Spinning Around in Their Reality – Austereo Following the PR Playbook

The last days since what is now called the “Royal Prank Tragedy” has been curious, but not entirely surprising. Not in the least that I have had Gerard Henderson, of the Sydney Institute, basically writing a similar argument about radio pranks as I articulated in my previous blog post. Rarely have the Sydney and Preston Institutes agreed so heartily.  I had other responses from various people, including a former employee of Austereo who spoke of a headquarters “decorated from material that looked like seconds from the Death Star” and likened working for them to this scene from The Dark Crystal:

Southern Cross Austereo (SCA) itself hasn’t covered itself in glory either in the last days, with a number of gaffes that seem to show that they haven’t any intention to change their culture or their macho approach to corporate responsibility to society.

1. Blame the Hospital for Not Answering the Phone.

Rhys Holleran, the CEO of SCA, said that the station “tried to ring the hospital” to gain permission to play the stunt.  Not only has this been denied by the hospital, it shows a complete misunderstanding by SCA of their culpability. Instead of trying to avoid censure from ACMA for not following the Commercial Radio Code of Practice, what they should have said is “we should never have run the prank, having not been able to contact the hospital”.  It sounds like the program director or whoever was responsible for the show said something like “oh, well, it’s just a great prank, let’s just get it on air and sort out the legals later”.   It comes out as blame shifting, rather than taking responsibility.

2. “It Can’t Have Just Been Our Prank That Did This”

Austereo’s Sandy Kaye, when speaking to the New York Post about the tragedy, said what a number of people around water coolers – and even the presenters on The View – have been saying for the past few days -

“Surely, there’s a lot more to suicide than a prank call where a woman has [done nothing more than] put through a phone call…  Perhaps the hospital should have known about that. If that turns out to be the case and they knew about her fragile situation, then why would you leave her on the front line?”

While this kind of speculation isn’t surprising amongst people away from the media and even on a public water cooler discussion show like The View, it’s astonishingly insensitive when coming from a spokesperson from the company directly involved.  It’s more blame shifting – inferring the King Edward VII should not have nurses working at their hospital if they are “fragile”. After all, as we know, it wasn’t usually her job to answer phones – she was a nurse on station at 5.30 am, who just happened to answer a phone.

Then there were the PR playbook moves that shouldn’t have been fooling anyone – but probably are.

1. Parade the Hosts On Tightly Controlled Media

Many people saw the tearful interview with the two hosts in question – it is not surprising that they feel great remorse and regret. Interestingly, they absolved themselves from an amount of responsibility from what happened after the call was made – which shows that this was indeed an Austereo blame shifting culture problem, where hosts are encouraged to make such calls, but then pass responsibility onto others.  The interview was intended to make viewers sympathise with the hosts, probably with the hope being that it distracts possible anger towards their bosses that foster the culture.

If Austereo were serious about having remorse for their action, the station staff directly responsible for co-ordinating pranks and allowing the material going to air should be interviewed – and not by a friendly, sympathetic interviewer like the ones found on ACA or TT. Or, maybe they should get the kind of treatment that “dodgy welfare cheats” get from those programs.  Doubtful, considering SCA is a major purchaser of advertising on Channels 7 and 9.

2. Suspend Advertising and Cancel the Show

This is the trick 2GB played when Alan Jones was receiving negative publicity after the Died in Shame incident.  They suspended advertising for two weeks – and now the advertisers would be knocking on the door, knowing that Jones’ ratings have increased since the incident. Austereo have done the same – it will be interesting to see how long that lasts.  The show, the Hot 30, has been cancelled, which is an odd decision, given that it’s mostly a music show, with the latest popular songs with a bit of banter between them. I can’t think 2Day won’t have a show like that again.  Again, more spin from the company.

I don’t agree with Tum Burrowes of Mumbrella that Holleran should resign. This would be yet another token sacrifice that companies do when they want to deflect criticism and don’t want to change their culture. This is why I suspect that he will probably resign soon enough.  What should happen is a root and branch review and a cancelling of pranks that target the bystanders.  I don’t think this will happen.  If The View is anything to go by, there is still a belief that such pranks in themselves are harmless and a bit of fun – as I have been told by many outside the Twitterverse in the last couple of days.

Little doubt this will story will continue to play out and then finally fade away, leaving behind the tragedy and the family involved. It can’t be easy to have a loved one’s mental state being speculated upon by American TV shows.  Ultimately, the executives of SC Austereo will survive this.  They will continue to live in what the former Austereo employee who talked to me called their alternative reality.  For those people trying to change their macho, rigid self belief, the phone message they will receive would go like this – “The reality you are accessing is no longer in service. Please contact your local reality provider.”

Prank Calls – Taking Advantage of the Vulnerable

Anyone who reads roadside banners and watches TV will know that the Austereo network adores the prank call – they use it as a cornerstone of their advertising. Someone rings up somewhere important and makes silly enquiries, in order to receive (apparently hilarious) confusion, then an “angry” slamming of the phone. Or a good natured “haha, funny mate”. That’s the 2DayFM / Fox FM style. Then there’s the MMM style, where “mates” set up other “mates” by suggesting how a phone call could really “get” the mate by picking on a sensitivity or promise something, get their hopes up – but then laugh when all is revealed. Often these calls involve some kind of barely disguised racism in the form of a “funny” accent, usually “Indian” or “Asian”.

The men of my school staffroom love MMM. Hence, I was once a victim of a MMM style prank in my staffroom at work involving lottery tickets and winning an amount of money. Hilarious to those around, but to me, it wasn’t, due largely to the fact I was under enormous financial stress as the only salary earner in a household of 4, living in a pretty dodgy suburb. Having that money would have made my life a lot easier.

This is the problem with phone pranks such as these – if you think about them and their implications, they aren’t funny. The person at the end of the line is often in a low paying job where they have to appear professional and courteous, no matter what is being said to them. They are usually monitored for their performance. The person calling, however, is in a much more secure, powerful position – he / she is in a well paid, comfortable job where they are encouraged to make fools of the lower paid through the phone call.

This was certainly the case with the nurse* at the King Edward VII hospital who made the “mistake” of assuming that the phone call being made was sincere. I can’t imagine the “prank call” is as big a “funny bit” in the UK as it is here. I at least hope it isn’t. It’s lazy, arrogant and painful to listen to.

Now the story seems to have a much darker edge that could not be anticipated by Mel Greig and Michael Christian when they made the call. Both the Daily Mail and the Evening Standard have reported that the nurse involved has appeared to have taken her own life. As has been pointed out by the excellent deputy editor of the New Statesman and excellent Twitter news source, @helenlewis, it would inadvisable to jump to the conclusion that the prank led directly to the suicide. She also cited the Samaritans’ guidelines for reporting on suicide, as well as a resource on how Tweeps should be reporting on such an act. It will be interesting to see how many media organisations draw upon Ms Lewis’ sensible advice. Not many in Australia, I suspect.

If it is proven that there is a link, however, then it’s a tragedy of which I doubt either of the radio hosts will ever fully forgive themselves. They certainly would never have guessed that this would happen, nor would their bosses. They will be made to feel guilty over the next few days, even if the link isn’t explicitly made – which is probably the most likely occurrence. What we will see, though – and I can see it happening already – is a gathering storm of disgust, revulsion and shame that will take a few days of screaming banner headlines and furious discussion on radio and TV.

Amongst that storm, we will be reminded that it was all over a news story that wasn’t even that vital – how the Duchess of Cambridge was doing in hospital.

They shouldn’t be made to feel overly guilty, however. It really wasn’t their fault. It’s the culture fostered by Austereo that created the call. Truth is, the prank call needs to be really examined and reconsidered as a “humour” device. Especially those made to the poor people in call centres and working as receptionists who can’t really bite back against the arrogance of an “only a joke” phone call made to keep Australian radio listeners mildly amused for 3 minutes.

* I have since discovered that the person involved was a nurse covering for a receptionist. My point still holds that these calls do target those who have to be polite and respectful in phone calls.

Keeping a Real World Shopfront is Tough at Westfields

Now it’s officially time to admit that Christmas is coming (not in October, when the decorations go up in the shops), I am doing the little bit of shopping I need to do in small stages. Today, I went to a shop that sells the type of things kids would like for Christmas in a large Westfield.  Such places are often held to be guides to our prosperity, our wealth.  You would think things would be fine in a Westfield – especially as they tend to suck in the bulk of shoppers in any regional centre / city in Australia.  I soon discovered, however, that they are not.

I picked up a present for my daughter – she is nearly 11 and I’m not trying to guess what she’d like.  We had been to this shop before and she pointed the item out as being a thing she’d like. Now I was buying it from the same shop – maybe not how things are done for some these days.  I like to buy things from shops, because the shop keepers can tell me something about it and I can take it back if necessary.

