies need to split and go off and unite with One Nation – they are more aligned with her policies.
        And the Libs need to go a bit left of centre if they want to hold the younger generations who do not see a way forward under the current policies. They will have to take renewable energy more seriously however much they fear it.
        The Labor party will clean up at the next election despite the misgivings about Shorten and the Libs will have time to sort themselves out.

    • Bella says:

      I wonder if this whole Turnbull ‘blame game’ came about because they figured he would just continue to do what he was told but he very clearly did not. I’m guessing revenge is best served cold. 😤

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Angus Taylor, Federal Energy Minister, Mr. Insider I just can’t “warm” to him and neither can the millions of Pensioners in Australia many who must have gone cold during the Winter as good old “My Farts Don’t Stink” Angus poo pooped giving Pensioners a small one-off cash payment to help them with their Winter Electricity Bills.
    I note he was on Alex Turnbulls “Top 5 Bastards List” recently published, headed up of course by ex-ousted PM Abbott, the biggest lowest bastard of all time!

  • Tracy says:

    Watching SKY this morning and and Kroger saying “if petrol prices aren’t an issue in Wentworth then they aren’t representative of the Australian electorate”
    That’s it matey keep insulting the voters, the ones you are more than happy to take heaps of tax off., the baseball bat is ready and waiting this neck of the woods.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Saw that Tracy and one does wonder doesn’t one what goes on in the “World of Kroger and Co”, sadly so out of touch with the rest of we Australians. Cheers

    • Bill Grieve says:

      My fuel bill for the month is only $5 because I ride a 50cc Motor Scooter , the problem with high fuel prices doesn’t really worry me at all . I have more important things on my mind , like world peace ..

    • BASSMAN says:

      I don’t think petrol prices will worry the Roller, BMW and Merc cohort that mostly live in Wworth Bald!

  • Milton says:

    If the media, in all its forms, via their various contributors, take seriously the abuse, diminishment and subjugation of females, they need only look at their commentary of Meghan, the new royal. Sure she is an attractive lady and a person of interest, for some, as a result of marrying into the mob. Yet what she wears, and how she “glows”, consumes a great deal of the commentary; what’s Harry been wearing? (prince Charles is a sub salad in the dressing dept)
    Regardless, what made me post was a headline (in the Oz), of sorts, that mentioned Meghan’s ”Diana moment”. I found that repugnant, Seriously, it was a low for a medium that purports to take itself seriously
    I saw the photograph hours earlier and immediately realised the gist, because, like Bella suggests (incorrectly) I’m obsessed. No doubt I pursue a healthy, perverted commentary on matters sex here, but mostly in fun or gest. But even I found that crude, especially for a respected paper.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      In the strange obsessed rabbit warren of your mind how exactly does a “Diana moment” play out for you?

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      I say Milton, Meghan, a person of interest and married into the mob? Hope the US law enforcement chaps don’t read JtI’s blog.

    • Boadicea says:

      Sells newspapers, Milt.
      Must say the dress was fairly risque for a royal. I was surprised. But good on her for being herself.
      I have enjoyed their visit. A welcome distraction from the other stuff. They make a handsome couple.

  • BASSMAN says:

    Sharma is a good man and I feel he could win Wentworth at the general election. He spoke well and is a true Liberal. Not like the clowns who pretend to be. Voters used the bye-election to give the Looters a tickle-up. Phelps may help her cause by arguing she will be able to get more out of a Labor govt than a cohort pf Looters who may be in Opposition for some years. That said, Sharma should stand again. He did very well. If Phelps wins the general election the Looters may lose Wentworth for quite some years. Morrison forgot that people in Wworth are educated. They have brains. He should have spoke policy instead of pretending he was at a country show with a megaphone trying to Kill Bill.

    • Boadicea says:

      I was impressed with him too Bassy. A pity to see talent wasted but I don’t see them regaining the seat for a while unless Phelps is a total disaster. In fact I think we’ll see yet more independents in parliament after the election in May. Hopefully one in Warringah!

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      The finest competitive principles at work there smoke. Send the manufacturers to the wall with price gouging and then move in for the kill at the asset fire sale.

  • Milton says:

    I think (the bi-partisan) calling off Question Time today, in respect of victims of abuse, is just another example of the hollow symbolism that has been growing steadily in our country, at many levels, for a good while now. The victims of childhood institutional abuse have and will never get a moments rest from their suffering, our politicians need to stick to their jobs and get on with doing something proactive and positive for them rather than self-serving posturing. This day was never about the politicians.
    And pleased to read Denis Ryan was in attendance. Rightfully so.

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