Scott Morrison:Well, I don't agree with the presumption of your question.
Now we get it: the Minister is not responsible. It's poor old Campbell who carries the can (of worms).
The genius of Scott Morrison is revealed. Single-handedly he dumps the Westminster system of Ministerial responsibility. It would be unfair in the extreme to note that the on-water operations excuse simply doesn't hold water, but then that may be why a General was chosen for this gig rather than an Admiral, who may actually know something about water.
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Dry-land Campbell, as we shall now know him, must pine for a quiet outpost in say, Afghanistan, where the chance of being shot or blown up by the Taliban seems preferable to the same being done to him by reporters.
One intriguing view on the Jesuit-educated Abbott's attempt at becoming a Trappist monk, and so assuming a vow of silence, is that it is a clever strategy because if refugees and boat people are ignored, the public will think the problem is solved. This is the view of behaviourial psychologist and Gruen Transfer panelist Adam Ferrier. So as Abbott strode, tight-lipped and eyes down past reporters asking him about the latest drownings at sea it did not, apparently, matter that he seemed utterly without compassion.
"All we see is all there is," Ferrier told ABC TV, in explaining how our brains work. Abbott, according to Ferrier, is insensitive, dogmatic and bullish, but he is also building hard-nosed credibility. Such a clever strategy "reinforces his brand," in adspeak.
The iron hand of Abbott extends to his ministers and backbenchers, who must clear any media outings with the PM's hardline apparatchiks. So again we have a callous cutting of freedom of speech and the right to know. But will it hold up?
Intriguingly, Ferrier believes that this "nonsense" won't last, not because the Ministers and others are devoted to free speech, but because they are showmen with big egos. This, to such psychologists, is because of the "mere exposure" effect. The more one is exposed something the more you like it, as shown by Kevin Rudd's devotion to TV appearances in a career initially given an enormous boost by, of all creations, breakfast telly.
While on the ABC and free speech, it is intriguing that it opens on-line column space to discredited Howard Minister Peter "Children Overboard" Reith. He was given a job to investigate fracking in Victoria and, surprise, surprise, found no problems. Reith apparently noted that the farmers are all happy campers, especially in Queensland. But, according to online comments, he may have overlooked his business connections with industries associated with energy supply or coal seam gas.
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Then, again, he did defend the MPs' expense rorts sleaze as not a problem because they all work so hard. So that's all right, then.
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