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Pearls and Irritations

John Menadue's Public Policy Journal

Politics
Policy
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Climate
Defence
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Asia
Palestine-Israel
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Letters
March 11, 2022

Asian Media - New South Korea president closer to U.S., Japan

Ugliest South Korean presidential election, remembering Myanmar, Xis virtual tip-off and racial profiling of scientists in America

January 8, 2022

Space invaders: better broadband or sky vandalism?

We must ensure that private companies placing objects in space dont create another environmental disaster like the plastic pollution in our oceans.

December 14, 2021

A curate's egg: measuring the successes of Australia's vaccine rollout

Against the odds, Australia’s vaccine rollout has been largely successful. In the first part of a two-part article, Robin Boyle reviews what worked.

December 3, 2021

Not in our name: Australia's tacit support for Palestinian apartheid

Australias abstention from a United Nations vote on protection of natural resources in Gaza, the West Bank and the Golan Heights from Israeli exploitation has been condemned.

October 15, 2021

Dodging the debt trap: a better way to compete with China in our region

Australia could use a small fraction of the money committed to nuclear-powered submarines to co-operate with our friends in a more cost-effective and quicker way to check China’s regional influence.

November 14, 2020

Singing outside the chorus on "Fratelli Tutti"

I suspect that I may be singing outside the chorus, but I must confess that I was a little disappointed in the recent Encyclical of Pope Francis, Fratelli Tutti.

December 19, 2024

Palestinian voices silenced: 14 months of ABC’s RN Breakfast Coverage

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) is widely regarded as one of the most trusted brands in Australian media. This trust is underpinned by the ABC's editorial policies. Among these policies, the principles of independence, impartiality, and diversity of perspectives are foundational.

December 8, 2024

A Christmas truce in Ukraine

There should be a Christmas truce/ceasefire (Orthodox Christmas or western doesn’t matter) in the war between Russia and Ukraine.

November 9, 2024

Trump’s election triggers anxiety – Asian Media Report

In Asian media this week: World must brace ‘for extreme chaos’. Plus: Beijing pivots towards military junta; Yoon now engulfed in political strife; Haggling intensifies to decide on Japan’s leader; Indonesia’s debate over joining BRICS; Anwar Ibrahim always one of the elite._

March 8, 2024

Two cheeks of the same backside: Galloways UK victory foretells ALP spanking

The Albanese ALP (Australian Labor Party) has become a true peoples government in the sense that its timidity restricts it from doing just about anything that might cause a political ripple.

March 7, 2024

A life sentence: The impact of wrongful convictions on family and friends

Picture a courtroom scenario, the accused and his family members have eyes on the jury foreman who is about to announce the verdict. The accused knows he is guilty, but is hoping for luck to come his way through the jurys decision. The foreman speaks: Guilty.

February 21, 2024

Dutton oversaw largest rise in asylum applications in history. They came by air

The arrival last week of a boat carrying 24 potential asylum seekers, and possibly another one carrying 13, sent Peter Dutton into his standard boat arrivals scare mode. The usual suspects at the Murdoch press went into a frenzy of panic with Chris Kenny calling it a national dilemma.

February 11, 2024

Charging for aged care at home splitting hairs and shifting loads

A number of commentators have proposed that the Aged Care Funding Taskforce would, and indeed should, recommend increasing user charges. With particular reference to services delivered through Commonwealth Home Care Program (CHSP), this step would be achieved by splitting care services and ordinary daily living supports; the former would be subsidised and clients would pay for the latter if delivered through CHSP or turn to the market. Seems simple? A closer look at CHSP suggests any attempt to increase revenue from client contributions might not be worth the effort and give rise to several policy and practical contradictions.

January 28, 2024

Populism and the fight for democracy

Liberal democracy is facing its most perilous time since the rise of fascism a century ago. Between the Global Financial Crisis and now, the number of liberal democracies has fallen by a third, as the drift towards populist authoritarian leadership gathers pace.

November 27, 2023

Hysteria: Putting the 12 asylum seeker boat arrivals into context

While there is much hysteria from Peter Dutton and the Murdoch press associated with the 12 asylum seekers who recently arrived by boat (its a catastrophe apparently), there was less excitement about a new post-pandemic monthly record for primary asylum applications set in October at 2,322. That is now approaching the monthly record of over 2,700 asylum applications set when Peter Dutton was Minister. It seems asylum seekers arriving by boat are much more exciting than those who arrive by plane.