On this occasion, the shop’s owner, after telling me that it was a good unit, was unsure of the price. This was because, for the first time, he was having to discount his goods. Usually, he was telling me, he based his price on the original wholesale price, plus rent, plus wages.  Now, however, he was having to compete with online sales – someone in China selling the unit on ebay – usually an outlet that has disappeared the next day or week. As a result, he was having to reduce the price.

There would be some who would call this a triumph of neoliberalism, the free market, where greedy shopkeepers are forced to reduce prices because of the ever shrinking world and the ability to buy stuff online. The same people who stridently oppose any kind of GST on goods imported into Australia.

For this shopkeeper, however, it just means that he isn’t making any money from the exercise. What is cut off the price are his wages, because the rent to be in the Westfield is fairly high and nigh on impossible to change – unless you close down and open again, having negotiated a lower rental, or if you are up for a lease renewal.  The former is expensive and could cost goodwill, the latter can be a long waiting game, especially if business flattens out. There are shopkeepers, he was telling me that are shutting down, just to force Westfield’s hand.

Again, people could argue that such business are free to leave, to move to a premises with less rent. This is not a viable option in many regional centres, where Westfields or equivalent shopping centres are the only places where you can attract passing trade.

This loss of business – the worst seen by many – is the result of people going online to save a few dollars on discretionary items, rather than going to a shop that has a responsibility to follow through if something is wrong.  That is part of the reason why I was the only person to be buying something from him for the hour before my purchase.  He surmised that it’s probably a good thing that Westfield doesn’t seem to be too interested in building new shopping centres – the current ones seem to be struggling to hang onto all the current tenants, especially independent operators or people with a few outlets.

It was a rambling, fascinating conversation.  After I wished him well, a few things struck me.  Firstly, that last week’s absolute nonsense about the AWU and bagmen whatever has no relevance to anyone outside Canberra. None.  More importantly, it showed me just what today’s freedom of the market is doing – the dramatic impact that is being felt in the community. That this “boom” economy is for many people an illusion, something they hear about in the media, but are not experiencing.  It’s little wonder Tony Abbott likes to be seen in shopping centres – he’d be hearing stories like this all the time. About how things are tough. Not that he would ever have any ability or interest in doing anything about it.

Finally, it struck me that I know that people like buying online, they save money, they get precisely the colour they want, it saves having to brave crowds.  This is, however, affecting people trying to make a dollar by selling things they like to sell and mostly know something about. Places that are also trying to employ younger people wanting their first job in somewhere other than a McDonalds.  It is a reality that these places are sliding away, the world gets just a little more clinical, a little colder and that is a shame.

You Can’t Touch This – The Issue of Israel in Australia

This last few weeks should have resolved once and for all why the issue of Israel and its relationship with Palestine should be a no go for political parties, media outlets and people wishing to engage with the issues involved. The issue brings up such astonishing levels of spin, poison and propaganda that no-one wins from bringing up the issues.

Before I begin, I am not saying in all this that I support things Palestine have been up to in the recent past – the recent antics from Hamas just boggle the mind. I keep thinking they need a Malcolm Tucker style figure to come in and say to their leadership “What the fuck are you doing??? You sent what to Tel Aviv? Fucking rockets? What do you think Israel is going to do in return? Send fucking flowers?” Perhaps he could also tell Fatah and Hamas to get their act together.  I’m also not against the fact Israel is a state and that the state needed to be formed after the events of WW2. What I am saying is that in the mine field of our provincial, narrow minded Australian media landscape, Israel is a no go zone. A paradise of hypocrises and illogical partnerships. Where Paul Howes and Gerard Henderson are friendly with each other, drinking mediocre hot chocolate. Where Andrew Bolt and Julia Gillard are buddies. It’s a funny old world.

In her time as Prime Minister, Julia Gillard has expressed a relative disinterest in foreign affairs (though this may have something to do with the fact Kevin Rudd was the FM) but now, on Israel, she suddenly decided to express an opinion of her own and attempted to put her foot down.  It should have come as no surprise, however, to people that unstinting support for Israel would be Julia Gillard’s position.  As Deputy PM, she visited Israel on what now former ALP member for Fowler, Julia Irwin called an “unnecessary public relations exercise” accompanied by such people as Peter Costello, Michael Danby, Greg Sheridan and Andrew Bolt.  Those were the days when Bolt was very enthusiastic about Gillard. This is why it’s really not a shock when Bolt supports Gillard when she speaks out against Palestine and for Israel.  We haven’t seen Gillard, et al, being shown the Palestinian side of the dispute by an equivalent organisation. The 2009 trip also puts into perspective Michael Danby’s strong objection to the recent vote.

The idea of having politicians and journalists over on a study trip to “learn” about one side of an issue isn’t new. The Soviet Union did the same thing with Australian writers and journalists in the 1920 and 30s.  The Jewish Board of Deputies continue to fund such trips, with journalists like the Daily Telegraph’s Simon Benson posting one sided reports about the recent conflict, not disclosing who was paying for the trip in that particular article.  In the middle of this trip, Benson was also on the Adam Spencer Breakfast Program on 702, talking about the situation in Gaza, admitting that he didn’t know a great deal about the details of Middle East politics. It looks as though from the articles he produced that he received a decent enough one sided account.

It’s therefore little wonder that the Daily Telegraph decided that the Government’s response to the UN’s enhanced recognition of Palestine is worth a front page screamer. Note that the article is written by the now educated Benson.  It’s a curious choice for a front page screamer, because most ordinary punters who read the Tele, like Benson, wouldn’t have much of a clue about Middle Eastern politics.

Agreeing to abstain in a UN vote is hardly “ditching Israel”. Nor is agreeing with the parliamentary party a “save yourself” situation. Logic isn’t a strong suit in all this.

As the Greens in NSW found out by trying to enact a fairly innocuous boycott against goods made by Israeli companies in order to raise awareness, bringing up Israel / Palestine will rain all sorts of derp on your heads. Media outlets like the Australian are STILL talking about the Marrickville Council’s actions. Maybe only Wollongong Council’s shenanigans gained as much long term attention.  And there was no lurid sexual details in the Marrickville “story”. The Greens’ BDS campaign, however, gave us this marvellous picture of the Secretary of the AWU, Paul Howes, drinking Max Brenner chocolate with his new friend, Gerard Henderson.  Oh, and Michael Danby.

I can’t imagine Gerard really enjoying the chocolate Max Brenner serve up (I have never boycotted Brenner for the fact they are owned by an Israeli company. I just don’t like their chocolate).  Shows, though, that Howes and Henderson would do anything in order to make a comment against the Greens.  When you have people from these diverse a set of beliefs against you, it’s time to just give up. Don’t bring it up. It will get people nowhere. On the issue of Israel, we can remain curious onlookers, but we will not have any kind of logical, calm, reasoned discourse.  Might as well just do the Hammer dance, because we can’t touch this.

 

N.B. Thanks to Kath Crosby for giving me a quick lesson in Hamas / Fatah, hence helping me understand precisely how to phrase my Malcolm Tucker reference.

TeeCember – 2012 Style

As the Month of Dodgy Moustaches comes to a close, I am suggesting another thing for people to donate to. Yes, that’s insane, I know. But there are people who like giving, plus others who don’t like dodgy moustaches with some spare cash. Plus, December is a great month for wearing Tshirts. This is why I am suggesting people could support a charity idea of mine that I started last year, TeeCember.

The idea of TeeCember is that people can wear a different Tshirt for every day in December – either after work or during work (if they are lucky enough to work at such enlightened workplaces). They can then take a picture of said shirt, put it on a blog or their Tumblr – like I did with last year’s Festival of Shirts.

The other part of the exercise – the most important part – is for people to use their shirt wearing in order to raise awareness and funds for little known autism related charities. People who get involved could start up an account with Everyday Hero or similar facility and support a charity that in some way helps kids on the autism spectrum, and / or parents with children on the spectrum.  Any charity.  The one I support, the Luke Priddis Foundation, supports parents with kids on the spectrum, with the long term goal of establishing permanent facilities for children.  Others who chime in on TeeCember, however, could support charities that support kids on the spectrum in their own area.

The reason I feel passionately about this is because my son, who is now 12, is on the spectrum and would have done with the support and assistance that is now becoming part of the landscape. He was especially lucky we stumbled across an expert teaching in a Catholic school who has been his guardian angel for these last 8 years – but others should be able to find more than lucky guardian angels to help. That’s why organisations like Luke Priddis’ needs donations.

So, people, put on a shirt each day, take a photo of it, tweet it, blog it, raise money.  I want this to be a thing that is not just me taking photos of myself. If you want to do it, tell me on the @prestontowers account, or make a response to this blog or the teecember.wordpress.com account – I am happy to publish guest Tshirt pictures there.

TeeCember. Supporting kids on the autism spectrum and their parents.

