
In the wake of the Super Saturday byelections, and the entirely unsurprising result — seats did not swing towards the government, and the Liberal v minor party contest in Mayo went exactly as polled — there has been a bit of open season, from the left, or from the Labor Left, anyway, about any sort of speculation about leadership, internal party movements, etc, etc.
The attacks on News Corp are fair enough — the attacks on News Corp are always fair enough — because the coverage was as mendacious as usual, tying the particular contests to the very abstract “most preferred PM” rating, and suggesting an apocalypse was innocent. But several news outlets made the trek to Longman and Braddon and found the same thing: the major parties were on the nose, the same rank dissatisfaction spreading through the country and the Western world.
That failed to materialise in Longman because Ms Reliable, Pauline Hanson, stuffed it again: taking the Norse heritage discovery cruise she’d promised herself before the small inconvenience of a byelection in the heartland of her heartland was called. The 100 cardboard cutouts, reminding everyone of the insult? That has to be an Ashby masterstroke, Australia’s campaigning anti-genius strikes again.
The minor party prospect were shown by Craig Garland in Braddon, basically the western half of Tasmania. Garland, a fisherman, ran to raise awareness of the depredation happening in western Tasmania — from forest lockouts for private contractors, residual logging of old growth in the Tarkine, and the despoliation of harbours (and native fishing) by quick-bucks salmon farming — but decided not to campaign, beyond Facebook and media (“I’d feel like a goose”, he said when I contacted to see if he might be doing some doorknocking). Well fair enough. You do what you’re capable of. Word was that Garland was wilting late in the day, due to publicity around a small altercation decades ago, with a cop who happened to be a policewoman. “He’s down to 5%,” they said. In fact he got 13%. With a full campaign, a local hero of such type could get above 20%; in the manner of Clive Palmer in Fairfax, they could split others’ preferences and win the seat from third spot.
So plenty to think about. Plenty to think about inside the major parties, too. Speculation that presumed Labor was in trouble is propaganda. Speculation that games out various scenarios is perfectly legitimate. Some of us are now being slated for asking what a bad result for Labor would have meant for Shorten’s leadership; the suggestion that Anthony Albanese might be stroking his field-marshal’s baton was held to be utterly out of bounds (in the same way that multiply-sourced stories about the possibility that Emma Husar might be the Imelda Marcos of Labor were verboten).
Listen. No one is saying that Albo is “white-anting” Shorten in the way that Abbott is Turnbull. But you’d have to still have the lens cap on, to not see that Labor’s factions have been moving across the battlefield for a good 18 months. As this correspondent has noted, the whole thing appears to have started with a split in the Shorten-Conroy right-side alliance, the willingness of Conroy’s remnant force to ally with the official Left, and the split away of an Industrial Left, to partner with — and support — Billy Bob Shorten’s leadership.
Is Albo running? Hoh yes, he’s running. Which matters for the form Labor might take and the policies it might take — even in these ideologically denuded times. And it is right and proper for us to write about the possibilities of it, in the context of a set of elections which could have gone any which way. That’s politics, that’s commentary, and we’re going to keep doing it honestly, even if others do it otherwise, and major party results turn out as expected, and a fly ma’am holds Mayo.

35 thoughts on “Labor might have won Super Saturday, but there’s trouble on the horizon yet”
Marcus Hicks
July 30, 2018 at 6:24 pmHey GRundle, instead of wasting more metaphorical “ink” on a challenge that will never happen, how about you talk about the *real* issues-like more revelations ahout the GBR money given to some grubby oufit with Liberal Party ties, or the fact that the AFP has gathered sufficient evidence against Cash’s office to refer the AWU case over to the DPP?
Sleuth
July 30, 2018 at 6:57 pmGuy, we pay good money to hopefully get good unbiased journalism. If it even smells just a little bit like News Corp, we’re out of here. OK?
Jack Robertson
July 30, 2018 at 7:24 pmGosh, what a bunch of anxious sooks be Crikey’s lemming ranks of Tory Progs (bank Right, ribbon & # ‘Left’). Rundle’s shorely not even out of first…
Dog's Breakfast
July 31, 2018 at 3:47 pmI’ll pay that Jack. Surely our skin is thick enough.
As for other publications, well no amount of cheerleading here will make up for the bias in the MSM.
AR
July 30, 2018 at 7:35 pmGrundle is working on the broken clock principle – if he just keeps the feverswamp of Inner Avocado seething by writing the same thing over & over, it may one day accidentally be correct.
There’s a reason an overgrazed sheep station was built over to become the national capital as Cabbage Patchers just cannot see beyond their turbid, muddy creek, flat horizons and boring, polluted bay.
Draco Houston
July 30, 2018 at 8:34 pmLots of ALP supporters down here in the comments having a melty.
bobalot
July 30, 2018 at 9:30 pmHis endless coma-inducing posts about the fall of Labor and the rise of the Greens gets tiresome.
I think he lost the plot when the Greens lost the Batman By-Election.
ChipsNbeer
July 30, 2018 at 10:41 pmNo. Most of us are just sick of the endless scrutiny of Bill Shorten and the ALP, and no scrutiny at all of the Lib/LNP/Nats who are actually IN government and running the country into the ground. The only balance that seems to be coming from most of the media is bullsh*t from the journos offset by common sense from the commentators.
Bob the builder
July 30, 2018 at 11:40 pmAn article saying “just ’cause I was wrong doesn’t mean I wasn’t right”.
I hope Rundle didn’t get payday for this.
klewso
July 31, 2018 at 1:45 amI’ve seen Pollyanna, I didn’t much like it, as a kid.
And though I wasn’t a boy scout, personally – when it comes to eggs – I’ve always been a two basket man.
Who can say when (heaven help us) Turnbull might hit an unavoidable purple patch : and Labor get it’s Shorten Curlies matted?
With the jitters and turmoil that a knife-edge delivers, who’s to say that Shorten could deliver a “healthy majority” – healthier than an Albo or even Bowen?
Why wouldn’t someone in the party be working on a Plan B – just in case? Someone should, surely?
I have no trouble with someone raising the issue – provided it doesn’t become a career limiting “special subject” obsession, as it does with much of our media – hoping for Labor turmoil to distract us from Turnbull’s?
Surely we’re able and prepared to countenance all, including negative, scenarios – to be ready, just in case?
I’d wager there are Labor supporters that would rather someone else was leading the party – that would arrange their protest in, say, a Garland and second preference Labor?
Dog's Breakfast
July 31, 2018 at 3:50 pmOle two-baskets Klewso, they call him! 🙂
Mick Devine
July 31, 2018 at 8:34 amI don’t always agree with Guy Rundle but “suggesting an apocalypse was innocent”? Me and Kilroy and George Davis are with him all the way
Bob the builder
July 31, 2018 at 9:23 amAn apocalypse is NEVER innocent!
Venise Alstergren
July 31, 2018 at 11:45 amAgain? I’d hate Crikey to become as boring as our politicians; but it’s becoming line ball. Give over Guy.