So, while I was out, can anyone let me know if the installation of the Murdochcracy has been completed, with the rise to power of his favourite "conviction politician" (ha!), Tony
Seriously, there seems to be a pretty unusually muted response by anyone to the completely over the top editorial line being pursued by the Murdoch papers in this election campaign.
But then, even Insiders was weird today. Barrie Cassidy started by asking some pointed questions about why Rudd's movements yesterday were so important to the Murdoch press; Malcolm Farr half fobbed it off, making out that he didn't think what Rudd did was such a sin. But then by the time Cassidy got to the Rudd interview, he was very aggressive towards him on the matter of the Gillard record As Cassidy was supposed to be pals with (Gillard's) Tim, I can only assume there was a large element of revenge in this for Rudd's role in her departure.
Rudd's sin apparently was in not making it clear he was doing Kitchen Confidential (essentially a bit of campaign related work) before having a briefing last night on Syria (done in lieu of some Brisbane campaign thing, I think I read.) The video of the briefing that took place did look pathetically transparent - but then again, there have been several videos of Tony Abbott pep talks to his shadow caucus team over the last six months which looked every bit as stilted and "for the cameras" as yesterday's effort. As for appearing on Kitchen Confidential - Abbott has already done his episode.
So, as far as I can tell, Rudd has every right to be furious with his treatment at the hands of the Murdoch press; but as nearly everyone thinks Rudd was a jerk for the way he undermined Gillard, no one's going to put their job on the line by putting in too much effort into calling out Murdoch.
What a sad state of affairs for someone like me, who has never liked Rudd, but considers that Labor collectively now has a sounder approach on economics and a majority of other issues than the alternative, which is headed by a bloke who has become a disgraceful fence-sitter and increasingly shows himself to be just not very bright. (Not that you need to be all that bright to be a successful politician. In fact, being too smart as a politician runs the risk of frequent paralysis. But you need to have enough smarts to know who to listen to. Abbott hasn't even got that, if you ask me.)
And look at the way that Abbott's odd ideas (buying people smuggling boats in Indonesia) are simply not getting any significant coverage in the press. For God's sake, I saw that quite a few at Catallaxy thought it was a stupid idea on Friday; then phftt; the proposal gets next to no attention while Murdoch's minions come up with the next "Rudd's a disaster!" headline for the following morning.
I haven't read much about the Liberal Policy launch today. I saw Abbott's daughters front and centre (for God's sake, Tony & Kevin, leave the kids at home like 99% of working people do), and something about defence spending being 2% of GDP in future. Tying defence spending to GDP was a Romney promise**. What a surprise. Mind you, this was an aim to be reached "in a decade". As irrelevant as Rudd's "aim" to reduce company tax in the Northern Territory if re-elected in 3 years.
And how appropriate that one of the few election commitments was for a big boost in Alzheimer's research. I wasn't really aware that Australia had any particular expertise there, and would have thought that other areas of biomedical promise might be worth pursuing - but Tony does have his power base to support.
All I can say in conclusion - if you value press coverage that runs something other than Murdoch's geriatric views, go an and pay for a digital subscription to a Fairfax paper. I'll be doing it tomorrow. It would be an appalling state of affairs if Fairfax did not exist.
* Has anyone else called Tony's never ending appearances as fitness he-man his Putin-isation? I doubt that is an original thought...
** I see that Labor has previously committed to this figure as well, which Alan Kohler calls a nonsense way to determine appropriate defence spending. At least Labor won't be reminding people of this the election campaign.