You know what I think is sorely needed in the Labor campaign?
A speech the equivalent of the Bill Clinton one in the Obama campaign, which clinically took apart the Republican economic policies as just not making sense. There is plenty to work on in a similar vein in the Coalition policies. They are, essentially, claiming that costings don't matter, and that people should simply trust them that they can save billions and billions easily while at the same time discarding revenue raising measures introduced by Labor and not introducing any of their own. They are going for a environment policy that not an economist in the land believes can work at the cost claimed. They are claiming (quite falsely) that the Commonwealth cannot legislate away the need for the States to agree to a GST rise. They are saying GST will be part of a tax review, but it will never go up.
It shouldn't be made by Kevin Rudd, though. As with the Obama campaign, it needs someone else who people tend to trust, or someone whose judgement on economic matters is trusted.
Finding someone on the Labor side like that is the challenge. Hawke is getting too long in the tooth.
You know, if he could wind back the desire to conduct a bitter personal attack on Abbott, and avoid self aggrandisement about what he achieved (a big ask, I know), I think Keating might actually plausibly be the best to do it. Perhaps as a warm up to the Rudd campaign speech? Sure, people remember him as arrogant; but even so they do give him some credit for understanding economics and being able to run with reforming, economic common sense. Or does the image of one Labor PM the public took the baseball bat make too many laugh with glee that they are going to do the same to his "friend" Kevin? (In fact, what has Keating ever said about Rudd - I can't remember.)
I'm just trying to be useful...
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