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True signs of desperation

By Stephen Cable - posted Friday, 13 October 2017


Nothing says desperation more than calling on the Hon. Bob Hawke to do your selling and evoking the memory of a labour dispute from more than a century ago. Alas, this is what the modern Labor party has come to in order to try and win some bush seats at the next election.

As reported in The Weekend Australian by Troy Bramston, the National Country Labor Forum was held in Rockhampton on Saturday with State and Federal politicians in attendance including Bill Shorten. Apparently, they screened a video of Mr. Hawke talking about the Labor party being founded in the bush with reference to the shearers’ strikes in the 1890’s as prime evidence of the Labor Party’s love of country folk. No doubt Joel Fitzgibbon will dust of an old Akubra and blend right in at Australia’s beef capital. According to Joel, “The Labor way is to create both opportunity and equality of opportunity in our regions.” Unfortunately this wasn’t the view held by Labor when they devastated the cattle export industry because of a one-sided documentary shown by their good friends over at their ABC. I suppose Labor is hoping that this can be swept under the carpet and all will be forgiven. You can be sure that ‘equality’ and ‘opportunity’ in this context means government tax and spend programs rather than tax reduction and removal of government impediments.

It is an interesting choice of historic event to reference to as it does indeed bring to remembrance a day when the Labor Party often actually represent working people. Its power and force derived from the labouring man who believed that political representation was the road to security and wealth. Calling on a leader from a time when Labor was politically sensible shows they’re desperately trying to take the focus off the current leadership and focus on a man who was Prime Minister more than 25 years ago. If you a needed previous PM, why didn’t they pick the Hon. Kevin Rudd?

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He is a Queenslander after all and quite recent. Plus, if you ask the Labor party, he saved us all from the GFC. I’m sure that reminding the bush that you spent billions of dollars on school halls and gave millions to the UN, will be a sure winner in country Queensland. And while they were at it, they could give us an update on the 2020 Summit that Kevin held. What a lost opportunity to inform Maranoa on how that plan's progressing.

At the time of the Shearers’ Strike, agricultural industries dominated economic life in this country. That is no longer the case, although our primary agricultural industry is sizable, as a percentage of GDP, agriculture sits at 2.3 per cent. Mining, finance, construction and education are all larger slices of the economic pie. The economic power now lies elsewhere and so does Labor’s power base and this is the true crux of the matter for the Labor leadership. Although they may have started in the bush, their heart and soul is no longer there and hasn’t been for a long time.

They are now the party of the inner city activist. They are the party of the academic who has no interest in the struggles of taxpayers. They are the party of the environmentalist who wants to return Australia to a wilderness, empty every farm and kill every mine. Labor is trying to walk a tightrope and be both the party of Paris and the party of Parkes. This is not possible if you are being honest with the electorate. It is only possible if you promise lavish debt spending and boost your employment numbers through government largess. You cannot simultaneously expand energy prices and expand manufacturing. You cannot give a job to UN bureaucrats and jobs to kids in Ipswich.

For Australia to grow, Canberra must shrink.

The modern Labor party is mainly detached from the bush, their concerns and their priorities. Shorten has tied Labor’s wagon to gay marriage, the republic debate and a host of policies that look suspiciously like motherhood statements. Every day he seems to be veering closer to Corbynite territory and seems unable to keep at bay Labor’s ever growing distaste for Israel. By recalling the past and basing their renewed interest on far away historical events, they are somewhat similar to an absent father who, after many years of neglect, now wants to reconcile.

They turn up on the doorstep and ask, ‘remember me?’

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The answer is yes, they do remember you, but not the way you’re hoping.

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About the Author

Stephen is the Federal President of CCfA and writes for Liberty Works in Brisbane.

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