 

We Don’t Need to Erect Tents – Australia’s Silver Lined Games

We have heard plenty about the “disappointing” performance of Australian athletes at the London Olympics. From media outlets, at least. It has become such that silver medals are now not acceptable – to media outlets, at least. More specifically, Channel 9, whose entire coverage seems to be focused on Australia – to the exclusion of showing key races like the Men’s 1500m race live, simply because they don’t involve Aussie Heroes.

There needs, however, to be some perspective seen in the performance of the team. I grew up in a time when we as a nation were happy with 4 gold medals in Los Angeles. The Americans and Germans dominated the pool and the velodrome, rowing and equestrian was something mostly done in exclusive private schools. Then the Sydney Olympics happened. Suddenly, Government coffers were more open to funding sport training for the largely non-commercial sports (ie. not sport with weekly or seasonal spectator events like football, golf, cricket or baseball) one sees once every so often on our national screens.  These sports that require professional training and living setups that develops sportspeople for the long term, such as swimming, rowing and cycling, reaped their reward for that cash spend in Sydney, with the ripple effect felt especially in swimming and cycling in the Athens Games in 2004, which saw more gold than in Sydney.

It is clear that in cycling and rowing especially, that Great Britain has been similarly committed in their targeting of sport funding towards the non commercial sport, with a considerable amount coming from the 18% of the “Good Works” component provided to sport funding from the National Lottery – which has translated to helping provide £264 million from 2009 to 2012.  Australia’s rowers and cyclists don’t have that level of gambling fuelled largesse.  No more the days of Ryan Bayley, the KFC Kid.

It also appears that in the case of swimming, Australia has come to back to the field to an extent, but only a small one. Instead of gold medals, there are silvers, which is no great calamity, but indicates that swimming has seen the return of American dominance and the rise of the Chinese swimming team.  There is also the encouraging sign that, unlike in 1984, Australia are still achieving good team results, such as in the medley and freestyle relays – for women. Australia’s male swimmers appear to suffer from the American syndrome of talking themselves up before an event and giving themselves silly nicknames like “The Missile”, which causes problems for the Channel 9 coverage, which is one of the more suffocatingly masculine coverages for a while.  Talking of female triumph – sorry, when the “girls” win, doesn’t seem to excite them as much as when men raise their fist in triumph.

When you take this all into account and you chart Australia’s Olympic performances between 1988 and 2008, you can see a big reliance on the swimming pool, cycling track and rowing lake for the medals that Australia’s athletes win

So, now that the USA, France, China and other nations have a range of swimming stars and the British have a National Lottery funded push towards rowing and cycling programs, we have this effect (though, there are chances for more medals before the end):

There will be many solutions discussed and provided by armchair experts and the media over the next few days and months. Already, Kevan Gosper is doing the predictable pan handling usually undertaken by John Coates, seeking more funding from governments. Coates seems to be playing a cooler political line, still pointing out that other nations outfund Australia.

The answer, however, is that there is no major problem. There seems to be a view that being lower on the medal tally is some kind of indicator of a flaccid national spirit that needs some of that erection medication that was continually advertised during Le Tour de France.  More tent building by our rugged, virile Aussie Heroes.  This tone can be discerned in the Daily Telegraph article relating to Coates and Gosper. The tone of Andrew Webster in saying Kate Lundy “gushed” about winning silver and quoting the human megaphone Laurie Lawrence in saying “anything but gold is not good enough” simply fuels resentment that should not be present in relation to athletic achievement.  Australia is not in a sport crisis and these sports don’t need more money – being competitive and achieving any medal at the biggest sporting event of all is a great achievement by any rational person’s standards.  What may need adjustment is the way it is all packaged and reported. We can listen to Mitchell Watt when he tells the media to wake up to itself. That won’t happen, but a person can dream that we as a nation can leave the tent building to the Americans.

Personally, I enjoy the Olympics for the events you would hardly see on Channel Nein (to steal Kimberley Ramplin’s name for them). Handball, volleyball, badminton and the like. It was incredible that the Australian “Volleyroos”, in only their third Olympic appearance, defeated Poland and challenged Italy and Bulgaria – all nations that treasure and develop the game to a larger extent than Australia. I am also awaiting with great anticipation the trip of Iceland towards Men’s Handball Gold. Iceland really only have one realistic medal chance at these Games – they won silver in 2008. Imagine if they had a Channel Nein there. They’d be a bit bereft of ways of interrupting the coverage of other nations winning events with banal interviews with their Icelandic Heroes.

The Triumph of the Bogans – Penbo Using the Working Class as a Weapon against Sneering Hipsters

Penbo Doesn’t Have Soft Hands – He’s a Champion of the Working Class.

Those folks down at News Limited have had their fun over the last few weeks, prognosticating on why the ALP is doomed and why they will be beheaded in an election some eighteen months away. The latest to reply to the “stacks on” call is David Penberthy, letting loose on The Punch. His piece on the weekend whipping up a bit of confected class warfare, pretending to be a man of the suburbs is worth a look. As ever, his words are in italics.

Cashed-up bogans will have the lethal last laugh on Labor

The origin of the excellent Australian term “bogan” has been the subject of intense debate but its definition has always been clear – a blue collar person, usually from an outer suburb, who earns little money and has a limited education. The more conceited uni-educated types have laughed smugly at the bogan, tut-tutting at his love of the parmigiana, Cold Chisel, bourbon in a can and trackie-dacks, things which for many of us are the makings of a pretty good night.

Already the simplistic battle lines are drawn. Uni-educated “types” with a smug laugh. I’m assuming this “type” excludes Mr. Penberthy himself, who studied at a university. His definition of “bogan” is a bit questionable, but it suits his purpose to characterise such a group as poor, working class and hence the victim of the “smug” people who studied at university. A simple, clean straw man. He sides himself with these people through declaring his love for bourbon and coke in a can and parmigianas – clearly we are about to see him pop up at Penrith Panthers or the Settlement Pub in Cranbourne soon. Of course, this is coupled with an image from one of Paul Fenech’s unwatchable, terrible SBS programs which did nothing more than highlight how out of touch Paul Fenech is.

There's a lot to celebrate…

The bogan has also been derided by the trendies as an ugly blight on the social landscape, someone who refuses to tread lightly on mother earth, spending the baby bonus on a second-hand speedboat, an Acca Dacca box-set or the biggest plasma screen they can find, generating a distressingly large carbon footprint in their McMansion with their 12-speaker home cinema, eight-burner barbie and three cars in the driveway.

The trendies. Another easy term to throw about. Accompanying it, a range of expressions I have never heard or seen written anywhere. I don’t know many “trendies” who don’t like ACDC or don’t own a large screen TV. Besides, 12 speaker home cinemas and eight burner barbies aren’t particularly damaging to the environment if used sparingly, which they are. As for the three cars, I have heard some criticise the dependence on cars in outer suburban areas – but when it is explained to people living in the inner city that public transport is non-existent in outer suburbs, there has been, for almost all I have spoken to, greater understanding of the situation. Penberthy is also showing little tolerance for those who may question how we use our finite resources. In Penberthy’s world, it seems questioning lifestyle choices should be forbidden.

It’s time to stop sneering, hipsters. Something remarkable has happened in Australia. The bogans have won. They are officially and seriously cashed-up. There is now a stronger link between having a university education and earning lower wages, than being skilled in a high-demand trade and handsomely rewarded in the blue-collar sector.

Sneering. Penberthy should know about sneering, because that is what we get for the rest of the article. First, he is addressing these “hipsters” who have dared to question the way we do things, telling them that the “bogans” earn more money than them – therefore they have won. Apparently, money is the measurement of happiness and success in this equation. Also, he is triumphantly declaring that a university education is virtually a waste of time – why bother when it earns you less money. I take it Mr. Penberthy isn’t referring to his own education.

It is true that many have written negatively about “bogans” – me included. These comments, though, are not mainstream and are generally limited to sections of the internet and Twitter. In the case of the people involved with Things Bogans Like, they are fading to an extent in any case. But my comment – and the comments of others – about these “bogans” has been more about an entitlement culture and an intolerance towards unemployed and disability welfare recipients and refugees than anything else. Not about the working class or a lack of a university education. I’ve met many people who hate the carbon tax, love middle class welfare and believe refugees should go home who have had a university education. Personally, I am still looking for a better expression to define this attitude of selfishness, entitlement and intolerance that was sung about succinctly by TISM in their Phillip Ruddock Blues. Maybe I should call them Ruddocks. But back to Penbo.

The rise of the affluent blue collar sector has been a nation-changing transformation. It has only taken about 15 years. And it has turned politics on its head, as these were the people who were once uniformly loyal to the Australian Labor Party but are now anything but that. If anything, they are more likely to be individualists who have an intense dislike of taxation and welfare, believe passionately in reward for effort, have an in-principle problem with punishing people for getting ahead, and want government to limit itself largely keeping the budget in the black and interest rates down.

