Monday, July 01, 2013

Ministers for Communications

The swearing in today of Anthony Albanese as Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy saw some tweeting about the longevity of Senator Conroy and contrasting it with the churn in the portfolio in the Hawke Government.

So I thought I'd share my table of Ministers for Communication since Federation. 

As "postal, telegraphic and other like services" are a Federal responsibility under the constitution the Post-Master General was a portfolio from the very start.

The initial ministries (1.1.1901- 12.7.1915) were constituted of PM, Minister for External Affairs, Minister for Home Affairs, Treasurer, Minister for Trade and Customs, Minister for Defence, Postmaster-General, Vice-President of the Executive-Council, Minister (without portfolio).  The Minister with responsibility for posts and telegraphs is therefore one of six that could have a list of Ministers since Federation.
 
Anthony Albanese is not the first Deputy Prime Minister to be the communications minister.  Lance Barnard was both in the two man Whitlam ministry from 5 to 19 December 1972.  Lionel Bowen was Post-Master General under Whitlam and subsequently served as DPM under Hawke.
 
John McEwen was the first Minister to be commissioned as Deputy Prime Minister in the Gorton Ministry on 10.1.1968.  Previously it was used unofficially for the second highest ranking Minister. (but none of them were the Postmaster General).
 
The full list is:
 
Ministry
Dates
Minister
Dates
 
 
Postmaster-General
 
Barton Ministry (Protectionist)
1.1.1901 – 24.9.1903
Forrest, J
1.1.1901-17.1.1901
 
 
Drake, Senator JG
5.2.1901-10.8.1903
 
 
Fysh, PO
10.8.1903 -24.9.1903
Deakin Ministry (Protectionist)
24.9.1903 – 27.4.1904
Fysh, PO
24.9.1903 – 27.4.1904
Watson Ministry (ALP)
27.4.1904 – 17.8.1904
Mahon, H
27.4.1904 – 17.8.1904
Reid–McLean Ministry (Free Trade – Protectionist Coalition)
18.8.1904 – 5.7.1905
Smith, S (FT)
18.8.1904 – 5.7.1905
Deakin Ministry (Protectionist)
5.7.1905 – 13.11.1908
Chapman, A
5.7.1905-30.7.1907
 
 
Mauger, S
30.7.1907-13.11.1908
Fisher Ministry (ALP)
13.11.1908 – 2.6.1909
Thomas, J
13.11.1908 – 2.6.1909
Deakin Ministry (Protectionist – Free Trade – Tariff Reform Coalition)
2.6.1909 – 29.4.1910
Quick, J (PROT)
2.6.1909 – 29.4.1910
Fisher Ministry (ALP)
29.4.1910 – 24.6.1913
Thomas, J
29.4.1910-14.10.1911
 
 
Frazer, CE
14.10.1911-24.6.1913
Cook Ministry (LIB)
24.6.1913 – 17.9.1914
Wynne, A
24.6.1913 – 17.9.1914
Fisher Ministry (ALP)
17.9.1914 – 27.10.1915
Spence, WG
17.9.1914 – 27.10.1915
Hughes Ministry (ALP)
27.10.1915 – 14.11.1916
Webster, W
27.10.1915 – 14.11.1916
Hughes Ministry (National Labour)
14.11.1916 – 17.2.1917
Webster, W
14.11.1916 – 17.2.1917
Hughes Ministry (Nationalist)
17.2.1917 – 10.1.1918
Webster, W
17.2.1917 – 10.1.1918
Hughes Ministry (Nationalist)
10.1.1918 – 9.2.1923
Webster, W
10.1.1918-3.2.1920
 
 
Wise, GH
4.2.1920 – 21.12.1921
 
 
Poynton, A
21.12.1921 – 5.2.1923
Bruce–Page Ministry (Nationalist – CP Coalition)
9.2.1923 – 22.10.1929
Gibson, WG (CP)
9.2.1923 – 22.10.1929
Scullin Ministry (ALP)
22.10.1929 – 6.1.1932
Lyons, JA
22.10.1929 – 4.2.1931
 
 
Green, AE
4.2.1931-6.1.1932
Lyons Ministry (UAP)
6.1.1932 – 9.11.1934
Fenton, JE
6.1.1932-13.10.1932
 
