Thursday, June 23, 2011

Australia: Disillusioned or Worried? Leadership Issues


According to an ABC report Political Analyst Dr Troy Whitford  believes Australians are disillusioned by the political leadership being displayed by the two major Australian political entities, Labor and the Liberal-National Party Coalition:







"...there's a great deal of negativity and cynicism in the air towards leadership in Australia at the moment,"


He goes on;

"There's a growing sense of disillusionment in our political system that's catching on. In some respects, it can be quite a long-term and dangerous problem,".

Dr Whitford then makes a similar observation about political leadership generally that I  made when I looked, more particularly, at why Julia Gillard was not striking notes of resonance with the Australian people.

In a recent blog post I stated that Ms Gillard did not meet the historical ideal of the rough and tumble Aussie, the type you believed in and trusted  enough to allow them to make the hard decisions on your behalf. The one you would willingly follow “over the top” of the trenches if necessary.

She, I said, is not a Menzies, a Hawke, a Whitlam. She is not a Jack Lang or Billy Hughes, not even a Jo Bjelke Peterson.

Big, bold characters. Full of belief, not only in themselves and where they believed they could take the country, but the country itself.  People who radiated confidence and purpose.

Dr Whitford I believe is making a similar point though he chooses a few different exemplars, the more father like leaders from our history:

"In comparison to previous times, most of our leaders - Menzies, Chifley, McEwen - were held in greater regard because they were either seen as being more statesman-like or more pragmatic with policy."

So I agree with Dr Whitford's analysis as it concerns leadership types that Australians are looking for, and, I think I know where he is coming from generally.  But, can what Australians are feeling at the moment be called disillusionment?  Cynicism? I do not believe it is anywhere near that easy to pigeon hole.

I would use a much harder term I would say what they are feeling is “fear”.  Fear of the unknown, fear of what tomorrow will bring.

Australian's today are generally better educated then previous generations. We have, with information technology growing so quickly, more exposure to issues that perhaps our parents and certainly our grandparents would not have been exposed to.

I have chosen my words very carefully here; the Australian people  are “exposed" to issues but they do not necessarily “understand” them, nor, know how we, as a nation, should handle them.

I will use myself as an example. I am university educated, of mature age, consider myself well read and, for want of a better word, worldly. But I have a lot of problems with fully understanding the totality of the issues we face as a country today.

Think about it. Asylum seekers, live cattle exports, Afghanistan, carbon emissions issues,  foreign policy, how to deal with a rising China, global economic crisis, immigration. All that before the average Australian starts to worry about day to day stuff, Interest rates, rising utility prices, child care costs et al;

To carry forward the military analogy we are like soldiers on a battlefield, seemingly outflanked, bullets whizzing around our heads and just, emphasis on just, weathering a withering barrage of artillery.

What do we do? Where do we go? We haven’t the time to think.

Where is the general? Tell us what to do! Save us!

Alas, we look around and there is no general. No one that we can put our faith in without having personally to be experts on military strategy.

We just want someone to say “follow me lads it will be OK!”

We have not got that in Australia at the moment. It is not Julia Gillard, it is not Tony Abbott.

We are not sitting back and basking in the self ameliorating righteousness of “Disillusionment”. We have not drifted off into “cynicim’, as the Doctor argues, we are as a nation deeply troubled and extremely worried.

Whilst not many, I feel, would admit to it, we do not understand and the vacuum of leadership, the lack of a group or an individual to be able to enlighten us does not exist.

Therefore, we as a people, feel deep uncertainty, we are scared  and we do not have anyone who radiates strength and purpose to alleviate us so we do not need to fully understand.

Someone that we trust in enough to follow “over the top” and believe that at the end of the day “She’ll be right mate!”

No Doctor we are not disillusioned. We are not Cynical. We are scared.

Australia's Political Leadership clouded by negativity.

Julia Gillard under fire in Question Time over Kevin Rudd knifing | thetelegraph.com.au


PRIME Minister Julia Gillard has faced a Question Time attack in Parliament over her decision to "assassinate" her predecessor Kevin Rudd one year ago this week. 

Ms Gillard seized the Labor leadership from Mr Rudd on June 24 last year, declaring she needed to take over because "a good government" had lost its way.

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott today said the Government had gone "from bad to worse" under Ms Gillard's leadership.

"Has the political assassination of a prime minister been worth it?" he asked her during Question Time.

Ms Gillard dismissed the question as part of a "silly political games" and attacked Mr Abbott's economic credentials.

"I cannot believe that he is so reckless, so negative and so incompetent that he has failed to absorb any of the detail of the last Budget," the Prime Minister said.


Julia Gillard under fire in Question Time over Kevin Rudd knifing | thetelegraph.com.au

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Accepting boat refugees a deadly game: Fielding




Retiring Family First Senator Steve Fielding has appealed to all sides of politics to support offshore processing of Asylum seekers who attempt to enter Australia by boat.

The Senator stated

"As long as we keep accepting these refugees who do make it, we will be a partner in this deadly game of Russian roulette," 

"We must stop the boats for humane reasons, regardless of politics from both sides."

The Senator was referring to the possible future loss of life of boat people attempting to get to Australia at the hands of people smugglers in non-seaworthy boats.






There have been many deaths of Asylum seekers risking the dangerous boat trip to Australia the latest being the Christmas Island tragedy in December 2010 when forty eight lost their lives. In 2001, 353 asylum-seekers sailing from Indonesia to Australia drowned when their vessel sank.


Senator Fielding went on further to say:
"Where asylum seekers arriving by boat would be transferred to the back of the queue in overseas refugee camps,"

"But to release pressure on these camps Australia would agree to take two or more refugees that had been waiting patiently for years to be resettled."

The senator stated further that he had floated this idea with both the Labor Party and the federal Coalition.

I believe the Senator has a very valid and workable idea.

Australian's fully sympathise with the plight of true Refugees. We signed the U.N. 1951 Convention on Refugees and have lived up to it's ideals. We truly want to help bona fide refugees but there is a process that we, as a nation, feel they must follow.

And not only must they adhere to our requirements but in dissuading "Boat people" by whatever means, we are, as Senator Harding infers, acting humanely by hopefully stopping unnecessary deaths at the hands of people smugglers and the unforgiving seas.

Bona fide refugees escaping death, torture and persecution  will always be taken care of by Australia and Australians.


Accepting boat refugees a deadly game: Fielding - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Kim Scott wins prestigious Miles Franklin Award

Aboriginal author Kim Scott has won this year's Miles Franklin literary award with his novel That Deadman Dance.


Kim Scott wins prestigious Miles Franklin - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Work with me: PM appeals to business





















Australia's prime minister Julia Gillard has called on the Australian business community to work with the government on Carbon Tax pricing.

In an address to the Business Council of Australia last night the prime minister said:

''Because for us to be our best selves, listening and leading, we need you to be your best selves too, putting that characteristic BCA voice into the public debate.''


Unfortunately business in Australia is not to particularly supportive of Carbon Tax so her pleas may have fallen on barren ground there.


By the way I have included the Sydney Morning Herald's cartoon because I am a fan of Political cartooning.


It was the Australian Federal Labor Party that stabbed Kevin Rudd in the back, not Ms Gillard alone, so to that degree the cartoon is a little unfair on the PM. 


Work with me: PM's appeal to MPs and business