This paragraph is one of the more outstandingly silly in an article with many competitors for that title. “Blue collar workers” were not uniformly loyal to the ALP for many years – electoral results in the 1990s were proof of that. If it wasn’t for the GST in 1993, blue collar workers would have punished Keating for interest rates and various other concerns then. Throughout the Howard years, these “individualists who have an intense dislike of taxation” who “believe passionately in reward for effort” were delivered a range of welfare benefits, such as family tax benefits, un means tested baby bonuses, private health care rebates, increased support for independent schools. These “rewards” were paid to everyone, whether they worked hard or not. These payments helped make the rugged “individualists” dependent on the welfare as well as hardened supporters of the Liberal Party. So much so that the current government is too scared to do anything more than tinker around the edges of these unnecessary drains on taxation receipts. To exclude reference to this middle class welfare demonstrates a wilfulness on Penberthy’s part to paint the loss of these “blue collar workers” to the ALP as purely the ALP’s fault – an ALP that presumably contains these “sneerers” of which he speaks.

It is also an odd logic where Penberthy claims that the ALP “lost” those blue collar workers who run successful businesses because they want governments to keep the budget in the black and keep interest rates down. Interest rates, that constantly present boogie man, are lower now than they were in 2007. The budget was put into deficit in order to stimulate the economy during the GFC. That move has been praised by the World Bank, that group of sneering hipsters. In addition, the ALP have not been sneering at the bogan / blue collar / working class person with their policies. Keeping most of middle class welfare is one example, as is their increased funding of schooling, sporting clubs, roads, whatever things that Penberthy’s “bogans” like. If anything, this group are more prosperous now than they had been during the Howard government. That isn’t the perception, though – and that can be sheeted home to a variety of reasons.

Just in case you missed the data I’m basing this on, I’ll recap here at some length, as it’s quite incredible. This week saw the release of official figures showing blue collar workers have overtaken white collar workers as the highest-paid people in Australia. Not just in the obvious sector of mining but almost across the board, with tradies, utility and construction workers taking home more money on average than those with soft hands.

More sneering at those with “soft hands” – I take it Mr. Penberthy’s hands are rugged and he uses Solvol to wash them. This assertion that a university education and a professional career is somehow a bad thing is curious – in that I can’t imagine that most university educated people would sneer at those from the working class. He perhaps should sit next to me whenever I have conversations with a variety of people near my workplace and home – no sneering on my part there, despite my university education. Or when I go to Giants games with these blue collar people. Perhaps I should start sneering at them in order to conform to the terms of this article.

The Suncorp Bank Wages Report showed that blue-collar workers earn an average $1229 a week, which is $144 a week more than those who sit behind a desk, with six of the 10 highest-paying industries are now blue collar. In order, this is how weekly salaries now stack up: mining $2173, utilities $1597, finance $1375, media $1365, science $1353, construction $1307, public safety $1270, wholesale trade $1252, transport $1219 and manufacturing $1145. The lowest three industries were the female-dominated hospitality, arts and retail sector, earning less than $500 a week.

Figures like this are out of place in terms of the social argument Penberthy is making – that somehow blue collar workers deserve to be taken seriously because they are earning more money. A quick examination of the ALP’s policies and actions would show that they take the working class very seriously. But Penberthy, I think, is confusing the ALP with a smattering of people at inner city dinner parties he attends and those who go up to Joe Hildebrand in the street and tell him he’s a wanker.

Another interesting side point to the salary stats is that highly unionised industries such as transport and warehousing experienced the lowest wages growth, up 60 per cent in the past 15 years, compared to the 177 per cent increase in utilities and 102 per cent increase in mining, sectors where workers are more likely to operate as independent contractors or on non-union agreements.

This is there to show that there is good blue collar and bad blue collar in Penberthy’s estimation. Bad blue collar are in “highly unionised” industries – where wages growth is slower. Perhaps this more shows how effective unions have been in working with their employers to control wages growth to within reasonable boundaries. The good blue collar are on individual contracts. I can almost see an argument for Work Choices creeping back in (perhaps he is getting ready to start spruiking it for after the 2013 election). He also makes reference to mining, which is at odds with his general argument about “bogans” in the outer suburbs. Miners make up a very small proportion of Australia’s workforce and are less likely to live in these outer suburbs of which Penberthy speaks.

Now, start thinking about all these employment statistics in the context of the mountain of polls forecasting the wipe-out of the Gillard Government. Reflect on the election results in suburban Brisbane and Sydney at the Queensland and NSW state elections this year and last, where blue-collar seats which were only ever held by the ALP are now comfortably in conservative hands.

This excludes the chance that outer suburban seats are big swinging seats. State Labor were lucky to hang onto power in 2007, where Work Choices and Peter Debnam conspired to keep a struggling government in power. Same in Queensland, where a weak opposition helped them in the past. This was borne out with the incredible turn around in poll numbers that occurred with Campbell Newman took over as opposition leader. It is also sloppy political analysis to draw lock step parallels between the performance of parties at a state and federal level. The fact that through the Howard and Carr years, the Federal Liberals held Hughes (in the “Shire”) while the state ALP held Menai – in the very same area – undermines Penberthy’s presumption to an extent. It doesn’t always follow.

What it all suggests is that the event which sounded the death-knell for Labor in 1996, when it lost the emblematic western Sydney seat of Lindsay to John Howard not once but twice in a subsequent by-election, was in no way an aberration but the beginning of a nation-altering trend. What was once the safest of Labor seats fell to knockabout suburban mum Jackie Kelly, derided by smart-asses as “Trackie Dacky Jackie” for her love of leisure wear and her daggy demeanour. When Labor knocked her off on a narky constitutional technicality and forced a by-election, Kelly ran again and smashed the ALP to bits. She held the seat at the 1998 GST election, at the 2001 national security election, the 2004 Latham v Howard election.

Most discussions about “bogans” and “blue collar” and the rest seems to settle on Lindsay – the electorate in which I lived for a long time and still live near. In many ways, it an emblematic seat to journalists seeking a narrative for the Howard era. It is, however, also an aberration. As a person who had swapped in 1994 from supporting the Liberal Party to the Democrats, I was moderately surprised by the victory of Jackie Kelly – but not as surprised as Kelly herself. Hence the fact she didn’t resign from her government job before running. That victory, though, was more a reflection of a vast dissatisfaction with Keating as PM (as Kelly herself said to me once – “voters were in a dark mood – they marched in just to vote Keating out”) than any kind of social shift. It also reflected the virtual invisibility of the MP who was voted out, Ross Free. To people in Lindsay, visibility and approachability is important. Free didn’t have that, Jackie Kelly did. She really was one of the people and had no ambitions for higher positions, unlike Free, who was a member of the NSW Right faction.

The ALP continued to misunderstand the Kelly factor and ran a sequence of poor candidates against her – friendly, local but dull Labor machine people. Kelly had a considerable personal magnetism that helped her stay in, even in 1998 – an election Kelly herself considered an impossible one to win (that three hours I spent next to her outside an electoral booth last year was very instructive). Those who disliked Kelly from other areas would dislike many from the west – I know Ed Husic and Michelle Rowland are similarly laid back and “westie” like Kelly. In addition, it’s curious for Penberthy to focus on her dress sense. Kelly knew how to dress for parliament and elsewhere. I never once heard her being called “Trackie Dacky Jackie” by anyone – I do, however, remember her love of yellow jackets, though. It an example of Penberthy pigeonholing outer suburban people as much as these “hipsters” of which he speaks. On a wider scale, though, Penberthy’s argument lacks the context that is required in order to understand the factors that kept Kelly in the seat through the period.

In NSW Labor circles there was a wildly hopeful view post-1996 that Lindsay was a one-off, the last venting of voter anger at the Keating era. If it was a one-off, it was a one-off that kept happening.

John Howard was always of the view that the Lindsay victories were not an accident and that blue collar voters were up for grabs. He wanted to make those people his own, and he supported Kelly because he regarded her as being genuinely of the area, someone who epitomised local aspirations (or to use that over-worked term, the local “aspirationists”). Kelly became a bit of a vain and loose-lipped liability towards the end of her career, and lost her seat against the vile if comic backdrop of a fabricated pamphlet campaign against a non-existent mosque, but she was an immovable force for more than 10 years. As Howard always said, Kelly’s many victories, and those of other conservatives in blue-collar seats, showed that voters these days are less tribal, less rusted on, and will certainly not cop what he called “head office identikit candidates” being parachuted into suburbs which were 20km way from the inner city share house they called home while doing their Bachelor of Arts.

