The Cairns Post

Time for Turnbull to take lead

-

IN his first comments about the weekend’s by-election results, Malcolm Turnbull stayed depressing­ly true to form.

He scoffed at Labor’s success in retaining the four seats it was defending.

There was absolutely nothing for Bill Shorten to celebrate, he said, because by-elections are always good for opposition­s.

But he also went on to promise the government would “look very seriously and thoughtful­ly and humbly at the way in which the voters have responded”. What was he trying to say? If the government never stood a chance in Longman in Brisbane’s outer north and Braddon in Tasmania, why did it run candidates and campaign so hard, including multiple visits by the Prime Minister? It didn’t have to.

In Saturday’s two WA by-elections, it didn’t think it could win and therefore chose not to stand candidates.

Obviously, the government believed it could take Longman or Braddon or both from the ALP. Its own people were talking about that as a live possibilit­y last Friday.

And if, only hours after the polls closed, it had already concluded there were no implicatio­ns in the Longman and Braddon results, where is the value in “seriously and thoughtful­ly and humbly” examining them?

It is just this sort of mishmash of thinking and messaging that has caused the government to regularly find itself on the back foot for the past two years.

But while various nervous unnamed Coalition MPs in marginal seats are quoted in the media questionin­g Turnbull’s direction, let’s look at this as an opportunit­y for the Prime Minister. He can reset. It’s surely his last big opportunit­y to confront the consequenc­es of the self-indulgent political strategy he’s been pursuing until now.

His contempt for Shorten is not hard to see whenever they square off in Parliament.

There looks to be something personal in the PM’s attitude to Shorten and he seems especially exercised about the Labor leader’s past relationsh­ips with business figures such as the late Dick Pratt.

Shorten — far from polished, even a bit clumsy, and worst of all, a former union official — is deemed unworthy of sitting at the top table.

That attitude has leached into the government’s approach to policy and positionin­g.

As the government has managed to make small steps in reducing Labor’s lead in the opinion polls since the Budget in May, it’s concluded that Shorten is so personally unpopular that he poses no threat.

Supposedly Turnbull and his people have become convinced they have the Labor leader’s measure.

Thus the government advocates a tax cut for big business and the trickle-down theory in which largesse at the top eventually finds its way into workers’ pay-packets, can’t get itself square with the Catholic schools, panders to Pauline Hanson, tries to appease all sides when it comes to energy, and kids itself that the preferred prime minister measure in the polls is the method by which Australian­s vote.

It’s a salad of stuff with few identifiab­le signs of where the government wants to take the country — save for jobs and growth, which is not really an idea.

It’s rarely asked: what does this government stand for? It seems to stand for getting through each week and holding on to power.

Shorten and the ALP can be cast as waging class warfare but at least there’s no doubt about what they’re looking to do. The Coalition under Turnbull? It’s not easy to tell.

Some in Canberra might not be able to see it but many voters in Middle Australia are deeply unhappy with the economic status quo.

They are looking for clearly defined policies and direct talk.

It’s not too late for the Prime Minister to rescue his fortunes but he’ll need to forget Shorten and be more inventive and assertive.

More of the same won’t be welcomed by the public or his party room colleagues. Peter Dutton, for one, whose seat is next door to Longman, is not going to sit by and see his political career — and his future leadership prospects — be frittered away.

 ?? Picture: JENNY EVANS ?? CHANGE TACT: Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.
Picture: JENNY EVANS CHANGE TACT: Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia