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A worried politician holding up a National Fuel Security Plan.

I. THE RUINS OF THE CENTRE-RIGHT

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    This Post Has 9 Comments

    1. Watershedd

      Albanese’s address to the nation was insipid. It offered no security and tax relief for a commodity that appears that it will soon be in such short supply that it will be meaningless anyway. There was nothing for those in regional and rural areas, who bear the brunt of the current dilemma; it’s not like they have the abundance of public transport options they do in the city. Freight is starting to go up, prices are already increasing.

      The deflated Liberals drift without the slightest comprehension of what has resulted in their current Siberia or how to trace their way to a new heartland. Without clear direction and failing support, they fail to fill the leadership void through constructive suggestion and engagement.

      One Nation screams blame. That’s it. They take no responsibility for anything and never will. They speak to those who feel abandoned by conservatives because those people are aggrieved by both the left (is there a left any more?) and the right of politics. All One Nation does is point fingers at a perceived evil, generally with brown or black skin, speaking an Asian language or that has a culture that spans more than 5 minutes.

      Where are the visionaries, the brilliant orators with sound policy, able to dissemble the vacuous arguments of the unaccountable? Not in Labor, that’s for sure, and not in the other leading options. Meanwhile, we drift into another pandemic-like isolation that is likely to decimate all aspects of supply, business and social integration. Albanese is not up to the task.

    2. David Harrison

      Albanese’s address to the nation yesterday was a clown show, he demonstrated a clear lack of leadership and a clear lack of vision. Australia is now a rudderless ship adrift at sea, with a captain who has no clue and no plan.

    3. Jen

      The essay’s central tension — between the claim that Australia is not in acute democratic danger and the claim that the preconditions for erosion are “present and accumulating” — is never quite resolved. You are clearly trying to avoid both alarmism and complacency, which is admirable, but the calibration is slightly off. The penultimate paragraph lists the preconditions (declining trust, hollowed parties, amplified extremism, absent leadership) and then says Australia is “not, by the standards of global democratic backsliding, in acute danger.” This reassurance feels imposed rather than argued. If the preconditions are genuinely present and accumulating, the reader is entitled to ask what rate of accumulation would constitute acute danger, and what mechanism would trigger it. The V-Dem framework you invoke actually has a fairly developed account of this — you could use it more specifically rather than citing it as ambient authority.

    4. Paulo

      Albanese has sold out the Palestinian people to Zionism and the Australian people to U.S. interests. He is a traitor to Labor.

    5. Kelly Conrad

      Albo has proven to be an absolute failure, no, disaster as Prime Minister. To be fair, he’s slightly better than Morrison, I empathise SLIGHTLY, because there’s very little in it. We need a PM who has actual leadership qualities.

    6. Mick

      Albo is doing the best job he can in a difficult situation.

    7. Sally

      I don’t understand why the major parties don’t do anything to address people’s underlying concerns, which will cut the ground out from underneath Pauline Hanson and One Nation.

    8. Jen

      I see that the rusted-on, on X don’t like your analysis of Albanese’s performance. Rusted-ons, everywhere in politics are a problem.

    9. Richard

      Albanese has sold out Australian voters.

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