Sunday 19th of May 2024

not winston, but morrison...

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Some of Scott Morrison’s closest party-room allies could face internal challenges for their seats after a Supreme Court decision handed down Friday.

Mr Morrison had backed a plan to have the Liberal Party intervene and stop three sitting MPs – Alex Hawke, Sussan Ley and Trent Zimmerman – from facing internal party contests.

The Prime Minister and the federal Liberal Party gave the party’s NSW division until Monday to hold a long-delayed annual general meeting, as well as preselect candidates for three seats currently held by sitting Liberal MPs and Morrison allies Alex Hawke, Sussan Ley and Trent Zimmerman.

 

Matthew Camenzuli, from the New South Wales hard right faction, successfully challenged legal advice obtained by the party which suggested state Liberal officials cease to hold office after February 28 due to a failure to hold the annual general meeting.

NSW Supreme Court Justice Julie Ward upheld Mr Camenzuli’s challenge on Friday and declared members of the state executive could remain in office under the party’s constitution.

The ruling means Mr Hawke, Ms Ley and Mr Zimmerman, all allies of Mr Morrison, could face preselection challenges for their seats ahead of this year’s federal election.

At stake in the battle to save the sitting MPs were also preselections for seats the Liberal Party does not hold, including Hughes and Warringah.

Candidates in those seats had expected preselections to be finalised not later than the middle of last month.

The process has instead dragged on in what sceptics say is a deliberate move to protect the Prime Minister’s and Mr Hawke’s faction.

Typically, the sitting MPs would have already been through a nomination review committee and then a competitive ballot, or plebiscite, if they had faced a challenger.

At issue is a complicated deal designed to ensure sitting MPs are protected but also notionally dividing preselections between the party’s main three factional groups.

 

Among the other preselection deals up in the air is a plan to install moderate factional player Alex Dore into the seat of Hughes, currently occupied by the vaccination sceptic and former Liberal Craig Kelly.

 

Read more:

https://thenewdaily.com.au/news/politics/australian-politics/2022/02/25/scott-morrison-allies-high-court/

 

MEANWHILE:

 

War! Who is it good for? Morrison most likely

 

Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine is a great chance for the PM to switch the political narrative from domestic matters to national security.

 

Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has begun, with his “recognition” of separatist provinces in Ukraine a pretext for dispatching an invasion force to seize at least a significant chunk — and perhaps all — of a country he calls a US colony with a puppet regime.

The unprovoked attack will be a vast tragedy for Ukrainians, and brings the threat of a major land war in Europe to the fore for the first time since World War II. The ripples will reach Australia too, however insignificant they may be compared with the sufferings of Ukrainians.

The immediate impact will be a sharemarket dip and an energy price rise — which will be bad news for motorists but even better news for Australia’s big fossil fuel energy exporters.

 

Whether it has any ramifications politically remains to be seen. Scott Morrison, who is in deep trouble just weeks from the election, will be desperately hoping it does.

 

Given neither European countries nor the US intend to provide direct military assistance to Ukraine, and instead will confine themselves to arms, medical equipment, civilian protective equipment and financial assistance (the EU agreed overnight to €1.2 billion in aid before Putin invaded), cherished opportunities for political photo ops with Australian troops will be thin on the ground.

But the more voters’ attention turns to foreign affairs and war, the happier the prime minister will be. For a start, domestic policy is full of problems for the government — aged care, religious discrimination legislation, anti-vax MPs, liberal independents on the warpath in urban seats and real wages falling for workers. 

But Morrison is convinced the tradition of voters preferring conservative governments on national security remains true — whether or not his incessant lying about Labor being soft on China has worked — and that Australians will rally to him at a time of global insecurity.

It might also mean that any backbenchers on his side restive enough to contemplate dumping him might think twice about doing so during a moment of serious conflict abroad.

Morrison also has Defence Minister Peter Dutton, who will seize on the conflict to do what he does best — talk tough and rattle sabres, even if there’s no role for Australia to play. Labor’s opposition spokesman on defence, Brendan O’Connor, is solid and experienced, but low profile compared with the man who would be PM. 

On the negative, Morrison has the least memorable, lowest-profile foreign affairs minister of the past 30 years in Marise Payne — currently attending the annual Munich Security Conference — who has a much lower profile than Labor’s Penny Wong. Expect Morrison and Dutton to do all the warning of the tsar and announce sanctions even after Payne returns from Europe.

Of more immediate interest for the government is whether China will take advantage of the crisis in relation to either Taiwan or Hong Kong, which will have more immediate, and exploitable, ramifications for a government insistent that Labor is controlled by Beijing, regardless of how closely the government has previously aligned itself with the Xi Jinping regime.

But the first challenge for Morrison will be to announce an adequate and appropriate response to Putin’s aggression — including significant sanctions and the downgrading of diplomatic relations. 

Russia’s diplomats should be sent packing as a clear sign that the consequences of invasion will be long term and serious. Given our trade balance with Russia is heavily in our favour, significant sanctions would also signal Australia isn’t prepared to let financial benefit get in the way of responding to aggression.

Anything less than that would make Morrison and Dutton’s hardline talk sound hollow.

 

READ MORE:

https://www.crikey.com.au/2022/02/22/war-who-is-it-good-for-morrison-most-likely/

 

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