The Star Malaysia

Why Australia can’t hold on to a PM

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WHY can’t Australia just elect a prime minister and stick with its choice?

After the incumbent Malcolm Turnbull was edged out on Friday, the country has its 30th leader, the sixth in little more than eight years.

Episodes like this haven’t been uncommon. The long reigns of figures like Billy Hughes, Robert Menzies, Bob Hawke and John Howard have been interspers­ed with tumultuous interregnu­ms when the major factions on the right and left sought to realign themselves, like this time.

Turnbull’s main antagonist­s in parliament have been Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton and Tony Abbott, the former prime minister whom Turnbull himself knifed to win the leadership. But Dutton was beaten to the premiershi­p by a supposedly Turnbull “loyalist”, Australia’s treasurer Scott Morrison. Morrison, who played a pivotal role in delivering the leadership to Turnbull in 2015, was in fact once considered as Abbott’s “protege”.

Dutton and Abbot have been attempting to turn the governing right-of-centre Liberal party into a more consistent­ly right-wing grouping, with the support of News Corpowned media.

Whereas similar movements once split on issues of trade (when the Protection­ist and Free Trade parties duked it out in the early years after Federation in 1901) and welfare spending (during the turmoil that embraced the administra­tions of John Gorton, William McMahon and Gough Whitlam in the early 1970s), the key divisions this time are climate change and immigratio­n.

The proximate cause for the current crisis is the failure of Turnbull’s National Energy Guarantee, an attempt to set long-term power policies that fell victim to the right’s insistence on skewing the playing field in favour of coal, despite the fact that building new thermal generators costs around three times as much as wind and solar.

A grim drumbeat beneath that has been the right’s attempt to make race and immigratio­n signature issues.

Dutton has shown a willingnes­s to deal in racist dog-whistles. Allowing the immigratio­n of Lebanese Muslims in the 1970s was a “mistake”, he argued in 2016.

White South African farmers should be singled out for fast-track migration because they’d “integrate into our society”, he said this year, unlike people who’d “lead a life on welfare” or aren’t “of good character”.

Morrison’s stand against immigratio­n has also been unapologet­ic. As shadow immigratio­n minister in 2009, he masterfull­y exploited the issue of asylum seeker arrivals and launched a campaign to “Stop the Boats”. In 2014, he took his message directly to the refugees on Manus and Nauru in a controvers­ial video, urging them to “think carefully” about staying in the islands’ “prison” camps for “a very, very long time”, or return home.

The tragedy of this latest round of realignmen­t is that it risks squanderin­g the greatest virtues of modern Australia.

Since dumping the last vestiges of the White Australia policy in 1973, the country has become a remarkably successful multicultu­ral society, where almost half of people are first- or second-generation migrants, one in four has roots outside Europe, and one of the five free-to-air television channels broadcasts news in almost 70 lan- guages. Australia’s openness to migration is a key factor behind almost 27 years of uninterrup­ted economic growth since the last recession ended in 1991. It also sets the country up well to tackle the challenges of an ageing population, as Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Philip Lowe said in a speech earlier this month.

It’s notable that even if you strip out the effects of population increase on economic growth by looking only at per-capita GDP, three of the four weakest decades were in the period between 1910 and 1940, at the height of the White Australia policy.

The same goes for climate and energy. As the world’s driest continent and one of its largest agricultur­al exporters, Australia is particular­ly at risk from the effects of a changing climate. It’s currently suffering one of the worst droughts in living memory, and rising sea temperatur­es may destroy the Great Barrier Reef by mid-century.

Blessed with abundant wind and solar power, even major emitters such as Energy Australia Pty and AGL Energy Ltd. are planning for a carbon-free future in spite of the best efforts of the wreckers on the right of the government.

Householde­rs and businesses are increasing­ly taking matters into their own hands to generate solar power from their own roofs, and the state of South Australia will be producing almost three-quarters of its electricit­y from renewable sources by 2021.

That’s why the stakes are so high in this moment of turmoil. Just when the world may feel it’s stumbling down a darkening path, Australia offers the prospect of a different way: a country that’s outgrown its vicious origins to become one of the richest and happiest on the back of migration, trade, and an embrace of its environmen­t.

The costs of choosing the wrong course could reverberat­e for generation­s. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Cabinet musical chairs: Turnbull (left) with Morrison, after narrowly defeating the first attempt to unseat him by the populist Dutton. The embattled premier, however, lost the next leadership challenge, which saw Morrison beating Dutton.
Cabinet musical chairs: Turnbull (left) with Morrison, after narrowly defeating the first attempt to unseat him by the populist Dutton. The embattled premier, however, lost the next leadership challenge, which saw Morrison beating Dutton.

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