Politically homeless

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Grist to the mill

Posted on 7:09 PM by Unknown
By the time wheat makes its way to Sydney it is pretty well processed and refined. It's easy to take it for granted as a commodity and to underestimate the politics involved in making and selling it.

If you want to be Prime Minister, and especially a Coalition Prime Minister, you have to get your head across the politics of wheat. The idea that you should rise to a senior position without having done so is negligent.

Wheat was grown in small and feeble quantities in early Sydney. The Indian strain ruti was grown on a hill to the west of the city that is still known as Rooty Hill, but from which all trace of agriculture has since been lost. When the vast lands to the west of Sydney were exploited by the British it came to be grown in vast quantities; later vast quantities were grown in Western Australia due to subsidies channeled from gold revenue.

Government involvement in wheat-growing took off after the 1930s. It had become one of Australia's key industries and was then labour-intensive. One of the first impacts of the Depression on Australia came with the drying-up of wheat markets, when agents and brokers and other bulk-purchasers went broke and/or slashed their prices, leading to real and immediate impacts on jobs and liquidity generally. Government took over the selling of wheat with the aim of insulating the economy from that degree of shock, offering to pool wheat output and sell it through a "single desk" - with the consequences you'd expect, really, in a neoliberal age.

Firstly, wheat farmers have generally received an even but rarely grand income, as highly regulated as any award employee.

Secondly, the politics of selling wheat has gone way beyond mere hypocrisy and gone into the kind of dissonance that causes mental illness in individuals:
  • Coalition MPs who made bloody denunciations of communism were happy to flog Australian wheat to the Soviet Union, and the People's Republic of China (until Whitlam the communist regime in Beijing was not recognised as the official government of China, the Guomindang government of Taiwan was regarded as "China");
  • The Howard government sold Australian wheat to Iraq despite UN sanctions against that country. There was a royal commission into the private sector's role in this, but the role of the then government has not been examined to the same extent. I expected the Rudd government to square that circle, but no;
  • When you factor in government involvement in selling Australian innovations such as Synroc and Securency you have to concede that, in certain situations, libertarians have a point.
Basically, wheat farmers in Western Australia want to privatise the profits where prices are high and production is abundant, while wheat farmers toward the east of the country are prepared to stay under government protection to better ride out slumps driven by prices (set by overseas markets and competitors) and production (i.e. droughts, floods etc in Australia). When the government proposed to abolish Wheat Exports Australia (the latest label on the "single desk"), the Coalition found itself wedged:
  • Eastern-states Coalition MPs were instructed to vote to keep the "single desk" in some form, and did so;
  • Tony Crook, whose presence in Coalition ranks was always tenuous, voted with a calmly united Labor in the expressed interests of his constituents;
  • Julie Bishop, the Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party, was mocked by some old has-been in her attempts to get Coalition MPs to all vote one way on the issue, and in a way that embarrassed the government;
  • Mal Washer and Dennis Jensen, two long-serving MPs who had relied on government incomes before entering parliament, decided they would play libertarian in abstaining from voting either with their Coalition colleagues or with the government (if moderates had done this, the Liberal right would have gone apoplectic); and
  • For their (non-)efforts, both were denounced by the Coalition spokesperson on agriculture, John Cobb. Cobb showed his genius for agricultural policy over New Zealand apples. He managed to harvest rural anger when the government banned live cattle exports to Indonesia, without a clear idea what he'd do given the breadth and force of opposition within Australia to Indonesian abattoir practices. Cobb pointed out that Jensen and Washer were not part of "the farming community", by which he means the agrarian socialist shakedown that makes people like him possible. 
Cobb's record of political and policy failure remains intact and ripe for rural independents to take advantage of. More broadly, the Coalition looked like a rabble in the lead-up to that vote, during it, and since in taking it to the government in Question Time (in the hope of uniting people deeply divided on matters of principle and what it means to represent the community's best interests).

Julie Bishop was used to brokering deals among fractious Western Australians, but this just proved too hard. Instead of focusing on policy, and taking the initiative away from the government, she instead focused on reacting to whatever the government did and making MPs toe an increasingly silly line.

MPs representing wheat-growing areas tend not to be party hacks with little direct experience in private-sector production, unlike most Coalition MPs. Simply cracking the whip and making these people do what they are bloody well told was never going to work, and nor would once-talismanic but no longer relevant input from Mark Textor jabbering on about elites. The main political tools of people like Bishop, and Abbott, were completely blunted in the face of a political issue that is, as it were, perennial as the grass.

Since his momentum has been slowed by sexism and misogyny, Abbott has been kept above the fray. The Coalition has realised that there is no further advantage for Abbott in his "junkyard dog" role. Bishop has taken over the role but she is no good at it. Pyne has disappeared from view and this is a good thing, nobody wants to or should have to hear from him. Hockey needs to be Mr Policy Substance but somehow he has been drafted into parliamentary theatre. Having abandoned his frontline role, Abbott sits there like his vision of the monarch: to advise, counsel, and warn.

The trouble for Abbott is that role is taken by Howard. His advice and counsel is not that valuable and his warnings have no impact. He sits in Question Time shuffling through papers like Kevin Rudd in 2007 - Rudd was a much more successful Opposition Leader and Abbott could do worse than emulate him more than he did. The difference is that Rudd probably read those papers, they were less likely to be the empty props that they are for Abbott. He will not become more Prime Ministerial by rising above the fray, but irrelevant in comparison with the hands-on Gillard.

