MUNGO MACCALLUM. Politics is an integral part of sport

Oct 2, 2017

“Keep politics out of sport.”  No doubt this piece of graffiti appeared some two thousand years ago on the walls of Olympia, when the Roman emperors were accused of fixing the chariot race. Certainly it has appeared on and off ever since as conservatives pretend that sport is some sacred activity that can be divorced from the messy business of being part of the society in which it takes place.

Thus the latest beat up from Tony Abbott, who objects to the NRL’s choice of rapper Macklemore’s hit song Same Love as part of its grand final program. Many years ago the same objection about politics impinging on sport was raised when John Williamson’s ditty Rip Rip Woodchip was included in the celebrations. As that other sporting icon, Yogi Berra, might have put it, déjà vu all over again.

The fact is that politics is an integral part of sport, which is why politicians gouge and grovel to gain free tickets at matches where they can parade their credentials as being in touch with the real Australia. Indeed, Abbott goes even further with his annual Pollie Pedal, a charity event apparently designed largely to enhance his physique in lycra.

And others have taken an even more decisive role – remember the international boycotts against South Arica, and the furore when the McMahon government ordered the RAAF to ferry the all-white Springbok team around the country. Even before then a courageous group of seven rebel Wallabies had refused to play against the racist regime, and shortly afterwards the untouchable Sir Donald Bradman canceled the forthcoming cricket tour planned for the following summer.

A rebel tour took place, but even the diehard South Africans realized that it wasn’t the real thing. The sporting boycotts added serious weight to the economic boycotts which came into place and in the end Nelson Mandela was freed, and his country welcomed back into the international fold. The point is that politics in sport can be very effective, which is why people like Abbott fear and oppose it.

But it has become a part of Australian life: just about all the big sporting institutions have taken stands against local racism, sexism and domestic violence and now have programs for inclusiveness and diversity as part of their modus operandi.

And by and large the public have accepted and even welcomed this progress towards a more tolerant and decent culture — what Abbott undoubtedly derides as political correctness. As always, the man is speaking with forked tongue: what he really objects to is not the politics per se, but the political messages he does not like. Which is okay; he does not have to listen to them if he doesn’t want to. But when he argues that no one else should be allowed to either, it looks perilously like an attack on free speech.

His colleague (well, up to a point) George Brandis quickly slapped him down but in one sense he had already made his point: enough controversy was generated by the Abbott-starved media to provide yet another distraction, yet another addition to the misleading and deceptive scare campaign with which he hopes to achieve – well what?

Certainly to irritate, exasperate, and undermine Malcolm Turnbull, but also, presumably, to make his target audience uncomfortable and not only at the NRL grand final. Keep politics out of sport – indeed, keep it out of everything. Just do what Tony Abbott tells you: this is not about politics, but about divine revelation.

Mungo MacCallum is Mungo MacCallum.

Share and Enjoy !

Subscribe to John Menadue's Newsletter
Subscribe to John Menadue's Newsletter

 

Thank you for subscribing!