There is a grain of good sense in these comments, but only a grain. The sneering about the Bachelor of Arts is needlessly harsh. As I pointed out earlier, it is true the ALP’s strategy in Lindsay was poorly formed – and I believe it still is the case. David Bradbury, I think, was entirely the wrong candidate for Lindsay. But not because he is a stereotyped “inner city share house resident” – the ALP have rarely had those in outer suburban seats as far as I can recall. I think, however, the seat needs a local person that is willing to be visible in the electorate, as well as a warm presence, in order to be successful. An Ed Husic type, rather than a Ross Free type, trying to climb the ladder. When the ALP lose Lindsay, it won’t just be because of the cocktail of toxicity that swirls around the government. I would say, however, that the “head office identikit candidates” aren’t the entire preserve of the ALP. Though it is telling that a local resident and daughter of the owner of a local motor parts company – Fiona Scott – was preselected before 2010, if a little hastily. It shows that the Liberals were looking for another Jackie Kelly. Though Scott is quite different from Kelly in manner, background and approach.

Lindsay was won back by Labor in 2007, and held narrowly in 2010 due to the indefatigable and workaholic ways of the local member David Bradbury. But it will never be a safe Labor seat again, even though it is by definition a blue-collar seat.

I really don’t know how many times Penberthy visited Lindsay during the campaign, or how many people he had on the ground in the electorate. His comments show to me that he didn’t visit and didn’t have many people telling him what happened. Bradbury was fortunate to hang onto a seat in which he wasn’t seen. Even ALP people I know commented on his lack of visibility before the campaign. He also managed to lose Green preferences – one of the few Federal ALP candidates to do so. The swing across NSW did not indicate that Lindsay would go in 2010 – and it has been said by many that the late preselection of Scott was a crucial error. In addition, Scott herself, despite being friendly and approachable, was an ineffective campaigner – not appearing at community forums and the like – and the campaign material that ran in a stream through my letter box in Lindsay focused more on Abbott than it did on Scott. It is also inaccurate to characterise Lindsay as an entirely “blue collar seat” when it includes suburbs like Emu Plains and Lapstone / Glenbrook in the Blue Mountains. It is a bellwether seat because it’s a mixed seat. There are people are work for unionised factories, university graduates, business owners, tradies, doctors.

This is the nightmare scenario for Labor, where the next election becomes a nationwide collection of Lindsays as the party is no longer seen as representing the fluoro-vested interests of a so-called working class that earns more than the middle class.

There the article ends, with its argument that the ALP are sneering at the working class made good and that Lindsay represents the whole country. It leaves out chunks of the truth. The people of Lindsay are annoyed not because of people sneering at them. There is a lack of services, public transport, a decent road taking them into the city, a perception of people getting more than them. None of these things are mentioned in the article, because Penberthy is being just as patronising towards the people of Penrith and surrounds as those “sneering hipsters” of which he speaks. He sets up the idea that Penrith is Jackie Kelly. That it’s all blue collar workers who made good. That only tells a section of the story of a place with a symphony orchestra, a university, art gallery and people living in share houses studying Bachelor of Arts degrees.

To say that the “bogan” is winning against sneering university graduates says a lot about the agendas and style of David Penberthy and other writers for the tabloid newspapers. It is an act, an artifice, designed to position them as one of the “people”, out there fighting against a constructed “elite” who sneer at the ordinary man. “Penbo” likes his JB and Coke, Chicken Parma and ACDC – therefore he’s an ordinary bloke (though someone needs to tell him that the people of Penrith tend to prefer schnitzel over parma – parmas are more a Melbourne thing). That he goes to inner city parties and hears people sneer about blue collar bogans – and then adopts the position that this represents the views of everyone who doesn’t live in the outer suburbs. Hildebrand adopts the same pose. There are those of us who actually live in the said outer suburbs can see the artifice.

Ultimately, this is not an article designed for the people so neatly boxed up by “Penbo” – people in the outer suburbs without a university education know they are doing pretty well, better than university educated people, who work largely for the public sector. But these same blue collar workers are good mates with public servants, nurses, teachers and other uni grads who live in the same street. They don’t feel this artificial divide that writers like Penbo create and conflate. Articles like that are designed to sneer at the sneerers. It’s a crude trolling exercise, hoping for the sneerers to sneer in comments about the article.

That manner and style speaks volume for a media that seems to revel in such negativity, rather than constructive commentary. It is a good thing that there is a fluidity of social groupings. That hard working people who own their own business can be a success. As the son of a working class man who made his money hiring plants to banks, I think it’s a wonderful thing. But it is another thing entirely to then say that they are “better” than university educated people just so a journalist can use them as a weapon against people in his social environment.

It is true to an extent that people from the working class who have made good have the ear of political parties. Maybe more of an ear because they swing their votes more. It can’t be said, however, that that ALP are “sneering” at these “bogans” and therefore losing their votes because of that reason. Nor can it be said that these “bogans” are Liberal Party forever – especially if Joe Hockey ever wants to dismantle the middle class welfare state that John Howard built.

Jokin’ Joe – Applying the McDonald’s Approach to Political Commentary

Turn on various televisions these days and Joe Hildebrand appears – as the self deprecating scruffy man crackin’ jokes and being self-deprecating. Plus, making jokes about the Greens being all about the inner city. This from a man who lives in the inner west. In the last week, however, Joe is starting up that pitch of his to be a heavy hitter.  A Federal Politics Commentator. In it, he manages to blame Victoria and Gillard’s childless status for the current political malaise. Plus the fact they didn’t give Twiggy respect.  Stay tuned for those points.

Curiously enough, he seems at times to be casting himself as a Labor sympathiser that has seen the once great party disappear.   First we had this rant about Twiggy Forrest, the great philanthropist, being nice to Rudd and that because the government didn’t do a deal with Forrest, it went on a downward spiral from there. In that rant, Joe is taking the ingredients and attempting to smoosh them together into an easily consumed burger.  The McDonalds of political commentaries.

Now, he has transferred this new recasting activity into writing for The Punch.  Here it is – with his words in italics.

A Hildebrand guide: how Labor destroyed itself

Nice referring to himself in the third person. He could be a sportsman with that schtick.

People looking for reasons for the ongoing implosion of the federal government are, it is fair to say, spoiled for choice. There is a phalanx of reasons lined up ready to drag Labor into electoral and political oblivion.

Going downnnnnnnnn. Illustration: Warren Brown

These include the assassination of Kevin Rudd, the carbon tax, the mining tax, the pokies cap, the second Rudd showdown and subsequent recruitment of Bob Carr and the Craig Thomson and Peter Slipper scandals.

These events are fairly self evident and he right that they aren’t particularly good for the government. Hildebrand, though, provides his reasons as to why they are there – hence revealing his startling narrative of What Has Happened.

However at the core of them all is one common element. One fundamental characteristic of the current Labor leadership which will prevent it ever again winning government in this country until it is expunged.

It is nothing short of extraordinary that in every case Prime Minister Julia Gillard and her attendant ministers managed to not just appallingly mishandle each issue but do so in a way that upset or disappointed both sides of each debate and left itself positionless. How has this been able to happen?

It’s all Julia and her ministers’ fault. Hildebrand wants to make that clear. Every single problem. It is from there Joe issues his reasons why, with that streamlined, McDonalds Hamburger kind of way Joe does.

Let us consider the facts.

FACTS. (According to Joe)

In relation to carbon, Gillard forced Rudd to let go of his own emissions trading scheme after it was blocked in the Senate by the extremist stonewalling of the Greens. The result of this was a freefall in Rudd’s popularity – albeit to levels still far greater than Gillard has enjoyed since forming government. This judgement call by her and Wayne Swan should have set off deafening alarm bells about the political instincts of them both but instead of pulling their heads in they blamed the whole thing on Rudd and assassinated a first term prime minister and the party, to its shame, fell in behind them.

Extremist. That must be in a guidebook somewhere, to couple “extremist” with “Greens” somewhere.  That is, apparently, a “fact” that the Greens indulged in extremist stonewalling.  Plus, Gillard alone forced Rudd to let go of the ETS. To this day, it is still supposition that she was part of a group that did such a thing – a supposition built on a leak. The Hildebrand Guide doesn’t allow for such grey areas.  Rudd’s popularity levels fall was caused in part by his position on the ETS, but that wasn’t the only reason – something the Hildebrand Guide also doesn’t allow for. Hildebrand then says in this paragraph that it was the ETS issue that caused Gillard and Swan to “assassinate” Rudd.

In the aftermath of this bloody execution, an ill-prepared and ill-disciplined Wayne Swan unequivocally ruled out a carbon tax while being quizzed on the 7.30 Report on August 12, 2010. Caught in the headlights by this policy on the run, Gillard was forced to fall in behind her deputy prime minister days later on August 17 and make her now infamous statement: “There will be no carbon tax under the government I lead”.

This critical miscalculation of backing herself into a corner was again a base political error. Even a wild animal knows not to let itself get cornered. However this now-active time bomb went largely unnoticed at the time because the government was waist-deep in the quagmire of its “citizens’ assembly” proposal – an idea so pathetically pointless, ill-conceived and undergraduate that in retrospect it could only have come from the new Labor order.