 
Parkhill, RA
13.10.1932 – 12.10.1934
 
 
McLachlan, Senator AJ
12.10.1934 – 9.11.1934
Lyons Ministry (UAP–CP Coalition)
9.11.1934 – 7.11.1938
McLachlan, Senator AJ
9.11.1934 – 7.11.1938
Lyons Ministry (UAP–CP Coalition)
7.11.1938 – 7.4.1939
Cameron, AG (CP)
7.11.1938 – 7.4.1939
Page Ministry (CP–UAP Coalition)
7.4.1939 – 26.4.1939
Cameron, AG (CP)
7.4.1939 – 26.4.1939
Menzies Ministry (UAP)
26.4.1939 – 14.3.1940
Harrison, EJ
26.4.1939 – 14.3.1940
Menzies Ministry (UAP–CP Coalition)
14.3.1940 – 28.10.1940
Thorby, HVC (CP)
14.3.1940 – 28.10.1940
Menzies Ministry (UAP–CP Coalition)
28.10.1940 – 29.8.1941
McLeay, Senator G
28.10.1940-26.6.1941
 
 
Collins, TJ (CP)
26.6.1941-29.8.1941
Fadden Ministry (UAP–CP Coalition)
29.8.1941 – 7.10.1941
Collins, TJ (CP)
29.8.1941 – 7.10.1941
Curtin Ministry (ALP)
7.10.1941 – 21.9.1943
Ashley, Senator WP
7.10.1941 – 21.9.1943
Curtin Ministry (ALP)
21.9.1943 – 6.7.1945
Ashley, WP (SENATOR?)
21.9.1943 – 6.7.1945
Forde Ministry (ALP)
6.7.1945 – 13.7.1945
Cameron, Senator D
6.7.1945 – 13.7.1945
Chifley Ministry (ALP)
13.7.1945 – 1.11.1946
Cameron, Senator D
13.7.1945 – 1.11.1946
Chifley Ministry (ALP)
1.11.1946 – 19.12.1949
Cameron, Senator D
1.11.1946 – 19.12.1949
Menzies Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
19.12.1949 – 11.5.1951
Anthony, HL (CP)
19.12.1949 – 11.5.1951
Menzies Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
11.5.1951 – 11.1.1956
Anthony, HL (CP)
11.5.1951 – 11.1.1956
Menzies Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
11.1.1956 – 10.12.1958
Davidson, CW (CP)
11.1.1956 – 10.12.1958
Menzies Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
10.12.1958 – 18.12.1963
Davidson, CW (CP)
10.12.1958 – 18.12.1963
Menzies Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
18.12.1963 – 26.1.1966
Hulme, AS
18.12.1963 – 26.1.1966
Holt Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
26.1.1966 – 14.12.1966
Hulme, AS
26.1.1966 – 14.12.1966
Holt Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
14.12.1966 – 19.12.1967
Hulme, AS
14.12.1966 – 19.12.1967
McEwen Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
19.12.1967 – 10.1.1968
Hulme, AS
19.12.1967 – 10.1.1968
Gorton Ministry (LIB-CP Coalition)
10.1.1968 – 28.2.1968
Hulme, AS
10.1.1968 – 28.2.1968
Gorton Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
28.2.1968 – 12.11.1969
Hulme, AS
28.2.1968 – 12.11.1969
Gorton Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
12.11.1969 – 10.3.1971
Hulme, AS
12.11.1969 – 10.3.1971
McMahon Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
10.3.1971 – 5.12.1972
Hulme, AS
10.3.1971 – 5.12.1972
Whitlam Ministry (ALP)
5.12.1972 – 19.12.1972
Barnard, LH
5.12.1972 – 19.12.1972
Whitlam Ministry (ALP)
19.12.1972 – 12.6.1974
Bowen, LF
19.12.1972 – 12.6.1974
Whitlam Ministry (ALP)
12.6.1974 – 11.11.1975
Bishop, Senator R
12.6.1974 – 11.11.1975
Fraser Ministry (LIB–NCP Coalition)
11.11.1975 – 22.12.1975
Nixon, PJ (NCP)
11.11.1975 – 22.12.1975
 
 
Minister for Post and Telecommunications
 
Fraser Ministry (LIB–NCP Coalition)
22.12.1975 – 20.12.1977
Garland, RV
22.12.1975 – 6.2.1976
 
