The Cairns Post

Spike risks economic recovery

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SO I reckon we’re at a tipping point.

How much longer do we allow Victoria to hold back the nation’s economic recovery from COVID-19 and at what point does the Victorian Government have to take responsibi­lity for its appalling mismanagem­ent of this latest virus outbreak?

A shoddy system of hotel-based quarantine where a third of people have been allowed to refuse testing, fining ordinary families but letting 30,000 Black Lives Matter protesters off scot-free, slow to act on a large breakout in an abattoir, spiking infections among Muslim families celebratin­g the end of Ramadan, risks with other new migrants illiterate in English, and now a premier who desperatel­y needs assistance asking for the army to help clean up the mess and then abruptly changes his mind, all the while distracted by internal feuding that’s seen the collapse of the Labor Party in Victoria and the loss of three ministers.

If the Ruby Princess was a ship of fools, what on earth do you call a state run by one?

With only a couple of months of JobKeeper left and businesses desperate to try and get back to some sort of post-COVID normal, the need to open up more and more of our economy is critical. For this to happen, consumers must be confident to get out and about to spend, and state borders open up.

Yet just when this was all headed in the right direction, the latest coronaviru­s outbreak of community transmissi­on in Victoria now threatens Australia’s economic recovery.

For over 10 days straight, Victoria has seen double-digit increases in infections while across the rest of Australia the disease is all but non-existent other than showing up in quarantine­d travellers returning home.

Talking to businesses in Melbourne this week, the latest spike has seen their bookings dry up, and more and more cancellati­ons come in for businesses that can barely even keep their doors open. Last Friday, the Prime Minister said that what’s happening in Victoria could have happened to any other state. You’ve got to be kidding.

This is a plague-ridden southern state, run by a socialist premier who made out he had locked it down hard and fast, but didn’t. Daniel Andrews presents as all ‘Labor numbers-man tough’ in his media appearance­s but there’s absolutely no follow through when he gets back to his desk.

And is it any wonder there’s widespread system failure when the number two health officer in his government doesn’t know the difference between Captain Cook and Arthur Philip, yet we’re all supposed to trust that for at least some of her medical subjects, she paid attention?

Give me a break. But as bad as the government is in Victoria, it’s also compounded by a dysfunctio­nal federation and that affects us all.

I remain deeply sceptical about this new so-called National Cabinet. To date, it’s turned out much better at shutting things down than at opening things up. It worked when the PM threw money at the problem (like ventilator­s) where the states had not met their existing responsibi­lities. But when it came to schools and now borders, it doesn’t matter what premiers might agree at the meeting when they do whatever they want anyway.

The whole foundation of cabinet government is solidarity. It’s about every person around the table being collective­ly bound by a decision that they may or may not have agreed with.

At the end of what’s supposed to be a confidenti­al and robust exchange (and it’s rarely either these days), a decision gets taken and they all must support, and defend, it. As far as I can see, other than a name-change, this is the same old sclerotic beast that was COAG. One of the reasons it’s so hard to get anything done is because it’s no longer clear who does what.

Even passenger management­s at internatio­nal airports suffers from this confusion, because while the Commonweal­th can impose bans, it’s still up to the states to manage quarantine.

The one saving grace we’ve had as a country is that it was only up to one level of government to shut our national borders because that has been the single most important factor in protecting Australia.

Now the challenge is to get badly run states to do their jobs properly and for the rest of the country not to be held back when they don’t.

Now more than ever it is critical we get the economy back up and running because if we don’t, a spike in coronaviru­s will be the least of our worries. Peta Credlin is a Sky News presenter.

 ?? Picture: GETTY ?? CRISIS: Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews.
Picture: GETTY CRISIS: Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews.

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