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Kevin Rudd: political genius? (1 Viewer)

Chemical Ali

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http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/55430.html
On Q&A, Rudd spoke about divisions in the Cabinet last year over the ETS. With the exception of one minister – Lindsay Tanner, now retired from politics – all of the relevant players from a year ago remain in the government today. The then prime minister, Rudd, is a senior Cabinet minister.

Rudd was careful not to name names, but he acknowledged “there was a massive conflict of views within the government”. There were three lines of argument. Some “people were concerned” about the effect of a carbon price on family incomes. There were “some who wanted to junk it” and others “who wanted to sail straight ahead”.

Rudd argued that he “tried to find a path up the middle of that” in order to “preserve the unity of the government”. He acknowledged it was “the wrong call because we should have simply tried to sail straight ahead”.

It sounds refreshingly honest. But Rudd was the prime minister. He was uniquely placed to guide the government along the path he believed was right. As many have argued, he could have called an election in early 2010 to resolve the issue. His mea culpa may warm the cockles of some hearts but it obscures the failure of political judgement and nerve.

It also obscures Rudd’s motivations for speaking out now. Some suggest Rudd is “positioning himself for a return to the Labor leadership” by appealing to the public over the heads of his caucus colleagues.

It is just as likely that he is simply bent on revenge.

Whatever it is, the nature of Rudd’s relationship with Gillard and the Labor caucus is a corrosive and pernicious force eating away at the government. Imagine what a Cabinet meeting is like these days with Rudd sitting there alongside the people he once presided - many say lauded – over.

His presence weakens Gillard. His presence highlights her powerlessness over him. His presence is a continual reminder of the political calamity last year’s leadership change wrought on the government.

Yet Gillard has the perfect means at her disposal to eject Rudd from her ministry.

The collective responsibility of cabinet ministers is one of the bedrock conventions of executive government. The principle holds that ministers meet and debate in private. A good ministry is one where ministers argue their case in front of their colleagues but accept the collective judgement of the group. But the principle works only if cabinet discussions remain secret. It works only if all ministers accept the collective wisdom of the cabinet and support its decisions in public, including the decisions they disagreed with.

The convention of collective responsibility has taken quite a beating in the past year. In constitutional terms, Gillard’s response has been exemplary. The election campaign leaks about her positions on a number of issues were met with a refusal to discuss the inner workings of Cabinet. That was the position she reiterated this week. It may suit her politically not to discuss what happened back then but that is not the point. The principle of collective responsibility should outweigh personal political considerations.

Rudd’s comments on Q&A represent an attempt to place himself above the conventions and processes of Cabinet government. As the former leader, it may be felt that he should be cut some slack and allowed to defend his actions as Prime Minister. However, as a senior minister still in the Cabinet, this surely does not apply. A cabinet, like a chain, is only as strong as its weakest link.

It gets worse. The faux candour of Rudd on Monday night is exemplified by his refusal to put names to the divisions. In so doing, only one conclusion can be drawn. Rudd is in effect pointing the finger directly at the Prime Minister and her deputy. He is contributing to the ongoing discussion about her credibility and the suggestion that she lied to the electorate. He is fuelling the doubts about her commitment to action on climate change. He is challenging a prime minister who is struggling to exude authority anyway.

Dismissing Rudd from the ministry would rid Gillard of a destabilising influence. It would bolster her authority inside and outside the government. The Cabinet would probably stand as one and applaud her. The discipline of the government would be strengthened.

Of course, it almost certainly won’t happen. Gillard wouldn’t dare sack Rudd. She wouldn’t dare risk a by-election. The principle of collective cabinet responsibility won’t get a look-in, no matter how many self-serving interviews Rudd gives.

Rudd’s position is safe because he IS a special case. Any other prime minister disposed of in his first term would be dead meat by now. Rudd’s anarchic administrative style and his disregard for established Cabinet processes should disqualify him from any serious consideration for the party leadership. That some people – aside from Rudd himself – see him in the hunt is indicative of the deep malaise this government is in.

If Gillard had shown some real leadership on the climate change issue, nothing Rudd says now would be given a second look. If voters really believed she had a long-standing, consistent, principled and visionary approach to climate action, Rudd would be irrelevant.

That some of the opinion polls show more people would prefer Rudd as Prime Minister than Gillard is an indictment of her leadership to date. Her approach to climate change is a key ingredient of that indictment.

The Prime Minister’s repeated protestations of her commitment to “price carbon” are weakened by her earlier vacillation, and undermined by her promotion of policies such as the Citizens’ Assembly which was rightly seen as a means of doing nothing.

Climate change, an ETS, Rudd and Gillard: what a Gordion knot this is. Who or what will break it?
I reckon he knows exactly what he's doing. Like when he called for a No Fly Zone in Libya before Gillard said anything about it; if she denied it was our policy, it looks like she's not in control of her ministers. If she said it was, it looks like Rudd was leading in making the policies and not her. Real art of war stuff imo.

What think?
 

cosmo kramer

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yeah but lets face this is just the behavior of a snivelling, passive beta bitch who was too much of a pussy to tell gillard that she was a fucking cunt bitch when she usurped power from him now hes just venting out his aggression in indirect ways

its funny but he is a pathetic faggot not a real man
 

cosmo kramer

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imagine if



was our prime minister instead and gillard tried to take power from him

he would just walk up to her during a speech she was giving and body slam her into a wall
 

Funky Monk

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haha Putin. shitcunt.

That guy's about as subtle and tasteful as a no-neck bouncer on the whizz.
 

Blastus

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No he would have the KGB execute her in a lift dude.

Yeah I'm reckoning Rudd is back on the up and up. PPM has Rudd as number 1 as people like the whole conviction politician shit. Rudd seems to have values

and if you don't like them, he was forced to have others
 

cosmo kramer

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No he would have the KGB execute her in a lift dude.

Yeah I'm reckoning Rudd is back on the up and up. PPM has Rudd as number 1 as people like the whole conviction politician shit. Rudd seems to have values

and if you don't like them, he was forced to have others
rudd is a cunt
 

cosmo kramer

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i dont think hes evil hes just tough as shit

russia is a blend of western individualism and oriental despotism thats what makes it great

he kicked out all the jew parasites
 

davidbarnes

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I would vote for Rudd over Gillard. Gillard won't be the candidate at the next election, it will either be Rudd or someone else.
 

Lentern

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http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/55430.html


I reckon he knows exactly what he's doing. Like when he called for a No Fly Zone in Libya before Gillard said anything about it; if she denied it was our policy, it looks like she's not in control of her ministers. If she said it was, it looks like Rudd was leading in making the policies and not her. Real art of war stuff imo.

What think?
That Rudd spent most of his leadership leading the opinion polls by landslide margins, and that people panicked when he was polling 52% is a testament to his charm and ability to shape peoples thinking but he does have great limitations

Rudd had an inclination to postpone ugly decisions which was why he remained at 60% for almost two years and why there was a sense of spinning out of control in his last few months as leadership as he was forced to confront them on the eve of an election. His postponement of the ETS, then his apology/taking responsibility for the home insulation deaths were absolute shocker calls. I imagine if he'd stayed on as leader he'd currently be polling about 54%, Joe Hockey would be leader and Malcolm would be handsomely favoured to return to the leadership but his behaviour now, if a campaign for the leadership isn't a great one.

He might be drawing admiration from his supporters in the party but the reluctant supporters of Gillard will be going mental at him right now, let's remember the leaks during the campaign. Whilst I imagine he wants to keep himself a popular option in the case of a leadership vacuum, he's smart enough to know his leadership is all but dead. What we're seeing now is a vanity exercise, an attempt to shape the history books. He is effectively painting himself as this smart, hardworking, warm, diplomatic guy who is generally percieved to be better than his successor on almost every level but who was stabbed in the back because of one or two honest mistakes and a corrupt party of hacks behind him. But you know who has come out of the whole affair looking like a sensible kid in a party of quacks? I'll give you a hint, he has nice hair.
 

Existential

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I would vote for Rudd over Gillard. Gillard won't be the candidate at the next election, it will either be Rudd or someone else.
I could have sworn you have pledged in other threads that Gillard will lead Labor to the next election. Bold comments like these don't show much insight because the political landscape of late is very unpredictable. I too would prefer Rudd, but I don't dislike Gillard.
 

Chemical Ali

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That Rudd spent most of his leadership leading the opinion polls by landslide margins, and that people panicked when he was polling 52% is a testament to his charm and ability to shape peoples thinking but he does have great limitations

Rudd had an inclination to postpone ugly decisions which was why he remained at 60% for almost two years and why there was a sense of spinning out of control in his last few months as leadership as he was forced to confront them on the eve of an election. His postponement of the ETS, then his apology/taking responsibility for the home insulation deaths were absolute shocker calls. I imagine if he'd stayed on as leader he'd currently be polling about 54%, Joe Hockey would be leader and Malcolm would be handsomely favoured to return to the leadership but his behaviour now, if a campaign for the leadership isn't a great one.

He might be drawing admiration from his supporters in the party but the reluctant supporters of Gillard will be going mental at him right now, let's remember the leaks during the campaign. Whilst I imagine he wants to keep himself a popular option in the case of a leadership vacuum, he's smart enough to know his leadership is all but dead. What we're seeing now is a vanity exercise, an attempt to shape the history books. He is effectively painting himself as this smart, hardworking, warm, diplomatic guy who is generally percieved to be better than his successor on almost every level but who was stabbed in the back because of one or two honest mistakes and a corrupt party of hacks behind him. But you know who has come out of the whole affair looking like a sensible kid in a party of quacks? I'll give you a hint, he has nice hair.
Smith? i dunno. Surely you're not talking about The Duck!
 

Chemical Ali

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if abbott hadn't got in as liberal leader, rudd would still be pm and end up being remembered as one of the greatest ever
 

Lolsmith

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I think Rudd's adorable when he smiles. Like a kid in a candy store

He's either imploding the Labor Party because he hates all their fucking guts (unlikely, but would be cool to watch it unfold) or, like everyone's saying, is making a stab at returning to the top job. I like neither of them as politicians.
 

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