
Late on the night of September 14, 2015, Malcolm Turnbull, fresh from defeating Tony Abbott for the prime ministership, arrived in the Blue Room at Parliament House, flanked by a smiling Julie Bishop. Turnbull was ebullient and eloquent. “This will be a thoroughly Liberal government,” he promised.
It will be a thoroughly Liberal Government committed to freedom, the individual and the market. It will be focussed on ensuring that in the years ahead, as the world becomes more and more competitive, and greater opportunities arise, we are able to take advantage of that. The Australia of the future has to be a nation that is agile, that is innovative, that is creative.
It was never to be. The reality would be the least Liberal, or liberal, government in decades, one in which mentions of agility and innovation would become first jokes, then banished altogether as a reminder of how the promise of that night had been squandered. And just as with Abbott, and Julia Gillard, and Kevin Rudd, the happy confidence of victory night would give way, in three years or less, to the bitterness of betrayal and another Prime Ministerial departure.
Turnbull returned to the Liberal leadership in 2015 not merely because of Abbott’s disastrous prime ministership and “30 Newspolls in a row”, but because he offered an old idea of leadership — the kind of leader last seen in the Hawke-Keating years and the first two Howard terms. As he explained the afternoon of the challenge:
We need a style of leadership that explains those challenges and opportunities; explains the challenges and how to seize the opportunities. A style of leadership that respects the peoples’ intelligence, that explains these complex issues, and then sets out the course of action we believe we should take, and makes a case for it. We need advocacy, not slogans. We need to respect the intelligence of the Australian people.
Turnbull had long been urging this kind of leadership: over a year earlier, he had articulated a philosophy of reform leadership involving a four-stage process of explaining and verifying the problem, offering the solution and doing so coherently and fairly. The perceived dearth of economic leadership under Abbott had so vexed the governing class that an economic reform summit had been convened just a month before his ousting by the two national newspapers. Turnbull’s ascension seemed to be the answer to a collective national prayer.
He was partly brought undone because the problem with “economic reform” wasn’t the lack of leadership, but that the electorate was growing more and more hostile to the whole agenda. They saw in it a vast scam in which corporations and the well-connected grew richer while they marked time (at best). If the likes of The Australian and the AFR, and Australian business, believed that Australia needed more tax reform (a higher GST and lower company tax), more industrial relations deregulation and cuts to government spending, voters saw only a continuation of the low wages growth that had set in after Abbott was elected, cuts to services and giant corporations getting away with avoiding tax. And they knew that in two key areas, financial services and energy, they were being ripped off by powerful companies that paid little more than pro forma deference to the alleged “regulators” of those industries.
Turnbull was blindsided by this electoral shift against neoliberalism. His entire agenda was neoliberal — the Australian economy would be stripped down for competition; we would embrace change, seize the advantages of being on the edge of the most dynamic region in the world. A thousand start-ups would bloom; a more confident Australian business sector would take on the world, with the electorate convinced of the need for difficult change by being treated as a thoughtful interlocutor in the political process led by a man who, more than any parliamentarian since Keating, spoke with eloquence, grace and intelligence (his parliamentary eulogies of Bob Hughes and Gough were superb).
But that plan didn’t survive contact with the enemy, especially on tax. Labor wasn’t going to play Turnbull’s “respect the intelligence” game in areas like the GST. And it was going to produce its own tax policies, making Turnbull look reactive. Lifting the GST rate — a favoured approach of business, which saw it as the way to pay for lower company taxes — proved problematic: by the time compensation was factored in, there was too little benefit for the political risk. When Turnbull eventually produced a tax reform package, it was barely worth the name — just a massive company tax cut, backend-loaded a decade hence. For a while Turnbull couldn’t — or more likely didn’t want to — say what the cost was.
On financial services, Turnbull was again blindsided. A former banker himself, with several former bank executives in his government, he couldn’t grasp how potent the call for a banking royal commission — initiated by the Greens and not adopted until 2015 by Labor — really was. Turnbull actually believed that voters would be worried about the threat to the stability of the financial system from a royal commission, telling western Sydney voters during an election debate “Mr Shorten wants banks in the dock”, then looking mystified when this drew cheers from the audience.
And while Turnbull managed to fall over the line in the 2016 election, it was already clear that in addition to his own tone deafness around economic issues — allowing Labor to exploit the disaffection toward neoliberalism uncontested — the poor judgement he was known for earlier in his political career (cf. Godwin Grech) remained unabated. Worse, no one on his office, which cycled through three chiefs of staff in less than three years, seemed able to ameliorate it. Stuff-ups became routine. In the second half of 2017, they became more than routine, the whole government became shambolic. No party covered themselves in glory on the citizenship issue — and certainly not Labor — but nor did any party leader stand up in parliament and appear to try to direct how the High Court should rule. Then Barnaby Joyce’s affair exploded in early 2018, resulting in open warfare between Turnbull and his own deputy prime minister.
By this stage, the initial idea of Turnbullian leadership had been long abandoned, along with its keywords. The promised four-step reform process had never even been employed; it was never clear, for example, what critical problem Turnbull’s signature $70 billion company tax cut was needed to address, given record foreign investment and low unemployment.
In other areas, too, Turnbull represented continuity far more than change. If anything, Turnbull accelerated Tony Abbott’s agenda of curbing civil liberties and extending surveillance. Some of the most egregious breaches of civil rights and freedom of expression in recent decades occurred under the one-time Spycatcher Malcolm, a figure that became as irrelevant as the leather-jacketed progressive of Q&A. Whistleblowers, politicians and journalists were hounded by police. Witness K and his lawyer were prosecuted for revealing lawbreaking by ASIS. A critic of Centrelink had private information leaked to smear her. Proposals for draconian secrecy laws, new police powers to demand ID and enhanced powers for security agencies were regularly ushered into parliament.
And a man prone to being thin-skinned led a thin-skinned government that relentlessly pursued those who embarrassed it — the ABC was cowed and defunded; journalists who did their job well targeted with vexatious complaints, while News Corp was showered with money. While attacking the ABC, Turnbull finally secured the removal of the last of the substantive media ownership restrictions, paving the way for the end of Fairfax and the triumph of Nine under Liberal Party elder Peter Costello.
In some areas, indeed, things went backwards. Progress on Indigenous constitutional recognition — a cause Tony Abbott had embraced — ground to a halt under Turnbull with his dismissive response to the Uluru Statement and his tolerance of the wilful misrepresentation of the statement by racists among conservative ranks.
All the while, the economy had actually been performing well. Commodity prices finally delivered a revenue boost that promised an actual, rather than endlessly delayed, return to surplus. Jobs growth was strong, partly because the government had reversed itself and was pumping more money into health and education. But convincing voters of that was more difficult, partly because Turnbull never took wage stagnation — and its structural causes, anti-union industrial relations laws and overly large corporations — seriously, partly because it was too busy trying to explain the urgent need for company tax cuts to a sceptical electorate. Even so, across 2018, once Barnaby Joyce had been given the flick and Tony Abbott’s destructive antics had come to be seen as mindless undermining, Turnbull recovered in the polls to come within touching distance of Labor.
The pretext of Turnbull’s ousting — that Peter Dutton was needed to halt the loss of votes from the right of the party to One Nation — was richly ironic. It was Turnbull who had breathed new life into One Nation with his double dissolution election. And under Turnbull, the Liberals had adopted ever more populist policies — belatedly embracing defence protectionism, intervening in gas and electricity markets, even succumbing to not merely a royal commission into the banks but a banking super-profits tax and setting up a One Nation-led inquiry into banks in the bush.
Illiberal on freedom, un-Liberal economically, Turnbull’s government never matched the promise of September 14, 2015, just as Turnbull himself never matched the idea of leadership he advocated. Long an advocate of governing from the centre, Turnbull found a way to fail at that: his prime ministership ended up being, at the urgings of the right, the most interventionist government in decades but he was simultaneously not reactionary enough for the right and too hostage to it for progressives. The enduring perception will be that the real Malcolm Turnbull, the idea of Turnbull that we all had in that spring of 2015, was never really permitted to lead. But the suspicion will be, this was the real Turnbull, and he just wasn’t particularly good.

