Labor lost on a crusade for fairness - what does that say about us?

Authored by theage.com.au and submitted by mollydooka

But he and others cautioned that it was too early to assume the community was shifting to the right because poor campaigning, and a Coalition scare campaign, might also explain the rejection of Labor and its policy platform. Asked at the outset of the campaign whether Australians were innately conservative, Mr Shorten expressed his faith in the willingness of voters to embrace his changes to tax concessions. Bill Shorten and wife Chloe return home after a disastrous election result. Credit:Darrian Traynor "I think the Australian people can detect unfairness at a long distance. I think they are more egalitarian than we give them credit for," he said in an interview with The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald. But the swing to the Liberals suggested voters were sceptical of policies to raise $56 billion from changes to dividend rules, $32 billion from negative gearing and $30 billion over a decade from superannuation.

Loading The result proved that Australians were more conservative than many thought, Institute of Public Affairs chief John Roskam said. "It shows that Australia is still economically and politically quite a diverse country," he said. "And it shows, as we've seen with Trump and Brexit, that Australian politics is realigning and the heartland of both parties is changing." While Labor benefited from swings in wealthier urban areas, adding 5 per cent to its vote in the Liberal electorates of Goldstein and North Sydney, it lost ground in areas on the edges of the cities and suffered big swings against it in Queensland. It was in danger of losing the electorate of Macquarie, on the western edge of Sydney.

Social researcher Rebecca Huntley said issues such as climate change were not working in Labor's favour as they had done in the past, forcing it to reconsider how it campaigned compared to the way Kevin Rudd galvanised support on the issue a dozen years ago. "It divides people more," Dr Huntley said. "The environment is not necessarily helping the Labor vote in the way it did in 2007." Dr Huntley said a belief in the fair go and equality remained strong but that Labor had not explained its tax agenda effectively enough. Voters generally considered the Coalition to be the best to manage the economy, she said, and this meant Labor had to be doubly careful to explain its tax and economic policies with a compelling message.

"The big message here is that the Labor Party's economic message has to be slogan-ready because they're already behind the eight ball," she said. Professor Markus said the outcome suggested Labor ran an ineffective campaign when it needed to take Australians with it on difficult reforms such as the tax changes. "It's overly simplistic to think of it in terms of the Australian people being conservative," he said. "Whenever people look back, Labor will have to ask itself whether it went counter to the proven requirement for an effective campaign."

On social issues, Professor Markus said, a large proportion of the population was progressive when asked about questions such as same-sex marriage or euthanasia, although Western Australia and Queensland were always likely to be more conservative. "This counters the narrative that it's about conservatism – it's about effective campaigning." Greenpeace Australia Pacific chief David Ritter countered the idea that voters were not as interested in climate change as his group and others had assumed during the campaign. "The issue is practical, not ideological," he said. "There's no doubt Australians want action on climate – people love renewable energy and nobody wants to live in a world of cascading disasters."

Loading Mr Ritter and others pointed to the success of independent candidate Helen Haines in the regional Victorian electorate of Indi as evidence that action on climate change resonated with voters outside the big cities. Mr Shorten acknowledged the challenges with his policy plans on Sunday. "There's lots of lessons for Labor to learn from yesterday's result and I know that my party will," he said. The party's deputy leader, Tanya Plibersek, suggested the problem was the tactical campaign plan rather than the policy platform.

CanYouJar on May 19th, 2019 at 22:37 UTC »

I don't think the amount of policy was Labors undoing. I think the way the Labor party focused on their policy, which policies they pushed into the mainstream, and how they did it was ultimately the problem.

The Labor party, for too much of the election were letting the right dictate the debate, this is always going to be fundamentally toxic to Labor's campaign. What they needed to do was shirk that, get on the front foot and be more convincing.

One example I'd have preferred is the franking credit debate. Instead of being framed as they're coming for old peoples money, which inevitably happened it needed to be somewhat divorced from that with a bold plan/vision. For instance this would have been great. "We're going to fund free public education for every child in Australia until they graduate year 12 (or university), also we're funding this by doing x x and x".

Having bold vision is what this country needs. Labor need not recoil back with just a few policies next election, that would be naive. Labor can't expect to sway the centre when the centre is always moving right because they allow the debate to swing away from them.

Ghostbuttser on May 19th, 2019 at 22:18 UTC »

I think a Lord Vetinari quote is pretty relevant for times like these "They think they want good government and justice for all, Vimes, yet what is it they really crave, deep in their hearts? Only that things go on as normal and tomorrow is pretty much like today"

Chad_Thundercock_420 on May 19th, 2019 at 21:59 UTC »

Checkout this map

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/ng-interactive/2019/may/18/live-results-for-the-2019-australian-election-track-the-votes

You can see most of the major cities went pretty heavily Labor. Sydney city was 70% labor. As was Melbourne, Perth, Hobart, Brisbane CBD.

The standouts in Sydney were Morrison's district which he won overwhelmingly (69.4% I'm impressed) and Northern suburbs.

NT went labor probably because the libs sold the port to China.

I can understand people who own property on Sydney beaches voting libs it makes sense but I'm confused why the rural voters think he'll help them.

Either way the people have spoken now we get to see if they were right in the coming years.

Edit: Brisbane surrounding suburbs not the CBD they went liberal.