Baillieu struggles to find his feet
December 9, 2010
Ted Baillieu has been guilty in these first few days of using imprecise language and sending confusing signals.
Even before he was sworn in, Baillieu left open the possibility he might play that old trick of new premiers and prime ministers: dumping election promises on the grounds that the other mob left the budget in worse shape than they'd let on.
The Coalition would have to ''remain cautious about our funding commitments'' pending a comprehensive audit of the state's finances, taxes and debt management, Baillieu said.
But 24 hours later, after a collective ''here we go again'' sigh from the voters, the incoming Premier was able to say all was OK; he had had
a preliminary briefing from public service chiefs and been assured there were no black holes in the budget.Which raises a couple of questions: why did Baillieu publicly raise the prospect of having to ditch or delay some promises when he was only hours away from getting a crucial briefing that would put his mind at rest, and why will he nonetheless proceed with the
audit of Victoria's finances (which presumably will be done by one of those expensive private consultants that
Baillieu in opposition used to complain about)?In the hours after he was sworn in, Baillieu started thinking aloud about the future of Victoria's hugely expensive desalination plant.
He had had some
early ''global'' advice about it, and as a result ''we are looking at ways to minimise the ongoing cost for Victorians''. ''I hope we can find ways to reduce the ultimate cost of what is really now becoming a substantial burden on future generations,'' Baillieu said on Friday. ''It may be a question of containing the construction and containing the arrangements into the future … I think there is some room for modifications.''
This was news to a lot of people, not least the
international consortium contracted by the state of Victoria to deliver the plant.
On Monday, Baillieu's Water Minister, Peter Walsh, was noticeably more cautious than his leader about the possibility of scaling back the plant. ''It's not something just to pass personal opinions on, it's about getting the facts and doing analysis of the detail,'' Walsh said. ''The Premier has made the comments he has; that's something we will talk about in the future.''
Then, on Tuesday, Baillieu got himself into a bit of a muddle about teachers' pay. As opposition leader, he had presented himself as a champion of Victoria's teachers; he wanted to ensure they were the best paid in the country.
But now he was Premier, he was refusing to repeat the phrase, instead saying
his promise had been merely to ''pursue the best interests of teachers''.
Several hours after an awkward media conference, Baillieu's office issued a statement seeking to clarify the Premier's position. ''Our desire to return Victorian teachers to being the best paid in Australia has not changed,'' it said (emphasis added).
Victoria's teachers will have to wait a while until they see the colour of Baillieu's money.
Perhaps none of this will matter in the long term. After all, the next state election is three years and 50 weeks away. But it's already pretty clear that
Premier Baillieu will give the Labor opposition plenty to work with.
http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/baillieu-struggles-to-find-his-feet-20101...