I tend to agree with Hildebrand here – it wasn’t a good idea to make such a promise. Though, I do wonder if Hildebrand has ever pointed out that both sides made promises on the run in 2010. Politics is filled with mistakes.  Gillard’s biggest mistake was to not say “as a result of the Greens’ balance of power position, it has been decided that a fixed price period will start, but then this will stop. This means that we will have to change our position on this”. Actually, she did say that. Not that we ever get told that.  However, after this fairly reasonable analysis, Hildebrand goes back to his attempted humour.

As of course we know, Gillard has since spectacularly reversed her position on the carbon tax, and so having exposed herself as a climate change atheist is now trying to convince the exodus of enviro-lefties flocking to the Greens that she is a true believer. Meanwhile double that number of middle-of-the-road voters have written her off as bullshit artist and are declaring themselves for a Liberal leader they largely hate because anything is better than a leader you simply cannot believe.

“Spectacularly” – a true conflation word. So is saying that she exposed herself as a “climate change atheist”.  She did no such thing – again we return to the leak and the supposition.  Even if she did suggest a backing down, that doesn’t make her a “climate change atheist”.  It is also, according to Hildebrand logic, only “lefties” who care about the environment – and that people supported the Greens only because of the environment. That is false on both counts. Many conservative people are concerned about the environment – and vote for the Greens – plus many support the Greens for their support for issues outside climate change and the environment.  To write off the Greens as a fringe left wing “enviro” party is again from the playbook that likes to characterise the Greens as “extreme”. Hildebrand should know better than to try to be Chris Kenny.  Hildebrand also makes blanket claims about reasons for people to support “a Liberal Leader they hate”. That is not a “fact” either. Abbott is not as hated as people like to believe.  However, grey areas are not allowed in Hildebrand World.

As I said, it would have been impossible to imagine an issue being handled so catastrophically prior to this but in fact it became the template for things to come.

In fact both the citizens’ assembly proposal and the carbon backflip are significant clues to Labor’s terminal pathology. Answers at the end.

The mining tax is another. Again, Swan lumped this policy onto Rudd and then hung the PM when it turned out to be a dog. In fact Rudd had been about to win over Australia’s only remotely popular mining magnate – and a genuine champion of indigenous advancement – in Andrew Forrest but by that stage Swan was already imagining the words “Deputy Prime Minister” painted on his office door and so instead cut a deal with BHP, Rio Tinto and Xstrata.

The breathtaking logical leaps being made here are extraordinary. Hildebrand is pinning his Twiggy Forrest poster to his wall and saluting it while suggesting that Swan changed a tax policy basically to become Deputy Prime Minister.  If I swear I didn’t see the phrase “remotely popular mining magnate” in the paragraph, I would have though Clive Palmer, the King of Conspiracy Theories, wrote this paragraph. This isn’t political analysis, it’s a script and monologue for an episode of the West Wing Hildebrand believes he is writing.

I do not believe, as some do, that these three giants had given Swan his riding orders in the lead up to the Rudd coup – it happened too fast and was too ill-thought out for that – but having dispatched his old nemesis, he jumped into their beds with unbecoming haste and effectively sold them the family farm to the point where there are reports now that they will pay scarcely any more tax at all. Either way a democratically elected Prime Minister was killed off by Swan in the interests of three multinational corporations trying to avoid paying tax. And this from a bloke who calls himself a Labor man.

If you remember, Hildebrand claimed earlier it was the ETS that caused Gillard and Rudd to “assassinate” Rudd. Now it’s the mining tax. It’s a touch confusing. He also repeats the oft repeated (but rarely given currency) conspiracy theory that it was the evil multinational mining companies that conspired against Rudd.  All very “the CIA brought down Whitlam, you know” that has been echoing for decades.  It’s also a curious leap to claim that the Mining Tax will “pay scarcely any more tax at all” – not backed up with any “facts” on this occasion.  It is raising more tax than was the situation before – and I agree, it’s not satisfactory, though it did come as a result of a compromise, which seems to be the way of either side of politics.  Hildebrand here is in fact showing himself to be a supporter of the Greens’ platform – that the original tax was good and that we shouldn’t be “selling the family farm” without our fair share of tax.  But Hildebrand thinks the Greens are extreme enivro-lefties. That is another bit of confusion there.

The pokies cap is another. Having turned a blind eye to the pokies blight before it was forced to by the newly-enlightened political journeyman Andrew Wilkie, the government suddenly swung a sledgehammer into its own political heartland in the outer suburbs and regions of NSW and Queensland. A morally dubious and corrupted heartland to be sure – anything funded by poker machines is – but a vital heartland for Labor nonetheless.

A pokies heartland that funds, through various means, many advertisements and features in Hildebrand’s own paper. The breathless “dubious and corrupted” is a disingenuous attempt by Hildebrand to still cast himself as a concerned citizen, despite his job working for a paper that is mired in that pokie world.

Then, having been caught blindsided by the clubs’ response (despite this being a carbon copy of their anti-pokies tax campaign in NSW of just a few years’ earlier), the government weathered all the political pain only to dump the policy and lose A) the holier-than-thou inner-city voters already heading towards the Greens; B) the equally holier-than-thou Hillsong/Christian anti-gambling brigade and C) Andrew Wilkie’s vital vote in the parliament.

I agree with the first part of this paragraph, where he criticises the government for squibbing on the poker machine deal. Then, however, he goes back into his shoddy categorising of opponents to poker machines being “holier than thou”.  This from a man who just the previous paragraph talked of poker machine land being “dubious and corrupted”. He can’t have it both ways.  Note that he went with the “inner city” Green stereotype. He needs to see some voting figures. But that would mean that he would have to undertake serious, reasoned analysis. He seems incapable of that. Too complex for the two all beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, tomato on a sesame seed bun style of journalism Joe is practicing here.

And will punters or the club movement come back to a government that spent a year in a war against them? Of course not. Again, they have taken an issue and managed to lose every single vote on every single side of it. It really is breathtaking.

I tend to agree with Hildebrand here. It is one of their worst mistakes.

Offered a second chance at salvation in the form of the Rudd comeback, the government’s instincts were at least, it has to be said, consistent and they chose the course of action that would guarantee their own destruction. Even in the days afterwards the botched recruitment of Bob Carr demonstrated how little they had learnt. Giving the former premier foreign affairs was a brilliant idea and perfect – if insufficient – circuit breaker, but then of course the PM panics and pulls the offer, thus putting Carr offside. When the debacle leaks, the PM tries to deny the story, then attacks the media, then buckles under public pressure and makes the decision that, had she simply made in the first place, would have been an exquisitely rare victory in a sea of defeat.

Hildebrand is trotting out the Australian’s take on the situation regarding the Carr ascendency – journalists will never admit any possibility that they were blindsided – but that wouldn’t fit into Hildebrand’s neat package.

(It is interesting to note that since then Carr almost seems to have become infected by the government’s incompetence, making a couple of uncharacteristic stumbles in his first weeks. Having said that, he remains by far the most standout performer and mind in the government and its only chance of seeing reason.)

A writer for the Daily Telegraph likes Bob Carr.  Press officers for Bob Carr must chortle every time they see one of the Telegraph crew praising Carr.

The Carr debacle was a ship-in-a-bottle version of the Titanic problems that are now sinking the government in the form of Slipper and Thomson. Once more under crippling public pressure, the PM has too late made the decision she should have made immediately upon these scandals coming to light. As a result she has lost the moral high ground and her own dignity by letting them contaminate the government for so long, but now also appears weak for finally yielding to overwhelming public sentiment. Again, the PM and her government have managed to lose all sides of the argument.

While it is easy to agree with Hildebrand here, he doesn’t entertain the “facts” from past governments that similar situations were treated fairly similarly in the past. What has made these bigger issues is the precarious number situation in the HOR.

All this is a harsh analysis but, sadly, it is also true. So why? Why does the government routinely destroy itself so?

The answer is at face value that greatest (and most effective) of political clichés: It is out of touch. But what does that really mean?

And here we see Hildebrand riding in on his noble steed to suggest why the ALP has fallen down so.

What we are seeing here is a government run by a political class, a team of professional politicians whose life experience is limited almost entirely to working for either the party or a trade union. Prior to entering parliament Gillard’s whole career was spent as an industrial lawyer for activist law firm Slater and Gordon, which is effectively a union outpost. Slugs and Bugs does a lot of great work but an office full of left-wing lawyers is not a broad enough background for a future PM. The watercooler issues there are not the same ones that everyone else in the country is talking about.

While this can be seen as a reasonable point about Gillard, there is something missing here. Hildebrand was earlier extolling the virtues of Kevin Rudd, who is hardly a “watercooler” man himself. Nor is former political staffer Tony Abbott or the phalanx of lawyers and staffers who are MPs in the Liberal and Labor parties.