January 9, 2023

How 20 ratbag Republicans could Trump 200 party loyalists

The farce occurring in the US House of Representatives, where a small group of far-right Republicans are seeking to veto the overwhelming choice of their colleagues for the partys congressional leadership, may well be resolved by the weekend in the traditional American parliamentary way, with bribes, deals, committee placements and stiff-arming.

November 14, 2022

Medicare compliance review unlikely to succeed

Minister for Health Mark Butler has given in to pressure from some media outlets and on 5 November announced an independent review into Medicare compliance to report in four months a requirement which means it will struggle to deliver on its main terms of reference.

October 23, 2022

Qatar FIFA World Cup: West silent on human rights

Competitors at the FIFA World Cup will grace stadia built in near-slave labour conditions and enjoy the receptions and hospitality of a state with a brutal penal system.

December 21, 2021

Through US base at Pine Gap, Australia is complicit in US war crimes

As Australia locks itself into the US military machine, we increase the risks of retaliatory attacks on Pine Gap in the Northern Territory.

November 12, 2021

Frank and fearless? The insidious politicisation of the public service

Public servants’ independence continues to be eroded by the use of consultants, closer control of communications and weakening of checks and balances.

March 23, 2021

Anchorage: Emerging Biden Policy on China

In his first few months, President Biden has had to focus on settling in his new administration and beginning to tackle the extremely challenging domestic issues he has inherited especially Covid 19. His new team has begun to flesh out the general themes of foreign and defence policy set out in his election campaign. Biden has insisted on a cautious and systematic approach to the development of policy towards China and North Korea for which the Anchorage meeting has been an important step.

April 2, 2025

Immigration policy and the federal election

Peter Dutton is desperate to talk about immigration during the current election campaign. That will largely be about pointing fingers at Labor, sometimes misleading fingers as he did during his budget reply and not providing details of his own policies.

March 10, 2025

America's day of infamy

While all the chaotic fireworks were exploding from Trump’s Oval Office — from Canada as the 51st State to Gaza as his waterfront Club Med — one little cracker caused barely a flicker of interest in a bedazzled media.

March 8, 2025

The key to saving Whyalla and seizing massive national security rewards? A clean commodities trading company

The Albanese government’s decision to partner with South Australia to save the Whyalla Steelworks is one of profound significance for Australia’s national security. The governments’ vision — to turn Whyalla into a pioneering green iron and steel facility and capture global first-mover advantage — is hugely ambitious. Done right it has the potential to boost Australia’s economic, energy, environmental, social and military security simultaneously. This could be a game-changer for Australia’s sovereign industrial capability and future export competitiveness in an increasingly uncertain geostrategic environment.

November 22, 2024

Are you better off than 2020?

The question draws from what Trump effectively used in the closing weeks of the recent USA elections. Liberal-National Party (LNP) leader Peter Dutton is exploring a similar approach to winning government in the approaching Australian election. Employer groups are preparing to help him. Will Labor’s messaging on living standards satisfy the Australian working class?

February 22, 2024

The vile game

Israel has played the victim all along with sighs of sympathy and offers of support from Western governments and audiences.They declared themselves ’the’ victim, not just The victim but the ‘only’ victim. As such, they are entitled to do to us, the Palestinians under their control, whatever they wish with Impunity.

February 10, 2024

Pope Francis would find PNG refugee conditions an eye-opener

In December, an impressive young Papua New Guinean named Jason Siwat, the director of the refugee program for the Catholic Bishops Conference of PNG and the Solomon Islands, travelled to Canberra bearing two important documents.

January 14, 2024

Labor MP Josh Burns says no ceasefire in Gaza

Josh Burns, Labor MP for Macnamara, in Victoria, has been visiting Israel. During this visit he did not even follow his own partys weak calls for a ceasefire. He said there must not be a ceasefire in Gaza.

January 29, 2023

Australia's racist Constitution and the Voice

Australia has a racist constitution. It gives the Federal Parliament power to make laws for The people of any race, for whom it is deemed necessary to make special laws. Deemed necessary, that is, by the Parliament itself.

October 21, 2022

Weekly roundup Saturday 22 October

We need to have a serious talk about tax; Imagine a public service that serves the public!, and a beginners guide to getting a Teal elected. Read on for the weekly roundup of links to articles, reports, podcasts and other media on current political and economic issues in public policy.

October 17, 2022

Is Albanese up to the job of public service reform?

I have a terrible foreboding about public service reform under the Albanese government and am beginning to wonder whether it should set itself a simpler task and leave serious improvement to some future government more up to the job. My pick for the simpler tasks would be abolishing 1300 phone lines for Centrelink, all customer or client service agencies, the restoration of a printed Commonwealth Gazette whereby the contact number of all SES officers were published to journalists, fellow public servants, and, most particularly to clients and customers. Why should junior Centrelink staff have to bear the brunt of popular fury at waiting five hours for the phone to answer?

March 15, 2022

ADF deserves better leadership in disasters, especially from politicians

The less than stellar task of deploying the ADF to Queensland and NSW floods this week brought to mind a much more difficult job of 48 years ago in Darwin.<!--more-->
We then had troops (and others) deployed within a day, people vested with unprecedented authority, and a confident and capable public service used great imagination to perform, at lowish cost and in quick time the major job of national reconstruction rebuilding the ruined city of Darwin after it was levelled by a cyclone.
The cyclone flattened the city. Almost all of the entire population of more than 50,000 people was evacuated by air within a week a shorter period than the full deployment of army resources to north-eastern NSW this week.
The two military officers in charge of organising initial emergency relief were General Alan Streeton and his deputy Colonel Van Vardenega, and they found out about the disaster at about the same time I did, early on Christmas morning. We compared notes of sketchy reports from different sources. Strictly, they were detached from the ADF. The National Disaster Organisation ran out of a smallish office on Northbourne Avenue.
But their military rank helped enormously in quickly cobbling together some emergency materials, loading them on to a Hercules and setting off, with general Streeton on board, for Darwin in the early afternoon. As a very young acting chief of staff (for a tiny Boxing Day edition) I sent a young reporter to interview Streeton as he was supervising the loading. He told the reporter, whose name I forget, that he could come along if he wanted. To our mortification, the reporter demurred; he had to get the car back to the office!
During Christmas morning, I spoke on several occasions to both Streeton and Vardanega, and over the next month or two to Vardenega almost every day. Their numbers home and at the office were both in the book and the Commonwealth Directory, and both thought it part of their duty to explain to reporters and the public what they were doing, and thinking, and why.
They did not behave, as does the massive, cumbersome and almost entirely useless modern successor, as if speaking to a reptile of the press was a prima facie breach of the Crimes Act. Nor did they hold back until anything they said had been cleared with the ministers office. Or demand questions in writing or use a thick screen and separate empire of public relations people to obscure the truth and promote the ministers view of the world.
The old arrangements, far more subtle and accountable, could involve far more Commonwealth people than were deployed even during the 2019-20 bushfires. They were far more effective, and many times cheaper than anything the Commonwealth manages these days. In theory the current body coordinates matters between Commonwealth agencies, and sometimes, whole-of- Commonwealth arrangements with individual states. The former task once accompanied far more effectively by ad hoc arrangements between relevant public servants and the minister, now consumes whole battalions of Commonwealth officials writing memos to each other, and is done badly, as anyone watching could see while questions of emergency money distribution and entitlement got caught in the spin cycle this week. We also had the spectacle of the relevant minister calling on homeless and possession-less people to contact Centrelink via the Internet, or by the notoriously incompetent, inhuman and inhumane phone service.
Back in 1974, senior public servants began arriving at work, unbidden, by lunchtime on Christmas Day, and began meeting and advising their ministers. Even junior public servants drifted in, recognising that the victims needed help. The prime minister, Gough Whitlam, was in Greece inspecting other ruins (though he got to Darwin and spoke to victims a jolly sight more quickly than Morrison) and the acting prime minister was Dr Jim Cairns, who was for the next few months the most popular man in Australia, particularly for his calm, compassionate and empathetic management.
Cabinet met while Stretton was still in the air to Darwin, and over the aircraft radio, Cairns promised him and his deputy, all the authority they needed to plan and implement a massive relief effort. That involved more than making decisions about what to do which soon included, after advice from folk on the ground the evacuation of the city. It involved planning, organising and implementingeverything,finding out who had supplies, and where, and if or how they could be commandeered. Ships were chartered; by nightfall Admiral Tony Synott had organised a navy ship to set off from Sydney with emergency items, including food and tarpaulins. This was organised by nightfall on Christmas Day a holiday of holidays with most sailors on leave. And while communications with Darwin were completely shut off. No one was saying that they couldnt move with all deliberate speed.
It was soon discovered that the department of manufacturing industry had many of the resources needed, and in Tom Lawrence, its deputy secretary, one of the worlds champion scroungers and organisers. If Stretton was running Darwin, Vardenega was in effect running the whole country.
Cyclone Tracey caused the biggest peacetime diversion of resources before or since. By comparison the 2019-20 bushfires were a doddle for defence
Vardanega was organising the most massive peacetime diversion of resources Australia had achieved before (or since). Ordinary government continued but extraordinary government was being performed by Vardenega and a small, impromptu and ad hoc team of public servants. Ministers were kept informed, and their views or at least those of Cairns and Whitlam in particular -- were incorporated into decisions. But no one was sitting around waiting for authority to do things which were necessary, for ministerial signatures, or press statements to be checked by the media managers. There were few demarcation disputes. Many tasks including recording the city of arrival of evacuees, their preliminary places of shelter, emergency dispensation of cash, counselling arrangements, and communications, were organised by public servants, social workers and volunteers, mostly from the department of social security and the social welfare commission.
A treasury official, Roy Daniels, sat close to Vardenega recording decisions that involved expenditure (there was no department of finance then). All decisions were recorded. Spending decisions had proper, if novel, signing off arrangements. Later, they would be subject to inspection by the Auditor-General as well as parliamentary committees. Public servants and military -- and the ministers at a distance were focused on making things happen, not in obstructing anything.
Every man and his dog wanted to help. Many got in the way. Vardenega brought in his young daughter to create a switchboard and divert some of the timewasters.
No minister had his own personal photographer on official visits to Darwin. No-one claimed the right to exclude the media, and no one least of all Whitlam used back exits to avoid members of the public likely to be critical.
Van Vardenega thought that communications was a primary part of the operation. Not public relations. Not political spin. Information. Facts. And informed opinion and background detail.
And he did not concede control over the publics right to be informed by any of the political or bureaucratic empire builders who offered to take the burden away from him.
I made it clear from the outset that, first, we would always tell the truth as far as we knew it, and secondly (18 years before FOI legislation) the media had free access to National Disaster Organisation areas and any papers involved in the disaster, Vardenega said. In turn, I expected a fair go. they never let us down. No event in Australian history was ever so widely or accurately reported.
Perhaps theres a lesson in that for Scott Morrison. And, perhaps, also for the public relations embuggerances at the department of defence, and the people doing heaven knows what, at Emergency Management Australia and the National Recovery and Resilience Agency. Supposedly the latter combines its expertise in natural disaster response, recovery and resilience, working with affected communities and all levels of government and industry. Im awaiting their references from the people of Cobargo, many now into their third year of learning self-reliance from the Commonwealth, perhaps for want of a handshake.
It should be remembered that the Commonwealth does not do anything, as such, to fight bushfires, rescue people from floods etc, except in extremis when the ADF is invited. That may explain why states who actually fight fires, or perform emergency services are somewhat reluctant to accord leadership to the Commonwealth.
That does not greatly trouble people at the very ambitious department of home affairs, since it seems to be by paperwork, not results, that the organisation judges itself. Maybe theres also a lesson in that for Morrison.
 
