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a year of polishing the surface does not change the rotten core....The unplumbed depths of Peter Dutton cynical politics should be a matter of deep concern to genuine political conservatives across Australia. Whoever those people are (at present they appear to be in hiding), its time they distanced themselves from what the Liberal Party is becoming under Duttons leadership. The political cynicism of Peter Dutton and the death of conservatism in Australia August 27, 2023
What should a genuinely conservative political party be like in the context of contemporary Australia? Modern conservatism has been greatly influenced by the writings of the Anglo-Irish intellectual, Edmund Burke (1729-1797) who was an MP in the British parliament from 1766 to 1794. Burke believed that society was a richly woven web of human relationships. Radical change would threaten the delicate balance of those relationships, possibly leading to their collapse. While acknowledging that reforms were necessary, he argued that they should be introduced cautiously, piecemeal and gently, giving people time to become accustomed to new arrangements in society. However, Burke was by no means what Marx would call a dead hand on the march of history. He was a passionate advocate for Irish independence, much to George IIIs annoyance and that of dyed-in-the-wool Tories. His stand won him the enmity of rapacious English landlords in Ireland. He supported the American colonists’ demands for no taxation without representation. He was one of those rare politicians who hold firmly to their moral principles, unswayed by critics and opponents. Policy gradualism, a deep respect for enduring social institutions, and the valuing of the traditions of diverse communities are what characterise genuine conservatives today. They are experts in what the philosopher Charles Taylor calls the politics of recognition, acknowledging and enjoying the historical integrity and plurality of cultural differences, while supporting policies that protect and nurture the cohesion of the always fragile balancing of society. They shun the politics of division and pay-back. They are unmoved by glib ideologies like neoliberalism. Is there evidence of genuine political conservatism present in Australia today? We should expect to find it as a significant element, a persuasive presence, in the Liberal Party. However, when we look at contemporary Liberal leaders, there is no sign of a Burkean influence, much less of an understanding of the philosophical bases of conservative ideas in their political imaginings. Instead they are the bitter proponents of what can only be understood as reactionary politics, or the politics of negative expediency and ideological dogmatism. The fact is that the contemporary Liberal Party of Australia has become a sad relic of what a genuinely conservative party should be. Appropriated by religious zealots, neoliberal ideologues, and wall-eyed reactionaries, it is now a dangerously illiberal and divisive force in Australian politics. Its reactionary policies (they are more like slogans) echo many of the alarming restrictions that the Republican Party is imposing on women, ethnic minorities, unions, and the LGBQI+ communities in the USA. Nowhere is this more evident than in Liberal leader Peter Duttons cynical approach to politics. Outflanking John Howard, he has become the most anti-conservative politician Australia has had to endure since the end of World War II. He is a typical reactionary, incapable of offering critical insights of governmental proposals, only insults, never providing practical alternatives. Policy negativism is his mantra. He has no inspiring way forward for Australias advancement to offer to voters. While critiquing government policy is the job of an opposition leader, it has to be based on a cogent alternative policy program. This is glaringly absent from Duttons agenda. We have no idea what he would propose as the alternative government. In fact, there is simply no alternative, no policy vision, being offered in the grim Duttonian scheme of political things. Duttons campaign against the Voice to Parliament referendum is grim evidence of his cynical politics. There is no principled element in his No campaigning. He is bent on dividing the country in order to defeat the proposed constitutional protection for an Indigenous Voice able to advise the parliament. It is indicative of politicalnarcism, of wanting to seizepower by any means. He has no sympathy for, or understanding of the destructive racial divide that has resulted in so much misery for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders ever since the arrival of the first fleet in 1788. His opposition to the Voice to Parliament can only be understood as coming from entrenched racism. Weve seen this rear its hideous face before for example, in his walk-out from Kevin Rudds apology speech in the Australian parliament, in his claims about African youths frightening away restaurant goers in Melbourne, in his sarcastic remarks about South Pacific leaders coming late to a meeting with him and other Australian officials. There is a stridency in his critique of the Voice, echoing elements of Nazi propaganda in the past, and this should be alarming to genuine conservative as well as all fair-minded Australians. Implied in his negativism to almost any policy proposed by the Albanese government is a resentment of the fact that he and his Coalition MPs are no longer in power. Its as if he cant believe that what he stood for, and supported, during the shocking years of the Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison governments has been rejected by Australian voters. Saying no comes naturally to him. It is his only recourse. There is no ethical depth or philosophical gravitas driving his politics, just a knee-jerk response to anything that seems to him to be a rejection of the Liberal Party that he now heads, dragging it in his wake the right on the Australian political spectrum. This demonstrates that the contemporary Liberal Party is neither liberal nor conservative. The unspeakable cruelty of the Robo Debt scandal, the maltreatment of asylum seekers, the sports (and other) rorts, the devastating revelations about the corrupt practices of private consultancies, the abject failure to respond intelligently to the dire challenges of climate change, potential corruption in the ranks of Liberal and Coalition MPs (we await the findings of the NACC), and the multi-ministerial self-appointments of Scot Morrison all constitute a gaping wound on the recent history of Australian politics. Dutton was a major contributor, implicitly and explicitly, to this sad era which has brought about the death of political conservatism in this country. It is likely that Malcolm Fraser was the last genuine conservative in Australian politics. True, the manner in which he came to power, following the grotesque gubernatorial sacking of Gough Whitlam, was uncharacteristically anti-conservative. However, his welcoming of Vietnamese boat people after the Vietnam war, his maintenance of the Whitlam governments approach to Indigenous land rights, his championing of multiculturalism, his standing up to Margaret Thatcher over the old Rhodesia and apartheid in South Africa, and his opposition to John Howards doctrinaire neoliberalism demonstrate his ethically and philosophically grounded understanding of what it means to be a genuine conservative. To their eternal credit, Malcolm and Tammy Fraser walked away from the Liberal Party, horrified by what it had become under Howard and his successors especially, but not only, in regard toasylum seekers. All genuine conservatives (if there are any such people left in the party) should follow the Frasers example and quit the Liberal Party altogether. Duttons cynical politics now hold sway. The Liberal Party has become an ugly refuge for recalcitrant reactionaries, leaving the Australian body politic much the poorer.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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hard heart....
