The Cairns Post

Green’s a gift to Right

- JOE HILDEBRAND

NAPOLEON once said you should never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake and so I am reluctant to weigh in on the subject of Lidia Thorpe while she is doing such a good job of destroying the Greens.

However, it is possible she may also destroy something good in the process and so the nation must be warned.

For virtually everyone in politics aside from her own party, Thorpe is nothing short of a gift from God.

For those in the sensible centre and centre-left she is proof of the Greens’ lunatic and delinquent political orthodoxy. In both word and deed she behaves like an unstable undergradu­ate revolution­ary of the kind that many of us were before we put down the bong and started paying taxes.

As she has demonstrat­ed time and again, she is not fit for parliament. Indeed, she treats the very institutio­n which provides her top-tier salary and privileged platform with undisguise­d contempt, from sabotaging her own swearing-in to celebratin­g the burning of our first Parliament House.

She professes to be a champion of empowering women and Indigenous people and yet her two most disgracefu­l outbursts were vile verbal attacks on a female Senate colleague and a female First Nations elder.

And by continuing to offer Thorpe unqualifie­d support – perhaps because without her they are whiter than a polar bear in a snowstorm – the Greens are explicitly accepting and implicitly endorsing this behaviour. As a result there has never been a more powerful advertisem­ent for their collective extremism, nor any greater incentive for any left-ofcentre citizen to abandon the Greens and return to the Australian Labor Party. So far, so good.

On the other side of the spectrum, Thorpe is also manna from heaven for the far right, which played out almost poetically this week.

After Pauline Hanson’s ugly social media attack on Mehreen Faruqi – in which she told the Greens senator to “piss off back to Pakistan” – there was righteous fury from the left.

Yet as soon as the outrage arose it was instantly cancelled out by the fact that the Greens have repeatedly refused to condemn or even mildly sanction Thorpe for her own catalogue of outrages.

Indeed, this was acutely demonstrat­ed by no less a figure than Waleed Aly, who left Faruqi all but speechless on The Project when he laid bare the Greens’ hypocrisy. Of course Faruqi is not responsibl­e for Thorpe’s behaviour, but she has been brought undone by both the actions themselves and her party’s failure to refute it. To quote a far-left mantra, it’s the company you keep.

On a broader global scale this is essentiall­y the problem with politics everywhere. The more radical the left gets, the more reactionar­y the right gets. Extremism begets extremism.

The examples are both multiple and manifest. Trumpism arises in blue-collar middle America in opposition to woke campus ideology and wealthy coastal elites. The Brexit movement flourishes in the workingcla­ss north of England in opposition to the cosmopolit­an urban south.

And most recently, Italy has produced its first female prime minister, Giorgia Meloni – a working-class daughter of a single mother, but don’t expect the feminist left to celebrate that. Meloni is an unashamed champion of traditiona­l values, already known worldwide for her 2019 declaratio­n: “I am Giorgia, I am a woman, I am a mother, I am Italian, I am Christian.”

Unremarkab­le, one might think, but her party also has a very dark history, with links to members of Mussolini’s fascists. Yet European fascists themselves rose to power on the back of fear of European communists.

Once more, extremism begets extremism. And this brings us back to Lidia Thorpe, who is of the left and yet the greatest ally those on the right could ever hope for when it comes to blocking an Indigenous Voice to parliament.

As you would expect from someone extreme, Thorpe opposes the Voice because it isn’t extreme. It is moderate, sensible and pragmatic.

Thorpe’s opposition to the Voice ought to be its greatest endorsemen­t, but sadly she has the potential to derail what is potentiall­y our most

profound national step since federation. She calls it a “waste of money”, which is exactly what its opponents on the right say.

In fact, it is an unpreceden­ted effort to finally eliminate the waste of money that has been directed at Indigenous communitie­s without those communitie­s having a say in how it is directed.

She calls it “symbolism”, which is exactly what its opponents on the right say. In fact it is an unpreceden­ted effort to deliver better services to Indigenous people via direct feedback instead of bureaucrat­ic box-ticking.

But the most telling and predictabl­e thing about Thorpe’s absurd outlying position is how enthusiast­ically the right have embraced it.

Many conservati­ves decry the

Voice because they think it is a vessel for dangerous radicals like Thorpe herself, while the rest point to her opposition as justificat­ion for their own opposition.

I see and hear it every day.

And so Lidia Thorpe has miraculous­ly managed to unite the hard left and half the right against this historic milestone that could potentiall­y deliver so much for First Nations people — just as Phil Cleary did with the republican referendum.

Remember this if it fails.

 ?? ?? Lidia Thorpe protests outside the British Consulate General in Melbourne, Picture: Asanka Ratnayake
Lidia Thorpe protests outside the British Consulate General in Melbourne, Picture: Asanka Ratnayake
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