Likewise Swan was briefly an academic (lecturing in public administration) before becoming a political staffer from 1978 onwards and of course the wunderkind factional boss Bill Shorten was a union official and industrial lawyer before entering parliament. Again, there is nothing wrong with these jobs but they do not expose you to the full spectrum of political views. Indeed, in all of these positions anyone you encounter who disagrees with you is likely to be the enemy you’re fighting in the court or the parliament.

This discounts the possibility that there are others in a party – but this is not an issue isolated only to the Labor Party. It’s a “fact” left out of Hildebrand’s thesis.

This mindset still permeates today, and so the humble swinging voter who’s had enough is seen not as a disenchanted citizen who needs to be wooed back to Labor but either a dirty Lib or a victim of right-wing manipulation.

And I thought there were all inner city enviro lefties leaving the party. Plus, to suggest that Labor people think that swinging voters are “dirty Libs or victims of right wing manipulation” is a curious call – without any kind of supporting evidence.  Next, however, comes the kicker.

The dominance of Victoria in federal politics is also shielding the ALP from mainstream Australia. Melbourne is not at all representative of the rest of the country; in fact it is often counter-representative, as poll after poll continues to show. Issues do not play out the same way there, or have the same bite. The pokies debate is the perfect of example of this. There is no major clubs industry to speak of in Victoria, nor is its football code manacled to the success of leagues clubs. Gillard and the minister left to carry it, fellow Melburnian Jenny Macklin, had no understanding of the level of antipathy among punters or the power of the clubs and NRL lobby.

For a long time a number of journalists have talked of the “Sussex Street Disease” or the “NSW Disease” – as in, focus groups and the pragmatism of the NSW branch was killing off the ALP. No, it’s Joe’s old home town of Melbourne that’s to blame.  That “counter representative” city that doesn’t have a major clubs industry – a breathtaking thing to say, especially in the light of the work of Tom Cummings.  It isn’t as big as NSW and Queensland’s, but that doesn’t make it just a minor problem in Victoria. It is true to say that Gillard and Macklin might not know as much first hand about the pokie machine industry as Chris Bowen and Ed Husic would have, but Hildebrand is eliminating the complicator that Gillard and Macklin may have actually talked to their MPs in those states. It is here I think we also see Hildebrand’s view that the NRL and clubs lobby really shouldn’t have been taken on at all – despite being “dubious and corrupt”. Phew. The Tele can continue to accept ads from the clubs again. And print odds for games. And promote the NRL and its licensed clubs.

Victoria’s local political operators are also appalling. On an internal level the split in the Right faction became so bitter and toxic it led to the HSU corruption scandal spiralling into a national outrage that may yet consume the government. On a macro level, head office managed to lose the unlosable election in 2010. And yet instead of being punished for being the architect of this debacle, the state secretary was appointed one of the Prime Minister’s senior advisers. This violates every law of politics.

“Unlosable election”. People still use that terminology? Could it have been that the Brumby Government was beginning to pall in the way the NSW government did in 2007, before Work Choices and Peter Debnam combined to help Labor win?  Such an idea doesn’t fit into the neat hamburger shape that Hildebrand has constructed. That it’s Victoria’s fault.

And, to be frank, the fact that Gillard has no children perhaps also limits her exposure to what’s happening in the world outside the rarefied corridors of Canberra or the Melbourne dinner party set. If the PM moved in broader circles or had better political instincts then this would not be an issue but it seems as though she needs every avenue to the outside world she can get and kids can be a great – if often unwelcome – conduit to what’s really going on. Having said that, this is of course a deeply personal matter and entirely one for her. It merely presents as one reason why she may be so insulated from popular opinion.

Gillard has no children. That is a problem for her. Another “fact”. That is what politics comes down to for Hildebrand. You have to be a father or mother to be a politician. Otherwise, you are out of touch. The weak qualification at the end of the paragraph doesn’t excuse the first bit.

There are countless other factors and examples that even the internet doesn’t allow space for but the nub of it is that we have a government that is neither grounded in nor has significant exposure to the full breadth of the electorate and the mass of antipathy, frustration and disbelief that lies therein. It almost defies belief to think that it was only after she got off a plane on the weekend that Gillard realised the true public hostility towards the government’s defence of Slipper and Thomson but this is what she said with a straight face on Sunday.

From here, Hildebrand can’t be bothered to give more examples – the previous ones being so reasoned and well thought out.

And it actually makes sense. Every time the government has been criticised or attacked, it has deluded itself to think that it is just the work of Tony Abbott or the Murdoch press or some other sinister force seeking to destroy all that is good and light. Not once does the party seriously consider the possibility that the public has turned on them because they knifed a popularly elected prime minister, lied twice about “the greatest moral challenge of our time”, and sought to defend two alleged rorters caught – almost literally – with their pants down.

We expect Hildebrand to defend his employer – that’s par for the course. So is the “popularly elected Prime Minister” line, which shows ignorance of the Westminster System.  It is a big pity that Costello didn’t have the courage to topple John Howard – then that false line couldn’t continually roll out. Nor does Hildebrand entertain the idea that governments obfuscate and squib – “non core promises” is a phrase that has disappeared into the mists of time.  What hasn’t disappeared is Jokin’ Joe, with his “caught with their pants down” line – with cases that haven’t been proved.

The ALP simply no longer knows what people are thinking. It is so consumed by parlour house politics – such as the “masterstroke” of recruiting Slipper – or patching together piecemeal and unpopular policies to appeal to tiny vested interests such as Wilkie and the Greens that it has completely lost sight of how these issues are playing out in the wider electorate. Then when they do hear the negative feedback they are so simultaneously arrogant and paranoid that they simply shoot the messenger.

I agree with the parlour house politics line in regards Slipper – it was a misstep, when they could have taken on the clubs and NRL over poker machine reform. It’s a vast piece of mendacity for Hildebrand to suggest people supporting a carbon price and poker machine reform are “tiny”. It’s downright offensive.  The carbon price was ALP policy – and it will cease to be a fixed price “tax” in time, which was also ALP policy before 2007. This fact escapes Hildebrand’s simplistic picture. The damage poker machines do to families across most of Australia is, to the likes of Hildebrand, “tiny”. As well as a “holier than thou” issue.  It is also laughable that Hildebrand casts himself as someone who knows about the “wider electorate” when his main job at the Telegraph is to write “humour” pieces about travelling on public transport and going to celebrity parties as the scruffy outsider. He’s as streetwise as the other Jokin’ Joe – the Honourable Member for North Sydney.  In addition, it’s not the messenger the Government are “shooting” – it’s inaccurate media reporting. That’s not the whole media that are being shot there. Just the ones with openly biased agendas.

And no doubt again when they read this piece the same bunch of ostriches will ignore its contents and accuse me of being yet another agent of evil attempting to destroy the party. They will rant and rail and stick their heads in the sand.

And most tragically of all they will not stop to ask themselves why someone trying to destroy the Labor Party would spend 2,000 words explaining how to save it.

The final part of the article shows that Joe really is trying to ride in on his steed, saving the Labor Party from the Childless Victorian Out of Touch Lawyers Tied to Tiny Extremists. Not sure what’s he suggesting, though, as a way forward – other than suggesting Gillard gets knocked up and the ALP stop having to do deals in two houses that have minority numbers.  I don’t think Joe is trying to destroy the ALP.  I think he genuinely believes himself to be master of cut through, the purveyor of non-spin.  He is nothing of the sort. He is spinning his own narrative from a set of logical leaps that wouldn’t look out of place in a Matthew Reilly novel. Making a complex set of political ingredients never seen in Australian politics before into a simple Maccas dinner bought from the drive thru.

We Will Never Surrender – The Debut of the GWS Giants

This week sees the long awaited debut of Australia’s latest experiment in sporting franchises – the GWS Giants. Long awaited by me, that is. As I said in my blog about my last Swans game as a Swans supporter, I have been an Australian Football devotee for 31 years and this is a great time for me. Finally, I can go to Homebush every time I want to see a football game. Finally, a stadium where the club has access to the best seats and bars. Most importantly, however, the AFL has a team in one of the largest population centres in the country. I have been asked why I am so passionate about a brand new team – because it’s about the region, it’s about the game, not the franchise.

At work, I have made it a experiment in social observation to make myself a total Giants fanatic. First of all, people know where I sit in the staffroom.

I also have my Giants coffee mug and lanyard. All little things – I used to use fairly bland things as coffee cups and lanyards. The impact has been interesting, however. Each time I walk around the school at which I teach, there are students telling me about what they know about AFL and the Giants. There will be the student whose cousin plays for a local youth team. The students who, as a cohort, undertook an Auskick program run by staff supplied by the AFL with Giants uniforms. The other students who were there when two players visited school, as a result of the work of some savvy staff at the Giants. Students are impressed by school visits by any impressive looking sportsperson in a uniform. There are still students who talk about “the tall one”, who was Jonathan Patton. Then there are the students who have seen the Giants on the news, on Sunrise, on various media outlets. The ones who speak of Israel Folau and express an interest in how he will go in the AFL. The interest is there, in the schools, amongst those watching shows other than the evening news.