 
Robinson, EL
6.2.1976 - 20.12.1977
Fraser Ministry (LIB–NCP Coalition)
20.12.1977 – 3.11.1980
Staley, AA
20.12.1977 – 3.11.1980
 
 
Minister for Communications
 
Fraser Ministry (LIB–NCP Coalition)
3.11.1980 – 7.5.1982
Sinclair, IMcC (NCP)
3.11.1980 – 7.5.1982
Fraser Ministry (LIB–CP Coalition)
7.5.1982 – 11.3.1983
Brown, NA
7.5.1982 – 11.3.1983
Hawke Ministry (ALP)
11.3.1983 – 13.12.1984
Duffy, MJ
11.3.1983 – 13.12.1984
Hawke Ministry (ALP)
13.12.1984 – 24.7.1987
Duffy, MJ
13.12.1984 – 24.7.1987
 
 
Minister for Transport and Communications
 
Hawke Ministry (ALP)
24.7.1987 – 4.4.1990
Evans, Senator GJ
24.7.1987 – 2.9.1988
 
 
Willis, R
2.9.1988- 4.4.1990
Hawke Ministry (ALP)
4.4.1990 – 20.12.1991
Beazley, KC
4.4.1990 – 9.12.1991
 
 
Kerin, JC
9.12.1991- 20.12.1991
Keating Ministry (ALP)
20.12.1991 – 27.12.1991
Kerin, JC
20.12.1991 – 27.12.1991
Keating Ministry (ALP)
27.12.1991 – 24.3.1993
Richardson, Senator GF
27.12.1991 – 18.5.1992
 
 
Collins, Senator RL
27.5.1992 - 24.3.1993
Keating Ministry (ALP)
24.3.1993 – 11.3.1996
Collins, Senator RL
24.3.1993  - 23.12.1993
 
 
Minister for Communications
 
 
 
Lee, MJ
23.12.1993 – 30.1.1994
 
 
Minister for Communications and the Arts
 
 
 
Lee, MJ
30.1.1994 - 11.3.1996
Howard Ministry (LIB–NPA Coalition)
11.3.1996 – 21.10.1998
Alston, Senator RKR
11.3.1996 - 9.10.1997
 
 
Minister for Communications, the Information Economy and the Arts
 
 
 
Alston, Senator RKR
9.10.1997 - 21.10.1998
 
 
Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts
 
Howard Ministry (LIB–NPA Coalition)
21.10.1998 – 26.11.2001
Alston, Senator RKR
21.10.1998 – 26.11.2001
Howard Ministry (LIB - NPA* Coalition)
26.11.2001 - 26.10.2004
Alston, Senator RKR
26.11.2001  - 7.10.2003
 
 
Williams, DR
7.10.2003 - 18.7.2004
 
 
Coonan, Senator HL
18.7.2004 - 26.10.2004
Howard Ministry (LIB-NP Coalition)
26.10.2004 - 3.12.2007
Coonan, Senator HL
26.10.2004 - 3.12.2007
 
 
Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy
 
Rudd Ministry (Labor)
3.12.07 – 24.06.10
Conroy, Senator SM
3.12.07 – 24.06.10
Gillard Ministry (Labor)
24.06.10 – 28.06.10
Conroy, Senator SM
24.06.10 – 28.06.10
Gillard Ministry (Labor)
28.06.10 – 14.9.2010
Conroy, Senator SM
28.06.10 – 14.9.2010
Gillard Ministry (Labor)
14.9.2010 – 28.06.13
Conroy, Senator SM
14.9.2010 – 28.06.13
Rudd Ministry (Labor)
28.06.13 – 1.07.13
Conroy, Senator SM
28.06.13 – 1.07.13
Rudd Ministry (Labor)
1.07.13 -
Albanese, AN  (Deputy Prime Minister)
1.07.13
 
There are a few additional quirks as follows:
  1. Minister for the Media 12.6.1974 – 11.11.1975 (check Administrative Orders for Responsibilities)
Minister for the Media
 
12.6.1974 to 6.6.1975
McClelland, Senator D
from 6.6.1975 to 11.11.1975
Cass, MH
  1. In 1982 the title seems to have undertaken a very minor change from “Communication” to “Communications”
  2. During the Hawke super-ministry of Transport and Communications there was a period with a junior Minister for Telecommunications
Minister for Telecommunications and Aviation Support
2.9.1988 – 28.3.1989
Punch, GF
 
 
6.4.1989 - 4.4.1990
Kelly, RJ
 
 
 
 
 
 
  1. During the Howard Ministry, Senator Ian Campbell was Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts from 21.10.1998 - 26.11.2001, (I had recollection that Chris Pyne did it later but it does’t appear in the APH list)
  2. During the Rudd Ministry from 1.07.13 there were in addition
                Senator Kate Lundy, Minister Assisting for the Digital Economy
                Sharon Bird, Minister for Regional Communications
                Ed Husic, Parliamentary Secretary for Broadband

Friday, June 14, 2013

Data Sets

Just an interesting post from Joshua Gans about open economic data sets. 

As I said the other day - we also need open models when used in papers.

Saturday, June 08, 2013

On Abbott

A new story today about old Abbott punches. 

Astute readers of this blog know that the earlier accusations about Barbara Ramjan were referenced by a comment here before they appeared in the press.

The single greatest criticism of Labor in Government is that they have created the condition under which it looks like Tony Abott may well become Prime Minister.

My humble opinion is that he is more morally and intellectually totally unsuited to the position than any of his predecessors - and some of them were quite dodgy. 

For a quick review see Mungo McCallum's The Good, the Bad & the Unlikely.

On cartel parties

I have taken to deleting my Latin postscript on most posts since I currently work for a Labor left Senator.  But I've left it on because of the topic of the day - which in the SMH editorial is that Labor must reform or die.

The problem is that every criticism of Labor in that editorial - narrow base, preselecting professional politicians, factions and fractions - apply equally to the other large political grouping.

This is a systemic condition, not one that applies to just Labor.  Katz describes the emergence of the cartel party.  I have elsewhere described this evolution as a consequence of the speed of communication.  The cartel party has now come to its logical conclusion - parties that as organisations are built only on power and influence, and as political entities merely reflect "the mob."

The "solution" is not some reactionary return to mass movement parties, that won't happen.

But the health of democratic states is for the political process to deliver the next form of organisation ....

Novae Meridianae Demetae Dexter delenda est

Academic publishing and data

Two pieces in today's SMH on economics raise some interesting questions about how research should be done in the 21st century - on which I think I've written before.

The first is another story on the Reinhart and Rogoff paper that make the prediction that once a debt to GDP ratio hit 90% a country would fall off a cliff.  That turned out to be a conclusion reached only because of an error in a spreadsheet. 

Part of the stoush is about how hard it was for people to test the original paper - no one could replicate the result.  There is a very simple 21st century solution that ALL the data and calculations in support of a paper should be available on the web. 

But it also raises the whole validity of the "peer reviewed research" model.  The paper was peer reviewed - which didn't prohibit the error.  Our good friend Thomas Kuhn and his paradigms would easily explain that - the "small government" conclusion of the paper would have matched the dominant thinking of the relevant journal.

Before the "real sciences" crow, they are not immune to the same errors. Be they fraud like William McBride's or a stuff up. 

But the other question then emergs is about availability of data itself.  The other article reports on this weekends Triple -j Hottest 100 of the last twenty years and cites two researchers who have "analysed voting trends from every Hottest 100."  This got me excited because I have tried a couple of times to get the core voting data set from the ABC, but they won't release it.

It turns out that the researchers don't seem to have had it either.  An earlier article reveals his was only an econometric study on presence, and possibly rank, in the Hottest 100 - not votes.  The conclusions of that study are hardly surprising given the research about influence effects mentioned in another blogpost about the Hottest 100.

The votes is an interesting topic because it would provide a good dataset to test the long-tail thesis which is often used to argue that in the online world we have no reason to fear media concentration.  If the thesis holds the votes have a power-law distribution over the whole set of songs, if not the votes suddenly decline faster at some point. Where that point is is more than just of passing interest.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Lobbying

An interesting study has been published that has analysed the lobbying activity of Enron.  I haven't read it in detail yet, but it is an interesting methodology based on textual analysis of e-mails.  The data is only available because of the collapse of Enron.

The interesting part of the conclusion is that the focus on effort is not on elections, but rule making.

