Tomorrow marks two years of the Abbott Government. Michelle Grattan looks back on a tumultuous two years…
At a Liberal function in his Warringah electorate last Friday night, Tony Abbott, just back from his indigenous trip, was in full campaign mode. “Geed up, determined, positive,” said one party attendee, adding, “He’ll fight to the last breath to be re-elected.”
Fight is what Abbott does best – but this penchant for pugilism is his great weakness as well as a strength.
The prime minister, who won power two years ago, is most at home in combat, whether on the domestic campaign trail or escalating Australia’s commitment to a battle abroad.
A Liberal parliamentarian, highly critical of Abbott, describes his current approach to government as “doing what comes naturally – he’s trying to be a warrior. He’s relying on a small circle of advice; he’s going back to areas he’s comfortable with.”
The great failure of Abbott’s leadership is that he had not been able to transcend his innate instinct for conflict. He leads a divisive government, which has become an authoritarian one.
Not just current opponents but those vanquished and off the field must be pursued. Critics not only have to be discredited but demonised. The culture wars are at a new intensity, with the “media wars” a dominant sub-set. Internal dissent is defined in the first instance as disloyalty – until it turns threatening and the rebels need to be bought off with promises to listen and be more responsive.
Top Comments
Oh for heavens sake......you all think a corrupt Bill Shorten will be good for this country?
Watch Australia go down the toilet if he gets in.
Yeah Bill Shorten, the architect of the NDIS (that visionary piece of legislation sorely needed) would make Australia go down the toilet so much more than Tony Abbott.
We are already in the toilet ,and being flushed out to sea
I hope they don't just lose government, but that some of them actually lose their seats.