The reason why you work on policy in opposition is that you can deal with "sudden" issues like this, complicated by an additional self-imposed requirement to gainsay whatever the government puts up. The Coalition reacts to events rather than demonstrating their capability in managing them. Pissant compromises are all very well for issues that come and go - but wheat is not an issue that disappears from Australian public life for long. The Abbott-led Coalition is not demonstrating that it is ready for government because it is not ready, therefore its criticisms of the incumbents will lose traction, and the Coalition will not be elected to replace them.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in bloody farmers, rightwing intellectual failure, yeswoman | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home
View mobile version

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • The most important issue of the week, part one
    The most important issue of last week was the release of the Gonski Report into school education funding . Yes it was. Asylum-seekers are fe...
  • (no title)
    Dedication to non-stories The next time you hear professional journalists describe themselves as a "fourth estate" and get all huf...
  • Gillard and the Labor leadership
    I've had this post under development for days, mainly because I have wanted to stay out of internal Labor politics. On one level the Gil...
  • (no title)
    Spearhead The term "spearhead" used to really annoy me, until I realised how revealing it is of those who use it. For a start, ...
  • (no title)
    Kia kaha Kia kaha , Christchurch! People proud of their dullness, hardiness and sense Of place find it hard to be told that You can't go...
  • (no title)
    Denial is not a river in Egypt In July 1789, as everybody knows, there was no Twitter, no al Jazeera, no David Burchill , although there was...
  • Advertise your own irrelevance
    Dear Mr Hywood, My name's Geoff Strong*. I'm employed as a journalist with The Age , which is a newspaper in Melbourne. I'm redu...
  • (no title)
    Johnny Panic The selection of John Robertson as NSW ALP leader shows how committed they are to staying dysfunctional, on a number of levels....
  • (no title)
    The (self-)destruction of Tony Abbott begins Over many years, Abbott has constructed an appearance of strength in his intellect and sense of...
  • (no title)
    What's wrong with newspapers, Part I The good news is that there are only two things really wrong with newspapers today, and with Fairfa...

Categories

  • 24hnc (5)
  • Aborigines (9)
  • adelaide (4)
  • annabelcrabb (10)
  • art (1)
  • bennelong (8)
  • bloody farmers (19)
  • boofheads (81)
  • childcare (2)
  • chrisberg (4)
  • church 'n' state (9)
  • civil liberties reconsidered (22)
  • corruption (21)
  • counterfactuals (20)
  • defence (2)
  • democrats (1)
  • economics (15)
  • education (18)
  • energy (4)
  • environment (37)
  • fairfax (12)
  • federation (16)
  • foreigners (62)
  • frydenberg (16)
  • gfc (13)
  • grattan (17)
  • greens (4)
  • gregsheridan (11)
  • gutlessness (145)
  • head of state (2)
  • health (9)
  • hendo (4)
  • history abuse (25)
  • hitchens (1)
  • ict (21)
  • imresaluszinsky (4)
  • infrastructure (32)
  • innovation (24)
  • journosphere (80)
  • katharinemurphy (12)
  • koutsoukis (1)
  • kulturkrieg (29)
  • laura norder (15)
  • life and death (15)
  • malcolmcolless (1)
  • milney (8)
  • moderates (16)
  • murdoch (6)
  • nikisavva (10)
  • nsw (49)
  • paulhowes (5)
  • pell (2)
  • politics of information (14)
  • posthoward (47)
  • predictions (56)
  • press gallery groupthink (130)
  • pvo (14)
  • queensland (20)
  • refugees (19)
  • regulators (18)
  • rightwing intellectual failure (242)
  • roskam (4)
  • rudd-gillard (7)
  • senate (8)
  • soccer (2)
  • split decision '10 (23)
  • sport (1)
  • straw man work (38)
  • sussexstreetbums (30)
  • tax (20)
  • tonyabbott (135)
  • uk (2)
  • vehicle industry donations (8)
  • victoria (10)
  • war (14)
  • wikileaks (3)
  • workchoices (16)
  • yeswoman (13)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (54)
    • ►  September (3)
    • ►  August (7)
    • ►  July (7)
    • ►  June (5)
    • ►  May (9)
    • ►  April (4)
    • ►  March (7)
    • ►  February (4)
    • ►  January (8)
  • ▼  2012 (102)
    • ►  December (5)
    • ▼  November (8)
      • To break a dealmaker
      • The story that killed the story
      • The unauthorised voice
      • Liberals afraid of ideas
      • An economist at sea
      • Honour and good sense
      • The Grand Old Praetorians
      • Grist to the mill
    • ►  October (7)
    • ►  September (11)
    • ►  August (9)
    • ►  July (7)
    • ►  June (7)
    • ►  May (13)
    • ►  April (11)
    • ►  March (6)
    • ►  February (8)
    • ►  January (10)
  • ►  2011 (125)
    • ►  December (5)
    • ►  November (8)
    • ►  October (14)
    • ►  September (10)
    • ►  August (9)
    • ►  July (9)
    • ►  June (12)
    • ►  May (12)
    • ►  April (8)
    • ►  March (17)
    • ►  February (10)
    • ►  January (11)
  • ►  2010 (115)
    • ►  December (7)
    • ►  November (9)
    • ►  October (14)
    • ►  September (12)
    • ►  August (16)
    • ►  July (10)
    • ►  June (5)
    • ►  May (13)
    • ►  April (6)
    • ►  March (5)
    • ►  February (6)
    • ►  January (12)
  • ►  2009 (94)
    • ►  December (6)
    • ►  November (5)
    • ►  October (9)
    • ►  September (9)
    • ►  August (12)
    • ►  July (6)
    • ►  June (12)
    • ►  May (8)
    • ►  April (9)
    • ►  March (6)
    • ►  February (6)
    • ►  January (6)
  • ►  2008 (10)
    • ►  December (3)
    • ►  November (4)
    • ►  October (3)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile