I hope history will record that it was @TonyAbbottMHR whose vengeance permeated the failed Dutton #libspill. He wrecked the Gillard Government, his own Government, & the Turnbull Government. Surely this is the story of the week. How one man has trashed 3 Prime Ministers. #auspol pic.twitter.com/rd09koM98H— Dr Chris Pepin-Neff (@christopherneff) August 25, 2018
Thursday, 30 August 2018
Tony Abbott: unpopular and unwanted
Sacked former prime minister and current Liberal MP for Warringah Anthony John "Tony" Abbott in August 2018.......
Crikey, 28 August 2018:
Next year, Tony Abbott
will rack up 25 years as an MP. And the best way for him to celebrate it -- for
his party, for the government, and most of all for Australia -- would be to
retire. 2019 should be the election at which he calls time.
Abbott said to one of
his media friends on Monday that he still sees himself as a young man. In fact,
Abbott has always been an old man; he is the classic example of Keating's
"young fogey", from his days as a student politician through his
stint as a seminarian and his devotion to BA Santamaria, through his entry into
politics first as a staffer and then as an MP. Abbott has only ever seen the world
through the eyes of an old man furious at the changes wrought by young people,
determined to reverse the desecration of all that is sacred in his world where
Christian white males hold unquestioned authority.
What did the rest of
Australia ever do to the voters of Warringah? Lucky to live in one of the
most blessed constituencies on earth, stretching from Sydney’s leafy north
shore to the northern beaches, its residents have nevertheless foisted on
Australia the single most destructive politician of our time: Tony Abbott. The
failed priest, nicknamed the “mad monk”, has done incalculable damage to this
country. And for someone who aspired to
be a “junkyard dog savaging the other side”, Abbott has lately mostly savaged
his own, culminating in last week’s Pyrrhic victory over Prime Minister Malcolm
Turnbull, which slaked his thirst for revenge but left the Liberals in their
worst position for a decade.
As a former director of
Australians for Constitutional Monarchy, Abbott was a key wrecker of the 1999
republic referendum, denying this country a head of state who was one of us.
Abbott employed David Oldfield, who moonlighted for Pauline Hanson and helped
create One Nation. Realising the threat that Hanson posed to the Liberals’
right front, Abbott was the brains behind shabby outfit Australians for Honest
Politics, which helped put her in jail for electoral fraud. As a pro-life
health minister, under John Howard, he tried to block women’s access to the
abortion drug RU486.
In 2009, Warringah’s
local member tore down Liberal Opposition leader Malcolm Turnbull over climate
change. It was desperately cynical even then: Abbott admitted to Turnbull at
the time that he’d been a “bit
of a weather vane” on the issue. But Abbott decided it was “absolute crap”
that the science of climate change was settled and, right there and then,
introduced a kind of madness into our politics. Ever since, the country has
found it impossible to agree on an energy or climate policy.
Emboldened after
toppling Turnbull, the member for Warringah went on to launch a misogynistic campaign
against our first female prime minister; he also embarked on a misleading “axe
the tax” campaign against Labor’s emissions trading scheme, which his chief of
staff, Peta Credlin, later excused as an exercise in “brutal
retail politics”, given the ETS wasn’t a carbon tax at all. As prime
minister, Abbott’s first great achievement was to kill off our car industry,
and he went on betray his promise to the
electorate that his government would make “no cuts to education, no cuts to
health, no change to pensions, no change to the GST and no cuts to the ABC or
SBS”. His first budget in 2014, possibly the worst in living memory, defunded
schools and hospitals to the tune of $80 billion compared with forecast
funding levels under Labor, and failed to pass the Senate. That year
Abbott made Australia the first country in the world to abolish a carbon price.
Then in 2015 he knighted Prince Philip on Australia Day, turning himself into a
laughing stock, and his downfall began. When the Liberal Party turfed Abbott in
September 2015, a grateful nation rewarded the new PM Turnbull with approval
ratings of 68
per cent.
Ever since, Abbott has
sniped, wrecked and undermined the Coalition. Although he describes his aim as
being the “best possible member for Warringah”, he has never cared to represent
his constituency faithfully. In the equal marriage postal survey, 75 per cent
of his electorate voted “Yes” – the highest proportion in New South Wales – but
Tony Abbott, a loud “No” campaigner, later scarpered from
the House of Representatives.
Now, without care for
the national interest, the institution of parliament, the office of PM or the
electoral fate of the Liberal Party, Abbott has torn down Turnbull a second
time. To what end? Not policy: Turnbull had conceded everything the hard right
demanded of him. Not politics: today’s Newspoll[$]
shows the damage caused by last week’s spill; the Coalition now trails Labor
44–56, and Bill Shorten is preferred PM. The member for Warringah will reportedly [$]
give a “call-to-arms” speech to rally Liberal members behind new prime minister
Scott Morrison. But can Abbott be trusted to serve Morrison loyally? Or will he
start the work of tearing down another Liberal prime minister?
The party is desperate
to put the Abbott-Turnbull wars behind it. Federal Liberal president Nick
Greiner said
yesterday [$] that Abbott is at least partly to blame for the
divisions in the party: “Tony is an excellent political salesman, a political
warrior; he should have been spending his time – and I of course said this to
him – much more on bringing down our political opponents rather than focusing
on internal differences.” Columnist Niki Savva was less politic on the
weekend, writing:
“If he had any decency Abbott would resign too, now that he has accomplished
his mission.”
Former PM Kevin Rudd
absolutely let
rip this morning: “I cannot remember a single positive policy
initiative that Abbott has championed and then implemented. Not one. As a
result, unconstrained by policy, the entire energy of this giant wrecking ball
of Australian politics has been focused on destroying his opponents – within
the Labor Party and the Liberal Party. Of all modern politicians, Abbott
is sui generis. His singular, destructive impact on national politics
cannot be underestimated.”
Labels:
right wing rat bags,
Tony Abbott
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