48 hours of confusion on negative gearing this week has damaged Labor's brand
By Jacob Greber
Topic:Housing Policy
Sat 28 Sep
We saw 48 hours of confusion this week over whether Jim Chalmers and Anthony Albanese were changing their negative gearing policy. (ABC News, AAP)
Whether accidental lab leak or deliberate but decidedly cack-handed kite-flying exercise, the government's handling of its negative gearing push has damaged the Labor brand.
That's certainly the feeling from inside parts of the party. What on earth just happened this week, is one response.
Labor's inability to come clean about who ordered the Treasury to work on the topic – or even that it was commissioned at all – left the government and prime minister Anthony Albanese smeared as tricky, dissembling and guilty of treating voters with contempt.
If the government has made a high-level decision to at least revisit options on how to curb negative gearing tax concessions for property investors – they would be better served coming clean and owning it.
Instead, for the best part of two days following a story in the Sydney Morning Herald on Wednesday about how Labor asked public servants to work up options, Albanese and his treasurer went into full The Thick of It mode.
Like one of Armando Iannucci's satirical scripts, Albanese and his ministers clung to the present tense like men on a raft losing air.
"We have a broad and ambitious housing policy already, and those changes aren't part of it," said Jim Chalmers on Friday.
It's not policy, in other words. Until it becomes so. It was the same sophistry that preceded the federal government's decision to curb superannuation concessions and its overhaul of stage three tax cuts.
For the best part of two years the latter was not a "current" policy. And then it was.
48 hours of confusion
The original negative gearing story by James Massola and David Crowe set off more than 48 hours of confusion as Albanese and Chalmers struggled to get their lines straight.
Albanese's initial reaction at a press conference in Launceston was that public servants "from time to time" look at policy ideas.
Inside the politics surrounding Labor's hypothetical negative gearing reforms
He portrayed it as a normal part of business, Treasury as some kind of Skunk Works, or ideas laboratory, and whoops, it looks like one of their experiments has escaped the lab.
Hours later on Sydney ABC radio Richard Glover pressed the PM about whether Chalmers had ordered the work.
"I don't know because I'm not the treasurer," he replied, adding that Chalmers was on his way to China.
Well, will you ask him once he lands, Glover countered. "You could ask him yourself," Albanese replied.
The following morning, Albanese was asked by ABC News Breakfast whether he was considering taking negative gearing reform and capital gains tax reform to the next election.
"No, we're not," he said.
Which might have settled things, except that by Friday morning Albanese was again referring to the present tense of current policy and expressly refusing to rule out a change on negative gearing in the future.
"I'm saying what we are doing, and I'm saying that is our focus, and our focus is on that," Albanese told reporters, perhaps suppressing a Malcolm Tucker expletive or three.
Speaking from China, Chalmers on Friday effectively admitted it was he who asked Treasury officials to work up negative gearing reform options.
"It is not unusual at all for governments or for treasurers to get advice on contentious issues which are in the public domain, including in the parliament," he said.
Clock is ticking for Labor
So where does that leave us?
Tellingly, several Labor backbenchers were given the green light to speak in support of reforming negative gearing. Most were from electorates threatened by Greens or Teals.
The thought of paring back what is seen as an unfair tax concession favoured by surgeons and baby boomers has great traction in those seats.
But for another set of voices – aspiration-belt Labor MPs – the notion that the government wants to tinker with a deeply popular and trusted middle-class pathway to the good life is a another blow to the Labor brand.
"It's very unhelpful in the places we need," said one Labor MP.
"It's part of the life-plan for many people, the aspirational voters in the suburbs. This is not what people think in Grayndler, Sydney or any of the Green seats.
"You're now kicking the ladder away".
One view inside Labor is that the story was leaked by the treasurer, who is increasingly anxious about his political legacy. The clock on Labor is ticking, with polls suggesting a hung parliament is a distinct possibility.
That may mean it's now or never for the treasurer, goes the thinking.
Certainly, he has struggled to get key elements of his reform agenda into law, including curbs on superannuation accounts above $1.6 million and an overhaul of the Reserve Bank of Australia's governance structures.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-28/negative-gearing-confusion-has-damaged-la...Another stuff-up and/or a powerplay between Gomer and Albo?
NEVER UNDERESTIMATE LABOR'S ABILITY TO SELF-DESTRUCT.