Bernard Keane is a bit of an odd fish, but sometimes he seems right on the money.
His column yesterday is just excellent, and here are some extracts:
...this dissonance between what the Coalition said in opposition and what
it now says isn’t merely about being mugged by reality, or even about
breaking promises. The weekend’s silliness about freezing MPs’ pay,
announced triumphantly in a drop to News Corp papers, was highly
symbolic. The Rudd government had done precisely the same thing — but
who should have railed against that but Tony Abbott himself, who
labelled it a “populist stunt” while, apparently, living hand-to-mouth
on his post-2007 salary. It demonstrated how, on virtually any issue,
from climate change to paid parental leave to the economy to taxation to
political consistency itself, it is straightforward to find a quote in
which Tony Abbott has declared, hand on heart, entirely the opposite to
his current position.
And:
“I’m not playing word games,” Hockey averred,
hilariously, to Laurie Oakes during one such discussion. Indeed, it’s
less like playing word games and more like waterboarding the English
language. It’s beyond casuistry; it makes John Howard’s legendary
parsing of his own statements look epistemologically rigorous.
And this, which is, I think, a fair summary of the state of modern politics:
Some, like John Quiggin, argue
that a lack of interest in facts is increasingly a characteristic of
the Right — that it’s in the Liberals’ DNA, so to speak — which
overlooks that relativism has been a defining characteristic of much of
the scholarship from the cultural Left from the 1970s onward and is
still to be found adorning identity politics. It is true, however, that
progressive parties like Labor, especially, in Australia, and the
Democrats in the US, have struggled to find a way to counter how
politicians of the Right have freed themselves from the shackles of
consistency and evidence. But for now, the most sound analytical
approach is to ignore what the Coalition says and focus entirely on who
benefits from its use of power. That will provide the most basic test of
its first budget.
1 comment:
Yes, when you have to come up with reasons why this government has had NO honeymoon then saying one thing before gaining Government and then doing something differently when in government must be near the top of the list!
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