29 thoughts on “How Turnbull lost control”
Margaret Marshall
September 8, 2018 at 8:45 pmMaclolm Turnbull wasn’t that bad and as well Malcolm Turnbull wasn’t that good. That judgement of him as a leader and a man who could win the election seemed to be by his own party. And yet by far by all his cabinet in parlaiament Malcolm could out perform them all in hios feet at the lectern in the glare of the cameras of Question Time. The coup was a silly move.
Both sides of the Liberal Party were upset with Malcolm Turnbull. To rule from the centre you upset both sides. The proof is of just who stood up, when the dust settled, Peter Dutton from the attacking side and Turnbull’s deputy Julie bishop, and Turnbull’s treasurer Scott Morrison who just a little while earlier gave Malcolm Turnbull a hug of love with the quote of “This is my leader.”
Can Scott Morrison lead in the eyes of the public after stating that to the media?
Turnbull’s position dead in the centre is much like a journalist sitting on the fence as to write there is like the eye of the storm, it is too calm on the fence there, ass there has to be a majority on which you back while still lightly attacked to the other side. The majority then back you and give strength to the position. To be the complete dead centre you isolate yourself. Then when the attack comes, the side that is supposed to be on your side become passive and sit there like stunned mullets and let the attacking side demolish all before it. The do not resist. The quote in this madness is then prophetic “I knows nothing” while the party crumble all around. The Liberal Party destroyed itself in trying to destroy the leader. They destroyed their own leader thinking that Maclcolm Turnbull coule not win the lection when he could win the election as he has an unasailable lead over Bill Shorten in the polls.
Now from the train wreck we survey the damage.
Should a political Party that was and still is the government be so myopic and so disassocaited with its 25 million members of the public be allowed to continue to run the country?
Now, it is the public who will have a say.
kyle Hargraves
September 9, 2018 at 9:45 amIt isn’t an easy topic Margaret but a few of your remarks do require some qualification.
“Both sides of the Liberal Party were upset with Malcolm Turnbull. To rule from the centre you upset both sides.”
If the centre is “thin” then yes : classical Machiavelli; choose a side. Everything being equal one is only going to be 50% wrong! However if the centre is rather thick (e.g., NZ, Canada and the UK) the Centre is a good place to be. However Turnbull was never really considered a team player (a tad much ego according to Mitchen and others). Nelson got the initial leadership over Turnbull upon the exit of Howard. Apparently, had Turnbull been perceived as more of a team player Turnbull would have been given the leadership upon a plate.
> The proof is of just who stood up, when the dust settled
Not really: Parliaments (and front benches in particular) are replete with opportunists – wafting back to Edward III.
> Can Scott Morrison lead in the eyes of the public after stating that to the media?
There are similarities between the memories of electors and those of goldfish Margaret.
> as he has an unasailable lead over Bill Shorten in the polls.
If the polls are to judge then Turnbull was speared for the same reason as Abbott; an unambiguous decline. It may not mean a lot but it certainly worried some. But the reality was (as you infer – indirectly) that the Libs wanted Turnbull out at any cost. On this point Bernie did a fair job of describing the matter – some minor caveats aside.
“Should a political Party that was and still is the government be so myopic and so disassocaited with its 25 million members of the public be allowed to continue to run the country?”
Its not a question Margaret despite the sentence residing in the interrogative. Neither Ayer or Russell or Hempel would be pleased. Who, for example, is to declare “no”? god?
> Now, it is the public who will have a say.
For my “bobs worth” its even money at best; the optimism of some of the subscribers of Crikey notwithstanding.
Margaret Marshall
September 9, 2018 at 10:11 amMmmm, so your retort in argument is a rather thin way in that you want us believe that you are objective when you are subjective.
You say Malcolm Turnbull was not a team player, and so you prove my point that both sides were against him when you put the cart before the horse.
He was the leader. He was. That means the players have to team with him, not that Malcolm had to team with the players. What makes a leader? Followers. They follow the leader. Instead they walked away from the leader. It is a fact that the players have to follow the leader for him to be leader. The leader is the team.
