The Guardian Australia

Peter Dutton’s shock-and-schlock tactics are fear-mongering in search of a policy

- Malcolm Farr

The opposition leader Peter Dutton’s determinat­ion to convince Australian voters they are on a path to an ill-defined catastroph­e is collapsing under the weight of its own absurdity.

As with his apparent American role model, Dutton’s Trump-like insistence that voters are headed for disaster relies on cheap over-reach rather than rational analysis – shock them with schlock.

There has been no better demonstrat­ion of this grubby, fact-defying tactic – and the attached, mindless absurdity – than his comments on Wednesday evening when delivering the Tom Hughes oration at the Sydney Opera House.

With no obvious twinge of shame or embarrassm­ent, he likened a rally at the Opera House on 9 October last year to the massacre of 35 people at Port Arthur almost exactly 28 years ago.

He said of the protest: “It was a recognitio­n that something is rotten in the state of Australia.”

Before our antipodean Marcellus produced that hollow and vile comparison with its clear disrespect for the victims of the 1996 atrocity, Dutton pumped up trepidatio­n here by referring to events elsewhere.

This is the central element to his scare strategy, a brazen bid to exploit global uncertaint­y for cheap domestic political gain. It taps understand­able voter insecurity by heightenin­g it, without even trying to itemise in detail a policy response.

Whether it’s electric vehicles or tax cuts for low- and middle-income earners, or a supermarke­t chain declining to sell trashy Australia Day items largely made overseas, Dutton seeks to hoist fear and anger, and demand someone other than himself do something.

An important element of this exploitati­on is to accuse those in authority – police, the courts, Labor government­s – of making Australian­s more vulnerable to the nasties rocking the world. And on Wednesday Dutton made that clear.

“Imagine if we were citizens of another country today,” he said.

“We might be on the frontlines in Ukraine. We might be mourning the loss of a loved one killed in Hamas’s terrorist attack on Israel or in the conflict which has followed in Gaza.”

We might also be in Finland which surveys claim has the happiest people in the world and one of the best education systems in the world.

But that wouldn’t fit the Dutton fright night speech.

He went on: “We might be living with little freedom or hope under one of the world’s many dictators. We might be paying a people smuggler and risking our life on a rickety boat in rough seas to escape privation for the chance of a better life.”

Of course, none of those terrifying

factors existed here in what Dutton said was “the safest, most egalitaria­n, and most prosperous democracy of them all”.

But clearly, his salient message was that it wouldn’t take much to turn Australia into an embattled Ukraine or a population escaping in boats.

You didn’t hear that message? Well, Dutton would not want you confused by accidental subtlety on his part.

Shortly after a glowing testimonia­l to Australia, and its white settlers, he made matters clear.

“But the Australian achievemen­t is under threat,” he warned.

“Just over six months ago, a seething mob [he’s referring to pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors] gathered on the steps of this very building. They burned a flag of Israel. They threw flares.”

He continued: “They chanted ‘Eff the Jews’ and ‘Eff Israel’.”

Then it was time for the big finish and the exaggerate­d menace which only he can see.

“The protests of October 9 were a moment of awakening for our nation. We must not surrender our civilisati­on to anti-civilisati­onal forces,” he said.

“We must defend the Australian achievemen­t from those who seek to sabotage it.”

Whatever was said on 9 October, it has not forced the surrender of any skerrick of our civilisati­on, or anything else. But when Dutton sees disruption he shamelessl­y turns it into a grossly over-rated threat, not because he himself anticipate­s nation wrecking, but because there could be votes in it for him.

• This article was amended on 11 April 2024 to remove an inaccurate reference to chants during the October demonstrat­ion at the Opera House.

His salient message was that it wouldn’t take much to turn Australia into an embattled Ukraine or a population escaping in boats

 ?? Photograph: Steven Saphore/AAP ?? ‘With no obvious twinge of shame or embarrassm­ent, he likened an 9 October rally at the Opera House to the massacre of 35 people at Port Arthur.’
Photograph: Steven Saphore/AAP ‘With no obvious twinge of shame or embarrassm­ent, he likened an 9 October rally at the Opera House to the massacre of 35 people at Port Arthur.’

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