In studying the attention Enron devoted to various political activities through its e-mails, we find very little evidence consistent with the transactional approach to political influence. Election-related e-mails make up only 1% of Enron's political e-mails—and even within that 1%, there is scant evidence that Enron's staffers considered themselves to be buying the support of candidates. Instead, we observe Enron's political attention to be focused primarily on monitoring and formal participation in rule making and other executive-branch proceedings.

This is unsurprising to a professional, but I gather it is to academics.

The second part is the revelation in all its glory of the regulatory information assymetry problem. 

Certainly, Enron had the capacity to make political contributions, and it did so. But perhaps its greater resource was its monopoly on policy-relevant information about electricity, natural gas, and communications markets, information that policy makers could not easily obtain elsewhere.

Interestingly one of the things that happened as a consequence of the greater faith in markets in the last quarter of the last century was that Government decided to outsource a lot of policy research activity. Also "red tape reduction" has been used to limit mandatory reporting. 

Together these increase the power of the industry lobbyist and their "monopoly on policy-relevant informnation."

Unfortunately this is a topic on which no one ever speaks.

Saturday, March 02, 2013

On being Prime Minister

In the SMH today Anne Summers relays the distressing state of political reporting.  It is another article about how the reporting is about who is leading in assessments of who people intend to vote for instead of spending any time in reporting on what the politicians stand for to help voters to decide who to vote for.

The articles in the same News Review section by Jacquekine Maley, Peter Hartcher and Lenore Taylor all fell into the category being critiqued by Summers.

But Summers concluding point is that John Howard faced similar poll results six months out from the 1998 and 2004 elections and yet won.

Now conventional wisdom is that John Howard was a "conviction politician" and this is what got him over the line.  However, Howard was also a poll driven politician.  The subtle difference may be that Howard used the polls to nuance how he sold his convictions whereas the perception is that Labor in the modern mold uses polls to tell it what its convictions should be.

Unfortunately when Julia Gillard does talk about her convictions - being the leader of a labour party - Hartcher for the second week in a row dresses this up as class warfare or politics of envy.  This time it is specifically describing Ms Gillard as a sectional rme Minister rather than a Prime Minister for all Australians.

And here really lies the rub.  The Prime Minister really is a conviction politician.  She is a firm believer in the "equality of opportunity" model of modern Labor as cast by Gough Whitlam.  She is talking to everyone when she says that - but the conservatives successfully frame it so that each individual voter thinks the PM is talking about everyone but them. 

There is a way for the PM to communicate the message.  But it would help if the editor of the SMH paid attention to what one of its columnists wrote.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Communications

It is really hard to describe what I do, either now particularly or more generally over the last few years.

Somehow or other it boils down to being something about communications - at least I find I hang out with a lot of communication people now.  That includes both those who are crafted a message and those who are trying to report it.

In a conversation with one such person last night we were discussing a common issue of how people charged with "doing something" - be it informing a community, formulating a policy or organising a workplace - think of "communications" as the piece at the end of the process.  Kind of like that stage in the car production line where the paint is sprayed on.

But really that's like thinking that what the car looks like is determined by the coat of paint, rather than all the elements of styling including the trim.  And the styling itself is part of the design of the performance of the car - be that the old "safe but boxy" of Volvo's of old, the modern SUV, the family sedan or the sleek sports car.

If we think about how we get anything done in this world it is by our ability to influence others.  Communication is the core activity of achieving that.

It probably doesn't help that all those not actively engaged in communications think in terms of the sender-receiver, message-medium model.

To be truly successful communication needs to be an integral part of the design, not just a decoration at the end.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

A labour party

Last night in her address to the AWU conference Julia Gillard outlined in a very short statement what it is that the party she leads stands for.

At the relevant point she said;

The watch-words of this year; the watch-words of our Labor cause; the watch-words of this nation’s future: jobs, opportunity, fairness, being stronger, being smarter. Making sure that the next generation enjoys a better life than we do. Getting work pumping through the work troughs and the factories and the offices now. Creating the economy that will give back prosperity to the next generation of Australians and beyond. That is our mission, that is our cause in 2013 and beyond 2013.

I come here to this union’s gathering as a Labor leader. I’m not the leader of a party called the progressive party. I’m not the leader of a party called the moderate party. I’m not the leader of a party even called the socialist democratic party. I’m a leader of the party called the Labor Party deliberately because that is what we come from. That is what we believe in and that is who we are.