Now as for Edward III, you are not a republican are you? No.
The answer to the question whether Scott Morrison can lead is obvious, no he can’t. He has to tell the public that he is on their side. To tell them that means he has trouble believing it himself.
The polls in politicians eyes are everything. They engage with the polls but don’t engage with the public.
Should the government be allowed to run the country has been answered this morning when the State by-election in Wagga Wagga saw a 30 percent swing against the state coalition government.
No one in the media is saying the federal issues were not to blame
It is a wipeout and will be a wipeout at the Federal election.
kyle Hargraves
September 9, 2018 at 11:36 am“Mmmm, so your retort in argument is a rather thin way in that you want us believe that you are objective when you are subjective.”
Rather than debate the existence (or absence) of subjectivity let history be our guide.
> You say Malcolm Turnbull was not a team player, and so you prove my point
The assertion does NOT “prove” you point Margaret – about the adverse effects of “centerism”. Moreover, I have cited examples in my previous post.
“That means the players have to team with him, not that Malcolm had to team with the players. ”
There is more than a whiff of the “divine Right of Kings” here Margaret. Consider the fate of Richard II, Charles I, James I up to say Edward VIII. Management is about herding cats Margaret and a good deal is written on the subject. Howard got himself tutored on the subject (but never actually changed his spots; he just learnt to camouflage them). Herding dogs is easy.
> What makes a leader? Followers. They follow the leader.
Are you kidding or did you have a late night last night? The assertion didn’t work real well in Soviet Russia, or Mao’s China or, now, in any of the contemporary African States. It might start with probity. It is seldom sufficient to be done; it must be seen to be done. Similarly for strategic plans for a country. The problem with the electoral cycle is that it is far too short. President Xi is very popular in China. Do you care to undertake some research and offer some reasons?
> Now as for Edward III, you are not a republican are you? No.
Actually I am very much a Republican Margaret. I actually got my hopes up some years ago and when Turnbull realised that his pet model of Republicanism was not going to be endorsed he lost all interest in the matter. Do you see what I mean about team players? As an aside I am a very strong atheist too. I did win the Divinity prizes at school and have given any number of Bishops and clergy a fair trot for their money regarding their respective religions : (in historical order) Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Know thine enemy : Sun Tzu
> The polls in politicians eyes are everything.
It does seem to be becoming a trend Margaret. Howard didn’t give a damn. Rudd was obsessed. There are a few detached pollies but not many.
> It is a wipeout and will be a wipeout at the Federal election.
Frankly, I don’t much care. However do expect to be disappointed with Shorten or Albo or whomever. But what you asset remains to be seen and only seeing is believing.
brian crooks
September 15, 2018 at 3:46 pmKyle, you sound like another desperate coalition voter expecting a divine wind to save your party, the fact is the coalition is a spent force, it managed to scramble through last time but has nowhere to go now, its trickle down ideology is totally discredited and we are seeing the end of both the liberal and national parties as political entities, much like the labor split of the 1950`s, they know it and so does australian business and they are already preparing for an incoming shorten labor government, if shorten handles this well he will be P.M for as long as he likes, if not, then it opens up the political landscape for other parties and independents, but after watching how shorten has handled his time as opposition leader I`m sure he`ll handle government as well as he has handled opposion. both Abott and Turnbull under estimated shorten and now Morrison is making the same mistake, voters may not like shorten, but they respect his ability.
kyle Hargraves
September 15, 2018 at 6:44 pmBrian, by now you ought to be aware that I am the quintessential spectator; I watch the ball go from A to B and back to A again. Believe it or not, I could cope with you as PM. As for Mr Shorten having the job “for as long as he likes” the same was said of Mr Rudd in 2007.
We have witnessed sufficient examples of leaders in opposition and in a fair few instances their effectiveness as Leaders of the Opposition was not equal to their effectiveness as Prime Minister. In other words, Brian, the assertion (of yours) remains to be seen.
I accept, and I think we will agree, that there is a good deal of hand-wringing going in the electorate of Wentworth. By-elections are generally opportunities to give the incumbent government a bit of stick and such could well be the case in Wentworth but the Federal election could be different even if Morrison hangs on and the Libs loose NSW prior to the Federal election.