In my autobiogaphy, Things You learn Along the Way, I recounted the start of the Darwin recovery and rebuild. I had then been Secretary of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet for only a few months.
The Darwin cyclone hit on Christmas Eve. Whitlam was as the newspapers described it, surveying the ruins of the Mediterranean when he should have been surveying the ruins of Darwin. Actually on Christmas Eve he was listening to Christmas carols in Kings College, Cambridge. On Christmas Day 1974, I went with Jim Cairns to Darwin. He was the acting Prime Minister. We got into Darwin at about 1.00 in the afternoon. It shocked me before we landed to see the awful power of nature. Galvanised-iron roofing sheets were strewn all over or wrapped around telegraph poles like crumpled silver foil. From England, Whitlam spoke to Cairns and me about whether he should return from overseas. The emphatic and unanimous advice of everyone he spoke to was that he should come back urgently. I awaited his arrival in Alice Springs on 28 December, by RAAF plane from Perth. At the Alice Springs airport he received a very hostile response. It shook him. The extent of the animosity at his being overseas when Darwin was shattered was palpable. The next day we went up to Darwin. Brigadier Stretton was in charge of the restoration and did a very good job, although he was frustrated by the many Federal ministers who came to Darwin making decisions in their own portfolio areas. Stretton complained and I recall Whitlam saying to him, Well, they give me the shits as well. Do what you have to do. If you have any problems give me a ring and I will fix it. The evacuation and the restoration of Darwin went very well. Towards the end of the emergency Stretton wanted a ceremony to hand back his authority. I consulted the Attorney-Generals Department which advised me that there was no authority to hand back. People cooperated because of the emergency and Stretton did not hold any emergency powers at all. ( John Menadue)
 
March 9, 2022

The ABCS Fog of War on Ukraine

The ABC war correspondents had a rich canvas to paint their stories. Yet they got nowhere near the scent of truth.

November 24, 2021

A unity ticket to challenge the integrity vacuum in Canberra

Two former political heavyweights from different sides have joined forces to combat the corruption and damaging inaction of the Morrison government.

November 11, 2021

Singapore hanging would be 'tantamount to executing a child'

An intellectually disabled man on death row in Singapore has won another short reprieve, but the global campaign to save him is growing.

October 7, 2021

A year and 3.5 million deaths later, 'greed is triumphing over human life' in vaccine fight

‘How many more people must die needlessly before countries do the right thing and support the lifting of patent restrictions, so COVID-19 vaccines, tests, and treatments can be produced worldwide?’

January 30, 2025

Asian vision of peace a bulwark against “America First”

At the 2025 World Economic Forum in Davos, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim stood out as a voice of reason and diplomacy, presenting the Asian vision of peace, development, and regional cooperation.

January 29, 2025

On ethnic cleansing and land theft

The pattern is familiar. Israel tightens the screws. Palestinians resist. Israel, under the pretext of self-defence, massacres Palestinians, steals their land to add to its ever expanding fluid borders, and rewrites history.

December 31, 2024

Whipping up Aboriginal enthusiasm

Here’s a sad prediction for 2025. By the end of next year, more states and territories will have dropped the age of criminal responsibility to 10, and adopted punitive laws based on slogans such as Queensland’s “you do the crime, you do the time” for juvenile as well as adult offenders. The greatest proportion will be Indigenous, of course.

October 11, 2024

We’re all tourists here, don’t leave a mess

Pretty soon we’ll be approaching the 40th anniversary of the December 1984 snap Federal Election that Bob Hawke called, just over 18 months after Labor’s historic win in early 1983 had ousted Malcolm Fraser’s government.

February 7, 2024

How Albanese could tweak negative gearing to save money and build more new homes

There are two things the prime minister needs to get into his head about tax. One is that saying he wont make any further changes no longer works. The other is that negative gearing doesnt do much to get people into homes.

January 18, 2024

Can China escape a deflationary trap? Economic outlook 2024

Last year was the most widely anticipated recession in history because tight monetary policy, slower government spending and higher oil prices normally spell doom. Yet total economic output (GDP) in both America and Australia kept growing in real (after inflation) terms. So, what can we expect in 2024? Will economists get it right this year or miss the mark again? Here is the outlook for leading economies based on what most forecasters are saying.

January 16, 2024

Australian Jewish Lobby groups damage Judaism and its followers

In their aggressive, unrelenting attempts to protect the government of Israel, groups such as the Australian Jewish Association, the Australia / Israel & Jewish Affairs Council, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry and the Zionist Federation of Australia have all contributed to a groundswell of anger in Australia over Israels shocking treatment of the Palestinians in Gaza and the Occupied West bank (OWB). And in the process have done a great disservice to Australian Jews; possibly stoking a rise in antisemitism.

October 2, 2023

Did unlamented Pezzullo dream of taking the Chinese surrender in Beijing?

I have never had much regard for Mike Pezzullo, and my regard is lower for the disclosures this week of Nine and Fairfax journalists of his secret email correspondence with politicians he thought he might be able to influence. As any number of people have said, his position is untenable, and he must look forward to, at best, the hope that some private sector consultancy might pick him up.

January 5, 2023

Country for bad dreams: vandalism on the Nullarbor Plain

This is quite shocking,declared South Australias Attorney-General and Aboriginal Affairs Minister, Kyam Maher. These caves are some of the earliest evidence of Aboriginal occupation of that part of the country. That evidence was subtracted this month by acts of vandalism inflicted on artwork in Koonalda Cave on the Nullarbor Plain, claimedto be the worlds largest limestone karst landscape and covering over 200,000 square kilometres.

February 22, 2022

Rebuilding Australian Public Service capability - Part 2

This two-part article sets out the main measures a new Labor Government should take to rebuild the capability of the APS which would not represent a partisan agenda but could attract broad support from the Parliament.

March 26, 2025

More than a human can bear

Two weeks ago, the United Nations Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel published a report, “ More than a human can bear”: Israel’s systematic use of sexual, reproductive and other forms of gender-based violence since 7 October 2023.

February 12, 2025

Letter to the leaders of the civilised world

“Take wisdom from the mouths of mad men” is an old Arabic proverb. It sprang to mind a couple of days ago, when I heard the narcissist leader of the “civilised” world, President Donald Trump, openly calling for the ethnic cleansing of Palestine.

January 23, 2025

The Israeli government is guilty of the deliberate death of Israeli civilians

The Israeli government has been accused of War Crimes including the murder and genocide of the Palestinians of Gaza. They should be indicted for the murder of Israeli civilians too.

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