The Cairns Post

Labor’s Aussie Day problem

- James Campbell James Campbell is national politics editor

YOU have to give it to the canny folk at Meat and Livestock Australia.

Having spent years training us to believe it was our patriotic duty to eat lamb on January 26, they spotted that the controvers­y over this particular holiday wasn’t going to go away.

Sniffing the wind a couple of years ago, the ads promoting what they now coyly call their Summer Lamb campaign were shorn of all references to Australia Day.

This year’s effort, which features dancing teams of Left and Right-wing commentato­rs eventually brought together by their shared love of a cutlet, strikes me as a clever acknowledg­ment that this row has now become one of those permanent schisms in our national life, like the republican “debate” that also isn’t going away.

This is an odd developmen­t for those of us old enough to remember how the world was before the Bicentenar­y in 1988.

Before then nobody paid much attention to Australia Day – it certainly wasn’t treated as a sacred day that had to be celebrated on January 26; it was just a public holiday that fell on the last weekend of January. Nowadays it’s a big deal. Of course, as the mainstream’s passion for this holiday has grown so have the protests against what its enemies call Invasion or Survival Day.

We shouldn’t be surprised, given the whole point of life for a certain type of Left-winger is to be opposed to things the majority of the country likes.

This week The Greens leader Richard Di Natale upped the ante saying the day represente­d dispossess­ion, theft, and the “ongoing genocide” and “slaughter” of Aboriginal people.

If he really thinks that Australia is engaged in “ongoing genocide”, surely we shouldn’t be celebratin­g it on any of the other 364 days of the year either.

I suspect Di Natale doesn’t really believe that. This is just a bit of virtue signalling to his people.

From the Greens point of view, this issue is a beautiful thing – even better than boat people, it’s another great attack line on the ALP.

In their heart of hearts, all but the dumbest Greens voters know that, as cruel as it is, the alternativ­e to offshore processing of asylum seekers would be thousands of deaths at sea and the eventual destructio­n of Australia’s legal immigratio­n program.

Calling for Australia Day to be moved is, in contrast, consequenc­e free.

Earlier this week, the ALP’s employment and workplace relations spokesman Brendan O’Connor was asked if there was a debate in the ALP about the date.

“We are always looking to reconcile the view of the nation, the sense of history,” he answered.

“I think, for example, we’ve closed our minds to a lot of things that happened in the past that we may now reexamine … I think when I was growing up and going to school we didn’t learn enough about indigenous culture, indigenous history, to the point where I didn’t fully understand as a young boy the sophistica­tion and the real remarkable story, which is our First Australian­s’ story and I think that’s a shame.” Hardly a ringing endorsemen­t of the status quo.

Similarly Linda Burney, the party’s human services spokeswoma­n and the first indigenous woman elected to the House of Representa­tives, said that she didn’t see the date changing in the short term “but the date needs to be a day of reflection, as I said, and deep understand­ing of the truth of human history, which is a pretty fabulous one for all to celebrate in Australia”.

This is Australia. Deep reflection isn’t really our thing.

The “debate” over Australia Day is, I suspect, only going to get shriller.

Unlike the Labor Party, the Liberal and National Parties are united on this issue. They love Australia and will be reminding us of that love at every opportunit­y they get. And they know that the vast majority of Bill Shorten’s blue-collar base is with them on this one.

It’s a cost-free exercise for them with the added bonus that it takes them back to the good old days of the Howard era when talk of the “black-armband” view of Australia history first sold tickets.

They also suspect that Shorten’s heart isn’t in a full-throated defence of Australia Day and the public will see that.

OF COURSE, AS THE MAINSTREAM’S PASSION FOR THIS HOLIDAY HAS GROWN SO HAVE THE PROTESTS AGAINST WHAT ITS ENEMIES CALL INVASION OR SURVIVAL DAY

 ??  ?? PROTESTS: The debate over Australia Day is only going to get shriller.
PROTESTS: The debate over Australia Day is only going to get shriller.
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