I think we might also agree that Joe in the street has something of a gold fish memory when it comes to the detail of political events. A few bags of jelly beans etc. prior to May next year just might (or might not) turn voter Joe. As for Shorten, had the super-Saturday elections been adverse for Labor Albo may well have taken his place. The point here, Brian, is that there are considerable elements of contingency.
I accept that the majority of the subscribers of Crikey (and not a few of the writers) are arguing just as your are doing. In general terms you may well be right. On the other hand various tribal bands of roaming independents (of extreme Right, Centre and Left) may come to, de facto, govern the country.
As for polling, as I have conveyed more than once, the difficulty is obtaining a random sample of (truthful) voters. Samples under 2000 are probably
insufficient but the Pollsters don’t like spending money any more than the next organisation. The second major difficulty is concerned with statistical independence (or dependence) in regard to the questions. Its a lot easier to ASSUME independence but its not necessarily the case. Such being the case, Brian, we’re just going to have to wait and see.
Arky
September 10, 2018 at 9:03 am“had so vexed the governing class that an economic reform summit had been convened just a month before his ousting by the two national newspapers. ”
“Turnbull’s ascension seemed to be the answer to a collective national prayer”
– A collective national prayer from the journalist class, sure. The people who spent 6 or 7 years helping mythmake for Turnbull so that he’d be popular and his failures in opposition would be forgotten (you can tell he’s gone now because Bernard just made the first mention of Godwin Grech by a gallery journalist in 6 years). The people who continue to mythologise Turnbull and make excuses that he wouldn’t even make for himself (the “if he wins the election he’ll do all that socially progressive stuff you want, like an emissions trading scheme and marriage equality, just trust us” line trotted out by journalists who should have resigned in shame within weeks of the 2016 election, but still have the gaul to pretend to be political pundits). The people still trying to “Kill Bill” and talk up a Turnbull recovery, ignoring any actual policy stories, right the way to Super Saturday.
Thanks for that, by the way.
This is actually a very fair summing up of Turnbull’s failures, albeit written with hindsight (these views were rarely expressed about Turnbull’s reign at the time even by Keane) and with the media’s role conspicously absent.
Wayne Cusick
September 10, 2018 at 11:27 am“Even so, across 2018, once Barnaby Joyce had been given the flick and Tony Abbott’s destructive antics had come to be seen as mindless undermining, Turnbull recovered in the polls to come within touching distance of Labor.”
BK, I still think that was the statistical anomaly that you claimed should have delivered Malcolm a win in the polls.
Wombat
September 10, 2018 at 1:23 pmThe problem with labour after 1971 is it ended up far too Liberal and the Liberals far too Conservative or should I say feudalistic. Both sides are looking for their identities in a world that’s not of their making. There are only two places that decide our fate and that is America and its unsinkable aircraft carrier in the Middle East. BRICS might take over if the Donald’s Trade Wars don’t sink the whole planet first.
Wombat
September 10, 2018 at 3:15 pmFurther more, there are two reasons that might have made Malcolm want to leave, something he does not have the stomach for.
The coming invasion of Iran and the consequences of the Donald’s Trade War.
The Germans are going to loose 60 billion.
Ask yourselves, why is Canada and the Saudi’s At each other’s throats, because of the Donald.
Canada’s Prime Minister swore under oath to be loyal to the Queen, not America or Trump.
Malcolm knows, his smiling.
Mike M
September 12, 2018 at 3:26 pmTurnbulls fundamental weakness was his disconnection with real people and his corporate view of the world. Sadly he appears to have been replaced with a person that each day looks more and more out of his depth. If they somehow make it through the next election, the country will continue to be held hostage to the inner battles of the Liberal party…..and the long drift will simply continue.
Margaret Marshall
September 12, 2018 at 4:08 pmThe Liberals chose Malcolm Turnbull because of his faults and because those faults suited the Liberal Party. They therefore can’t complain that it is Malcolm’s fault that he had those faults. It is also the fault of the Liberal Party itself that they loved those faults of Malcolm’s as they are also traits of the Liberal Party. They love and the action of the gaining of money and wealth and the movements on a chessboard to gain profits in big money.