Peter Dutton has a particular view on children born in this country of parents who had sought asylum after entering Australia without the proper paperwork. ‘Spud’ called them Anchor Babies.
What ‘Spud’ was trying to imply was that asylum seekers who had babies, frequently whilst in detention, did so for the purpose of using their babies to ‘anchor’ their ability to stay in Australia.
This is nonsense as the The Australian Citizenship Act does not confer Australian citizenship on a person simply by virtue of them being born in Australia. Section 12 of the act states :
Citizenship by birth
(1) A person born in Australia is an Australian citizen if and only if :
(a) a parent of the person is an Australian citizen, or a permanent resident, at the time the person is born; or
(b) the person is ordinarily resident in Australia throughout the period of 10 years beginning on the day the person is born.
So the notion of ‘anchor babies’ as applied to the ‘Biloela family’ is a mischievous fallacy promoted by the Morrison government as Australian law does not allow the parents to use their Australian born babies – Tharunicaa and Kopika – as an automatic right to residency. However, the minister does have discretion to allow them to stay but this is rarely if ever exercised : this government it seems would prefer to fight the matter through the courts and in the meantime hold the family in detention, at a reported cost of six million dollars a year
Now three year old Tharunicaa is in hospital in Perth, she had reportedly been unwell for ten days with high temperatures, vomiting and diarrhoea, as her family called for more medical help. It now appears that she has untreated pneumonia that led to a blood infection.
Tharunicaa, together with her parents and her sister, Kopika, have been in detention on Christmas Island since August 2019.They are the only two children in immigration detention in Australia.
The family had initially settled in the Queensland town of Biloela where they were welcomed and quickly became contributing members of the community until early one morning their home was raided and the family was taken into custody by Australian Border Force personnel in March 2018 – they have been detained since.
The family has been engaged in legal appeals since 2012. Tharunicaa’s father and mother are both Sri Lankan nationals who arrived in Australia by boat seeking asylum in 2012 and 2013 respectively. They arrived without visas and are considered in law to be “unlawful maritime arrivals.” Although Tharunicaa and six-year-old Kopika were born in Australia, they too are “unlawful maritime arrivals”.
Former Home Affairs minister Peter Dutton (now Defence minister but with considerable authority within Cabinet) has repeatedly said the family is not owed protection. They are part of a caseload who had their claims for refugee status determined and denied under a “fast track” process. The Australian Human Rights Commission has found significant issues with the “fast track” process and has called for a compassionate response to this family.
The current drawn out legal action centres around the obligations of the government to consider whether Tharunicaa can apply for a visa in Australia. This can only happen if the new Home Affairs Minister (Karen Andrews) personally intervenes, which it seems she must in the prevailing circumstances.
Only minister Andrews or Immigration Minister Alex Hawke have the power to allow the family to live in the community whether it be on Christmas Island or in Biloela on bridging visas. Andrews recently said she was still taking advice on whether she would allow them to live in the community. Her difficulty will come from Dutton who is taking this issue personally. But both he and Morrison are alert to public calls for this to end. They would both be aware that in 2018, following a similar medivac situation a Queensland coroner found delays in diagnosing and removing Iranian asylum seeker Hamid Kehazaei from Manus Island directly contributed to his death from septicaemia.
Karen Andrews, as the senior minister responsible, is under increasing public pressure to do more for the family and she should now accept an offer by our more compassionate neighbours, New Zealand, who have indicated that they are happy to take the family and resettle them.
However, we know from past experience that what seems sensible, humane and compassionate doesn’t necessarily intrude on the stubborn intransigence of ‘Spud’ Dutton. Morrison could step in but he is wary of the Right wing faction led by Dutton. So this could be a big test of his authority as prime minister.
Whatever happens, the next few days are critical and this little girl should she survive, cannot be returned to detention on Christmas Island or elsewhere.
https://theaimn.com/the-life-of-a-little-girl-and-our-dignity-as-a-nation-hang-in-the-balance/
The Sri Lankan 'Biloela' family have been granted permanent Australian visas after a lengthy community battle against immigration officials.
The Nadesalingam family were given the news at their Queensland home by the Department of Home Affairs on Friday afternoon after a four-year immigration battle.
Priya Nadaraja, Nades Murugappan and their daughters Kopika, 7, and Tharnicaa, 4, will now call Australia their permanent home after years at the centre of a debate about Australia's immigration policy.
It comes following a personal intervention in their case by [LABOR] immigration minister Andrew Giles.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11083683/Biloela-family-granted-PERMANENT-visas-Australia-bringing-end-years-long-saga.html
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.