I gather there has already been on-line commentary suggesting that the PM said the party wasn't a "progressive" party. Clearly that is not the case. 

What she did was distinguished the party from just any old progressive party by tieing it very clearly to the interests of labour versus capital.  Useful for those who want to consider deeply the question of "what the ALP stands for."

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Observation on politics, and on the observation of politics

An interesting piece by Deborah Snow in this morning's SMH outlines the tawdry career of Ian McDonald.  It notes a speech by John Faulkner that goes as far to suggest the McDonald had long been a "plant" in the left. 

The better and real story is the question of how people arrive in politics.  At the first entry to politics a decision ismade about what course to follow.  For some like Malcolm Turnbull and Tony Abbott that even amounted to a genuine choice of party - as there were aspects of both that appealed to them.

For others it comes down to where in a chameleon like space you can position yourself to get into a position of influence.  If in the 60s and 70s you wanted a position of power on a left dominated campus the easiest choice was to clothe yourself in the language of the radical left.  It is not a hard language to learn, and its strength has never been its consistency.

This appears to be the path chosen by Ian McDonald.  From there it was a path of patronage against a backdrop of a NSW left that was divided between so-called hard and soft left - where in the end it was your loyalty rather than your beliefs that mattered.

Rodney Cavalier has long emphasised how the union block votes, made bigger through the union consolidations, are the biggest pieces in this game.  Their role in the rise of Ian McDonald is laid out in the article.

Do not think ill of the individual union leaders involved (thoughI am starting to suspect that Arthur Gietzelt's purported role as an unreformed communist inside the ALP has yet more chapters to unfold), this is the system.

It is nice to see discussion in the party talking about the end of block voting and factional tieing in the Parliamentary party, but the issues in NSW did not come from the Parliamentary party.

Anhow, the observation I make here is that the McDonald's of this world - and they appear in all sides of politics - emerge from an environment in which one's choice of politics can be determined by where you can get ahead, not by what you believe.

The juxstoposition of this is in another SMH item by Peter Hartcher.  Hartcher tries to run a line about Gillard Government strategy, saying;

In short, Labor is seeking an old-fashioned, populist, left-wing fight based on envy and resentment. The usual shorthand is "class warfare".

This is where you get to when those who observe politics only perceive it as a contest for power not a choice of approach.  The divide between the two major camps has always been about the difference between the capitalists and the workers.  The fusion that became the very first Liberal Party at the start of the twentieth-century started its life as the "anti-socialist" party, and right the way through to the seventies that side of politics was distinguished by how much of a centralised planned state they were prepared to accomodate to keep socialism at bay. 

Through the 80s and 90s that rhetoric did change as the weaknesses of that approach to a planned economy were revealed.  The "left" more broadly has struggled to reframe its agenda in the wake of that change.  The dominant ideology - despite even the catastrophe of the free-market inspired Global Financial Crisis - is now of free markets not planned economies.  The grand story of the history of the left iks not "envy and resentment", it is about equity and fairness.

To suggest that the approach of Gillard's team is different to Rudd is extraordinary in the extreme.  It was Rudd who penned essays for The Monthly railing against free market ideology.

And the lesson of Hawke and Keating is not that Labor should shun its historic role, but that Labor needs to understand the changing workplace and exactly who are "the workers."  The "sole-employer, self-employed small-business voter" of which Paul Keating spoke is not a capitalist, they are just workers in different employment relations.

The true genius of John Howard was his ability to defy"public choice theory" - that is the need to appeal to the self-interest of the median voter.  The Howard "aspirationals" are people who would like to imagine they are something other than they are, they are the same people of whom Keating spoke.  But they vote Liberal not because it is in their interests, but because it is in the interests of the people they aspire to be.  What they don't understand is that the policies they then vote for are the policies that make it harder for them to achieve their ambitions.

Labor's challenge is not to walk away from the historic role of the left, its challenge is to explain how its commitment to equity and fairness best represents all those in society affected by the established power relationships.

Finally as a last observation on observations it is a great pity that in her column Lenore Taylor didn't note that Tony Abbott's street walk in Eden-Monaro was a relaunch of a policy from October 2012.  I wonder which was of more interest to people in a mostly rural electorate, CCTV cameras on city streets or the announcement a week earlier of faster speeds forv the NBN fixed wireless and satellite services?