Some recent media reports about the Giants, however, demonstrate a fairly standard method of reporting the Western Suburbs. Stick a Camera in Main Street, Blacktown and Ask the Locals. That’s not going to yield a realistic picture of what kind of knowledge would exist in the wider community about GWS, in the same way Sticking a Camera in Penrith Plaza will yield a realistic idea of what is believed about asylum seekers in the region. It does get the sound bytes media outlets want. If these same producers really wanted to know what was happening, they could do some research and ask the school teachers or other professionals who work every day in the western suburbs.

The other perspective in regards the Giants concept and Blacktown is the mistaken belief that the Giants are a regional Blacktown AFL team. It’s not. It’s a team for the city that is for the greater west. If those same cameras went to Blaxland or Springwood, they would find plenty of people who have either stayed with the Swans or have made the switch to the Giants because they like the game and want to support the team connected to their region. The same can be said for the Hills District and areas of Campbelltown, who have had an AFL playing culture existing for many years – unlike Blacktown, which is still largely a league town (and will continue to, I believe).

The other factor in GWS’ favour will be the large number of people in the district from other states who love their AFL and their team. Many of the supporters I saw at the first NAB Cup game in Rooty Hill (their training ground is closer to Rooty Hill than Blacktown) had scarves for various teams. They will still support the teams of their previous lives, but will take out Giants’ memberships and will go to the Giants HQ in Homebush. This is because they are such rusted on supporters that will see the new club run around, playing the game they love in an easily accessible location, rather than take the journey out to Moore Park. They will also find more in common with the fans of the new club, who will, I can envisage, feature more working class members than I suspect would make up the supporter base of the Swans.

That is why the Giants will be interesting and for media outlets looking for the full story, they need to work a bit harder than sticking a camera in a street. This is a year long story, even a five year long story, as the AFL try something that is very risky. The possible payoffs, though, are big. Already, I’ve heard parents wanting their children to play AFL rather than rugby league, due to the perceived lower risk of injury. If that view catches in the western suburbs and the Giants start to have success, the AFL will have succeeded in their plans.

Personally, I hope that is true. My daughter already likes the game and wants to see them play. I want to grow old in the orange and charcoal, singing that very cool song from the Cat Empire’s Harry Angus. I want to see a team that embodied that great line We Will Never Surrender.

Mr Carr Goes to Washington… and Barnaby

I should like Bob Carr. He possesses a great intellect and is able to absorb ideas that are beyond almost all of Australia’s politicians, with perhaps Malcolm Turnbull and Kevin Rudd being his equal. I should like him because he has the even less patience than I do with old style “nostalgic left Trots” firing up abuse and aggression at rallies. Yet when he was the NSW Premier for 10 years, I never liked him.

It’s probably because he never really seemed to have his heart in the job. When I started following politics in earnest as a teenager (and keen Nick Greiner fan – yes, I know), it also appeared that Carr’s criticisms just droned on and he wasn’t really that engaged. That’s why I, like a lot of people, was startled when Mr. Negative, in 1991, almost defeated a first term government, causing, in time, a minority government involving Tony Windsor. It turned out that Carr never particularly wanted to be a state politician – it seemed to be federal politics and specifically Foreign Affairs that entranced him. Thus said his diary of the time:

I spent today like a doomed man, taking phone calls and drafting a statement, still saying to the press I wasn’t shifting. I feel a jolt in my stomach about what I’m getting myself in for. I will destroy my career in four years. Everything’s altered. It’s my fate … So, for better or for worse, I become leader of the party next week.

Looking back, the question would be there – Why would a person with the intellect of Carr want to be the Premier of a state where Joe Tripodi, Eddie Obeid and Michael Costa lurked inside the government. It was a tough time for a government that was attempting to undertake a range of social, legal, educational and environmental reforms as well as deal with the increasing difficulties infrastructure funding and maintenance threw at the government. It is the latter with which Carr has attracted the most criticism – with little improvement to show for his years as Premier. There’s the 4 lane M5 East, the non-existent M4 East, one (half) additional train line, train carriages that arrived over budget and beyond deadline, a ticketing system many years behind Melbourne’s. The Carr Premiership also heralded the increase in poker machines and the continuing grubby association with the Australian Hotels Association. There was, however, a major benefit of the Carr years for areas of Sydney, with Campbelltown and Liverpool receiving much improved cultural facilities, and a corker of an idea – opening the doors of every Sydney museum for a night – all as a result of Carr’s own liking for culture. Again, another reason I should like Carr. But I find myself disagreeing with most of his views on culture. It’s probably the same reason I never took a liking for Kevin Rudd. They both show an overbearing Smugness and in Carr’s case, an apparent disinterest in built up areas outside the inner city of Sydney. Though, that impression has possibly been left with me because when he opened my local primary school hall, he called it “Riverview” instead of “Mt. Riverview”.

That is the past, however.  Time seems to have been kind to Carr, especially as he parachuted out of the NSW Government before things got really toxic – ie. when Costa became Treasurer and then the revolving door of leaders. Looking at Carr today, he seems like a renewed man, ready to take on the challenges of being our Foreign Minister – even if it’s only for 18 months or so. Oh, and being a Senator. In the same chamber as Barnaby Joyce, Mary Jo Fisher and Cory Bernardi. I think a lot of people would pay admission to see a debate between Barnaby and Bob, if only to see the looks on Joyce’s face as he sees his Riverview education unravelling when the public school boy swat delivers one of his historical references or famed putdowns. It would be interesting to read any response his new opposite number, Julie Bishop, would make to this article by Carr about the future faced by social democrat parties, or indeed most inside his own new party group. What should also fascinate Senate watchers is Carr’s relationship with the other tall NSW born Bob in the chamber. Carr has been fairly constant in his criticisms of the Greens in his blogging activities – I can imagine that he may show some modification in that attitude – in public at least.

There is also a question as to what the newly elected Senator Carr would do during a Coalition government. I can’t imagine him wanting to go anywhere, especially when he would get an opportunity to challenge the new Coalition Ministers in the Senate. Especially the aforementioned Barnaby. I can also imagine him staying there until his dotage – which is what he suggested yesterday:

”I’ll aim to become the Australian equivalent of Robert Byrd, or one of those ancient US senators who just stay on there into their 90s, dispensing their wisdom and speaking with more principle as each year passes.”

It’s a good move by Gillard to find a specialist in the area of Foreign Affairs whose addition will add some gravitas and experience, rather than capability and the desire for compromise, as well as constant presence in the back bench, which were elements Warren Mundine, the more usual style of replacement, would have taken to Canberra. It has also made it easier for Gillard to maintain the same balance in the senior ministry, with no major changes amongst her current cabinet members. Though, on a side note, it is a curious move placing David Bradbury as Assistant Treasurer – a role that will lure him away from Lindsay even more than his current position. Lindsay still is a seat where people want to see the local MP.

It’s also been interesting and instructive to see the press gallery’s egg on their prognosticating faces. There was Michelle Grattan, who first tool an opportunity to put her boot into Gillard about her failure to appoint Carr having to eat her words (well, as close to it as a senior Canberra press gallery journalist will). She did, though, take the opportunity to take another kick at Gillard for having less “panache” than Carr – making politics look like Canberra’s Next Top Model. Simon Benson also took a break from his relentless criticism of every single thing Gillard does by praising Carr’s appointment, but then going back to his crude kicking at a government, which is in his opinion, is “hopelessly lacking in authority”. Benson and the Daily Telegraph seemed to have given up on writing the Rudd is Challenging as Leader narrative, deciding that Carr is the new Challenger. This is why Benson writes that “the question is already being asked whether he [Carr] could be a potential prime ministerial candidate”. Not sure who is speculating in society about that – but Benson is right, in terms of there being speculation. That speculation comes from Simon’s very own paper, printing an article by him and Patrick Lion which can’t fail to throw in a “bungle” at the top.

It would be more likely to see me going to a Wagner opera with Bob Carr, David Marr and Andrew Bolt than it would be for Bob Carr to cope with the dangerous labyrinth that faces anyone wanting to be the leader of the ALP and then Prime Minister. Carr’s talents lean more towards philosophy and diplomacy with fellow intellects than trying to reconcile all the competing demands from a range of ministers and lobby groups. Besides, there would be too much baggage from the latter years of his NSW reign. Plus, I can’t see him holding his patience as well as Gillard manages in the face of the stupid thrown at a Labor leader by particular journalists.

Julia Gillard has given us interesting times and this appointment has been no exception. Besides, there are probably a great number of people in NSW who would sing in one voice that getting Bob Carr out of Australia as often as possible is a good thing. Personally, it means that I can brush up my own Bob Carr impersonation.