Khaleej Times

Australia’s political churn is a shame on governance

- Gareth evans —Project Syndicate Gareth Evans was the Foreign Minister of Australia from 1988 to 1996

What explains Australia’s bizarre leadership churn? No prime minister has served a full term since 2007, with five different faces becoming prime minister in the last five years: Julia Gillard, Kevin Rudd, Tony Abbott, Malcolm Turnbull — and now, in the latest party-room coup, Scott Morrison, whom most Australian­s, let alone internatio­nal observers, would struggle to identify in a line-up. All this is happening in a long-establishe­d, conflict-free, and above all prosperous parliament­ary democracy, enjoying a record 27th year of uninterrup­ted economic growth.

The answer still seems to lie in the three factors — globally familiar, nationally systemic, and personally idiosyncra­tic — that I identified three years ago. Is this entertainm­ent — no joke here, however many others abroad may be laughing — destined to continue indefinite­ly, or can the cycle be broken?

The first explanatio­n of the churn is that Australia is not immune to the preoccupat­ion with personalit­ies and popularity polls, and the demand for instant gratificat­ion rather than serious policy debate, afflicting most of the world’s establishe­d democracie­s in this age of the 24/7 media cycle and omnipresen­t social media. Traditiona­l mainstream political parties everywhere, spooked by populist fringe-dwellers, are constantly on edge trying to work out how to counter their appeal.

A second dimension is Australia-specific: the tension created by peculiarit­ies in our Westminste­r parliament­ary system. A ludicrousl­y short three-year electoral cycle, briefer than almost anywhere else in the world, makes it almost impossible to govern in a campaign-free atmosphere. The Senate, with more formal power to block and bring down government­s than any comparable upper house, has been dominated in recent years by a litter of minor parties and independen­ts. These oddballs have made it very difficult for any prime minister to deliver on the promises he or she makes.

Moreover, the internal rules of the major parties — the now governing Liberal/National coalition, and until recently Labor — have permitted leaders, including serving prime ministers, to be torn down overnight by their own colleagues, with no referral to the wider party membership or other delaying process. If a leader is seen to be losing appeal, either to the broader electorate (or, as happened with Malcolm Turnbull, the party’s own base), the absence of any braking mechanism to force reflection means that momentum for change can build and feed on itself with sometimes lunatic rapidity.

The remaining part of the explanatio­n is undoubtedl­y local and personal: the character quirks that have contribute­d to each leader’s dramatic rise and equally spectacula­r fall. Gillard was a highly competent transactio­nal politician who had her minute of internatio­nal fame with a passionate attack on her opponent’s misogyny. But she was seen as politicall­y tone-deaf otherwise.

Rudd, who wrestled the leadership back from her in 2013, remains intellectu­ally without peer and highly regarded internatio­nally, but was seen by his colleagues, not entirely unfairly, as too often incommunic­ative, obsessive, and having misplaced policy priorities. Abbott, profoundly conservati­ve and hyper-partisan, proved utterly incapable of managing the transition from opposition to government. He presided over the cabinet with slogans rather than coherent policy, and constantly alienated his colleagues.

Turnbull, the urbane but arrogant former journalist, lawyer, and investment banker, was initially popular — and apparently as liberal in his instincts as Abbott was reactionar­y. But, while he maintained more public support than any of his internal rivals, he proved unable to translate it into opinion-poll majorities. And as he made ever more concession­s to his party’s right wing in order to survive — notably on climate policy — the perception took root that he had no core beliefs at all, other than in his own genius.

Morrison is a potentiall­y more appealing knockabout character, and less divisive than Turnbull’s main conservati­ve challenger, the Abbott acolyte Peter Dutton, would have been. But bridging the gulf between the Liberal Party’s moderate and reactionar­y wings will probably be beyond him, with his public salesmansh­ip not helped by the announced departure from politics of the wellknown and well-regarded former deputy leader and foreign minister, Julie Bishop, who was the party’s most senior woman.

With the public manifestly fed up with division and dysfunctio­n in the governing coalition parties, Australia’s next election, most likely in May 2019, seems now almost certain to result in yet another new prime minister, Labor’s

The first explanatio­n of the churn is that Australia is not immune to the preoccupat­ion with personalit­ies and popularity polls, and the demand for instant gratificat­ion.

Bill Shorten. Impossible though it may be to confidentl­y predict anything about Australia’s future, given the madness of recent years, there are reasonable grounds for believing that this could be a circuit breaker.

The first reason for such confidence is that Labor has introduced a rule that any leadership change between elections requires supermajor­ities in the parliament­ary caucus and endorsemen­t by the wider party membership. The other reason is that Labor’s current front bench is not riven by any significan­t personal or ideologica­l divisions, and seems to have an overall depth and breadth of competence not seen since the successful Bob Hawke and Paul Keating government­s of the 1980s and 1990s. As party leader, Shorten continues to generate mixed reviews. He is an astute strategist, has a good policy brain and decent core values, and is an excellent communicat­or one-on-one and in small groups (if less compelling in other settings).

Shorten and his team seem, overall, to be mercifully free of the indiscipli­ne and character quirks and flaws that have afflicted Australia’s national leadership over the last decade. In the interests of our credibilit­y abroad and sanity at home, it is not just Labor party loyalists here who are fervently hoping so.

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