http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/times-up-for-teardown-tony-20110624-1gjiv..."All opposition and no leader" ... Tony Abbott needs a more positive strategy. Illustration: Rocco Fazzari
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Time's up for tear-down Tony
June 25, 2011
The Opposition Leader's bare-knuckled biffo can take him only so far before a more positive strategy is needed.
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His angry oppositionism has been highly effective. A prime minister who has only a dubious legitimacy in the public mind has been unable to defend herself against his bare-knuckled biffo.
He has put aside any pretence at being an alternative prime minister. His budget in reply ignored the budget. His parliamentary speech to welcome the New Zealand Prime Minister was supposed to be a national act but Abbott mischievously turned it into a political one.
He refuses to respond substantively to the actions of the government. He homes in laser-like on the carbon tax and asylum seekers.
Instead of positioning himself as an alternative prime minister, he criss-crosses the country on a stunt-a-day campaign to get his eight seconds a night of footage onto the television airwaves.
As Gillard works her way through her scripted lines and deploys the spousal prop in a transparent effort to warm up her cold image, Abbott calls for a "people's revolt". She gets increasingly confected and he gets increasingly angry.
Abbott the Angry has successfully knocked Gillard down in the public perception. Only 13 per cent of people think that Australia has become "a better place" in the year Gillard has been prime minister, while 51 per cent say it has become "a worse place", according to an Essential Media online poll this week.
Yet consider the objective conditions. In the past year, average wages are up by $21 a week, share prices are 5 per cent higher than they were a year ago and unemployment has fallen from 5.2 per cent to 4.9. Visitors from abroad have difficulty understanding exactly why Australian seem so disgruntled.
But perhaps the most extraordinary indicator of Abbott's triumph over Gillard in public perception is what he has managed to do with the issue of asylum seekers. Another Essential Media poll asked: "Is the issue of how Australia handles asylum seekers more or less important than issues such as managing the economy, education and health services?" An astonishing 50 per cent said it was as important or more important. This is a gut reaction, not a reasoning one.
But this strategy has limits. The people's rejection of Gillard is not an endorsement of Abbott. How could it be? He offers little more than the negation of her. Labor's Anthony Albanese calls him "all opposition and no leader".
It is perhaps no coincidence that the people rate them equally when asked which is their preferred prime minister. In the latest Herald-Nielsen poll, Abbott and Gillard both scored 46 per cent. He has dragged her down to his level.
There are signs that Abbott's approach may have reached what the great Prussian military strategist Carl von Clausewitz called "the culminating point of victory". All successful generals are tempted to continue with a winning strategy, even when it has outlived its usefulness and needs to be reappraised.
"This culminating point in victory is bound to recur in every future war in which the destruction of the enemy cannot be the military aim," Clausewitz wrote. Why can't Abbott aim for the destruction of the enemy?
First, because of the fact that he does not control Parliament and cannot force an election to give real-world effect to his dominance in the polls. There is a clear contradiction between Abbott's dominion over the public mood and his impotence in Parliament.
This week demonstrated it powerfully. Abbott has managed to turn the Australian public against the idea of a carbon tax. Yet when he tried to force Parliament to call a national plebiscite on the carbon tax, he failed immediately. It was a stunt - the outcome of a plebiscite does not bind a government, and Abbott said he would not be bound by it either.
Gillard may be the head of a minority government, but she has so far shown an iron grip on a parliamentary majority.
Of the 151 bills that the Gillard government has supported, 151 have passed the House of Representatives. Abbott has successfully blocked nothing, and successfully proposed nothing.
As the government proceeds to get its signature initiatives through Parliament, Abbott risks looking increasingly ineffectual, full of empty bluster and with nothing else to offer. This week the national broadband network crossed a serious threshold towards becoming reality. The likelihood is that the carbon tax will, too, in the months ahead. Successive losses in Parliament will expose Abbott and demoralise his troops.
Second, because true victory cannot be scored on opinion polls but in a federal election. And to win an election, Abbott will truly need to be an alternative prime minister. If he wants the people to vote "yes" he has to represent something more than...