Malcolm Turnbull was a Merchant Banker and he made a lot of money being a merchant banker in his own company Whitlam Turnbull, where he was a partner, then later he joined the world-renowned Goldman Sacks, and that added to his status and his fame skyrocketed. That is why they chose Malcolm Turnbull for as leader. He was a lawyer and a Merchant banker and had a reputation with a world bank.
That is a solid gold connection glue and adhesion to the Liberal Party, but it pushes away any connection to the average Australian. The Average Australian does not have shares on Wall Street or money in a bank, offshore, on the Cayman Islands or property in a luxurious homestead in the elite part of the rural area.
Malcolm Turnbull was not a Commonwealth Bank average person, and that persona also does not make him average in the way he communicated. He was a great speaker, more like Robert Menzies. He himself compared himself to Menzies. So add another trait, arrogance, the arrogance of Gough Whitlam. Turnbull could dust off Labor’s Bill Shorten any time he liked, and women loved Turnbull because of the elite power persona. Turnbull was the Supreme pizza in the pizza shop. Average? You have a Mr Average in the new PM Scott Morrison.
Sadly, Mr Morrison has not the eliteness, the status, the elequtte and the elliquence of speech to be respected as a serious Liberal Party leader. He will fall.
Mr Morrison can not even think up a credible reason why the Liberal Party dumped Malcolm Turnbull. That is the chink in the Liberal armour, so that question of WHY Turnbull was outed as PM will continue to be asked of the new prime minister, Scott Morrison.
kyle Hargraves
September 12, 2018 at 5:19 pmIts unlikely that we’re going to permit history to interfere with our perspectives Margaret but confining myself to one remark of yours (the others are of similar creditability) if “That is why they chose Malcolm Turnbull for as leader” then would not have Turnbull prevailed (or ought to have prevailed) over Nelson in 2007?
Then you would have to explain the subsequent Turnbull-Abbott challengers of a few years hence. As for gentlemanly grace cast an eye over this item :
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4848640/Malcolm-Turnbull-called-Tony-Abbott-c-word-VIP-flight.html
As Hawke put it (at Gorton’s funeral) : “the Libs are such great haters”.
Margaret Marshall
September 12, 2018 at 5:33 pmSwear words are reported in the Daily Mail, and those words are in the heading ” … witnesses said.” It is a subjective story.
It is a political story and that means political motivation motivates people to be witnesses. Therefore a grain of salt needs to be taken with it when reading that story, even if they are said to be witnesses.
kyle Hargraves
September 12, 2018 at 6:00 pmOh – I see Margaret – or more accurately : I don’t see. Were the article to be a raw example of libel I think we could presume that the subject and experienced lawyer may have sought compensation. Yet, that the article remains waving in the breeze suggests that an aeroplane of passengers are unlikely to be wrong on all counts.
That Malcom is your hero is one thing and it would have sufficed to have made that point but to attribute (or attempt to attribute) traits that are not in existence (your instance notwithstanding) does not advance your case or Malcom’s. I think we might have “done it to death” Margaret.
Karen
September 17, 2018 at 1:56 pmTurnbull never governed from the centre. He delivered the corporatist agenda from the right to appease the right. The same happened to Abbott whose similar agenda was even more unpalatable on account of his persona. The LNP will deservedly lose the election because of this and because of what they did to Turnbull without so much as an explanation.
Keith1
September 19, 2018 at 8:14 pm“He delivered the corporatist agenda from the right to appease the right.”
Yes Karen. And now today, revealed for all to see, the sick-making heart of this process: the spider himself and his abjec, lick-spittle pawn:
” a desperate prime minister tried to explain to Murdoch that the only result of changing leaders would be to deliver government to Labor.
He pointed out he had shifted on the national energy guarantee policy so hated by many News Corp commentators and Tony Abbott and he had delivered, in part, on tax cuts.
It did no good. Murdoch fobbed him off, promising to speak to his son Lachlan about it.”
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2018/sep/19/turnbull-warned-rupert-murdoch-trying-remove-him-prime-minister