How Oz politics works
Australian politics is the art of riding a bicycle along a tightrope, pedalling furiously, using one hand to alternatively whisper into a phone and scream into a megaphone, while the other hand is used to cook a complex meal. And always the imperative is to both balance and steer the bike.
The bike-on-a-wire juggle is about communication and creation, plus the fundamentals of push and progress to avoid falling off. The image is political pedalling—its essence is power.
Australia is unusual in housing the executive government and the parliament in the one building. Everything happens in the same place, up on the hill under the giant flag, where the politics and the policy meet the people: law-making and governing amidst debate and division—and not just the voting divisions in the chambers.
The house on the hill is where Australia confronts its pressures and problems, a place of persuasion and policy decision. The parties caucus, the House and Senate enact, and out the back the ministerial offices jostle as the cabinet governs.
Mario Cuomo’s truth applies in Canberra: ‘You campaign in poetry. You govern in prose.’
The soaring visions of campaign verse turn pragmatically prosaic by the time they’ve been through the voting mill on the hill. Labor MP Andrew Leigh expresses the Cuomo line in a simpler Oz form: ‘While politicians campaign in “and”, we govern in “or”.’
The campaigning pollie can promise this and that and the other and more besides. But when they sit down under the big flag, they confront a simple, tough reality: ‘To govern is to choose.’ And so they must choose between this or that. The or truth is that each dollar is spent only once.
The and/or crash of the prose against the poetry can push the cyclist to pedal harder, or so jam the works that the immobile bicycle tumbles off the wire. That was what George Megalogenis described as the enigma of Kevin Rudd:
He came to office with more than 600 promises to implement and a determination to win every day in the media. Ambition and indecisiveness linked arms to create an unusual model of leadership. Rudd talked and talked. In the end, he was all doorstop and no delivery.
Canberra does doorstops by the dozen. Delivery is tougher.
Having spent five years reporting in the old parliament building and a total of 20 years in the new parliament, I’m fascinated by attempts to describe how Canberra’s bike-on-the-wire act works. Instead of political theory and academic explanation, I favour ‘how-to’ lists and the meanings offered in memoirs and anecdotes.
My unholy trinity of how politicians operate in Canberra is this:
- It’s always personal.
- There’s always a deal.
- Follow the money.
For the public service, the first two rules shift dramatically:
- It’s never personal.
- Evidence should always drive the decision.
- Follow the money.
The best list I’ve seen was written more than 20 years ago by John Kerin, who was a Labor cabinet minister for a decade:
- You are always on your own.
- Other people will always let you down.
- You will inevitably let others down.
- In the longer run, the best policies are the best politics, but do not tell the rank and file, the prime minister or the mob.
- Policy analysis always beats the divining of chickens’ entrails, opinion polls or the consensus of editorials.
- Some of the best policies are carried out by stealth.
- The choice between seizing the moment and compromise is always vexed.
- ‘All political careers end in failure.’ – Enoch Powell
The game hasn’t changed much, to judge from the laws of politics handed down in 2012 by another former Labor minister, Lindsay Tanner:
- Everyone in politics exaggerates everything all of the time.
- No one ever complained about consultation when they liked the outcome.
- The further from responsibility you are, they more left-wing you become.
- Lobbyists with public opinion on their side talk about democracy; when they don’t, they talk about leadership. Politicians understand that displaying ‘leadership’ is code for political suicide.
- Sucking up: all editors, shock jocks, and journalists are incredibly intelligent, witty and good-looking, and should be told this regularly.
- You run into every person you’ve ever met in your entire life—just hope they don’t remember the excruciatingly embarrassing incident that happened when you were 19.
- People who answer ‘Yes’ when asked if they’d pay higher taxes for better government are answering a different question: Should someone else pay extra so I can get better services?
- There are no options allowed in politics, only announcements: when you publicly speculate about a possible policy approach, the media will treat this as a commitment to implement it.
- The most important thing is to look like you’re doing something: actually doing something can be expensive, risky and annoying to other parties.
- It’s vital not to offend anyone who matters.
All this is preparation to direct you to a fine Monthly essay by former Greens Senator Scott Ludlam, ‘How politics works in Australia, and how to fix it’. It’s an excellent insider-as-outsider description of what goes up the hill, how the battles get fought, and what comes down the hill as a result.
I like it a lot, as much for the bits I argued with as for those where I nodded in agreement. Ludlam writes—and writes well—about the diverse realities of Parliament House: representative democracy as a ‘festival of mediocrity’, a caffeinated jumble of intensity and hilarity.
It’s tough up on that tightrope—balance and steer, shout and create, persuade and punish. One of our most important institutions can be circus one moment, colosseum the next.
This piece was originally published in The Strategist.
Graeme Dobell has been reporting on Australian and international politics, foreign affairs and defence, and the Asia Pacific since 1975. He is Journalist Fellow at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.