
Cian Hussey: Albonese has the chance to ‘do a Roger'
Labor's resounding victory, the trouncing of the Greens, and the disorder of the Liberals at the Federal election creates a fascinating opportunity for Anthony Albanese.
He could set Australia up for a generation of Labor governments if he 'does a Roger'.
Roger Cook is the incredibly popular Premier of WA. He has taken a model of a seemingly centre-of-the-road Labor Party — pro-worker, obviously because it is the Labor Party, but also pro-business and investment — pioneered by his predecessor Mark McGowan to a new level.
At the State election in March, Cook led the Labor Party to its third consecutive victory.
There was a swing against Labor, but this was to be expected given its starting point was 53 of 59 seats in the Lower House. All the same, Labor retains an incredibly comfortable position with 46 seats in this Parliament.
This is because of WA Labor's astonishing popularity. Premier Cook owns the political spectrum. Business is comfortable with Cook because he leads a Government that is pragmatic, where ministers are willing to pick up the phone or have a meeting and hash out an issue. Workers are comfortable with Cook because — as the Premier himself said at an event in Perth last year — they are the Labor Party, being on the side of unions and workers 'is written on the box'.
No doubt it helps that West Australians are overall happy and wealthy. GDP per capita in WA is about 60 per cent higher than in NSW, and 77 per cent higher than in Victoria.
However, there is a lesson here for Anthony Albanese. If he can own the political spectrum by becoming more pragmatic and pro-business, like Cook, he will set Labor up for victory at the 2028 election, and possibly the 2031 election too.
Last year Cook was one of the staunchest opponents of Federal Labor's Nature Positive plan, as it then existed. He has sought to reduce red tape, delays and duplication and unlock investment. He recently said that he is open to thorium mining in WA, something that does not currently take place.
'I think we need to have a more flexible outlook in terms of alternative energy sources . . . we just need to be open to the fact that technology and energy sources will evolve over time,' Cook said.
His comments could be taken as softly opening the door to the possibility of mining not only thorium, but also uranium, in WA.
Cook encouraged his Federal Labor colleagues to approve Woodside's North West Shelf expansion project (which went through a lengthy approvals process in WA and was subject to a number of legal challenges already), and he has recently reminded West Australians that carbon emissions may have to rise in WA if they are to see an overall decline in the world.
It's a sensible line that he has been running for some time. It also happens to be true. If the world wants more steel for windmills and more lithium for electric cars, more mining needs to happen in WA.
At a mining conference last year, Cook said: 'At the end of the day, we're not trying to save WA, we're not even trying to save Australia, we're trying to save the planet.'
The ejection of the Greens from Parliament shows that Australians do not support their radicalism. It presents a significant opportunity for Albanese to adopt a Cook-style pragmatism.
There is a historical Federal parallel here too. Australia is somewhat peculiar in that it was a centre-left government under Bob Hawke and Paul Keating that undertook economic liberalisation and deregulation in the 1980s and 1990s. In the UK this was done by the Conservative Thatcher government, and in the US by the Republican Reagan government.
One cynical reading of this is that Bob Hawke saw an opportunity to go after the Liberals where they ought to have existed. The Liberals under Malcolm Fraser squandered an opportunity to embrace reform that should have been their bread and butter. Hawke took their bread and their butter, and the Labor Party dined on it for 13 years.
Albanese gave this kind of political manoeuvre a try during the recent campaign by offering both higher spending and beating the Liberals on tax cuts.
That is not to say that there are not long-term consequences of this kind of politics.
Racking up debt, crystallising sections of government dependence, and expanding the State have significant negative cultural and economic implications.
But until a strong, intellectually consistent counterweight to the Labor Party comes along, Albanese could 'do a Roger', own the field, and win again and again.
Cian J. Hussey is a public policy analyst.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
40 minutes ago
- West Australian
Australian news and politics live: Greens Leader Larissa Waters responds after Dorinda Cox joins Labor
Scroll down for the latest news and updates. The Prime Minister has confirmed publicly he is seeking to meet with US President Donald Trump on the sidelines of the G7 meeting in Canada later this month. Canadian leader Mark Carney invited Anthony Albanese to attend the meeting of global leaders when they spoke shortly after the May 3 election. Mr Albanese confirmed on Tuesday the widely speculated meeting with Mr Trump was being organised to take place in Alberta rather than Washington.. 'That's what we hope to do there,' he told ABC Perth. He said his approach in dealing with Mr Trump was to be 'consistent and clear and unambiguous'. 'That is what I've been. I've had three really constructive discussions with President Trump, but it's important that you don't jump around and take different positions from day to day,' he said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is on ABC Perth talking about Dorinda Cox and the North West Shelf. He says Senator Cox had decided after much thought that her values aligned more closely with those of Labor rather than the Greens, leading to her defection. 'We know that the Greens have lost their way,' Mr Albanese said. 'That's one of the reasons why they lost three of their four seats in the House of Representatives, and the domination of issues that certainly aren't environmental have been their concerns.' Asked how someone who has so stridently spoken out against the extension of the North West Shelf project can now be on board with Labor, Mr Ablanese points out the Greens including Senator Cox voted for the safeguard mechanism as the primary way to cut emissions. 'The North West Shelf, like other projects right around Australia, the top 200 emitters, are all subject to that (safeguard mechanism) that requires emissions to be brought down each and every year or to be offset as part of getting to net zero,' he said. 'We have not just a policy of net zero. We have a plan to get there… You can't change the way that the economy functions through just good will or good thoughts.' Having worked as a delivery driver at Pizza Hut, as a cleaner, in a newsagency and at a call centre, Sally McManus used to depend on an award wage. Now, the 53-year-old firebrand leading Australia's top union body is calling for a 4.5 per cent pay rise for nearly 3 million workers who live pay-to-pay on an industry award or minimum wage. The Fair Work Commission will on Tuesday release its annual wage review decision. Ms McManus says it's essential the nation's lowest-paid workers receive a pay rise above inflation. 'It's about whether you can keep up with your bills or not, it's whether or not your life gets slightly better, whether it stays the same or whether it goes backwards. It's everything,' she tells AAP. 'When you're on those wages, you're not saving money. Everything you earn, you spend.' Read the full story here. With two Aboriginal women now having left the Greens, the party is facing questions about its representation and approach to First Nations issues. 'I think there's two very different reasons why those strong First Nations women made the decisions they made. It was definitely their call to make,' she told ABC News Breakfast. 'Senator Thorpe has gone on to be a really strong voice in the Parliament and I'm sure Senator Cox will continue to work for the issues that are meaningful for her,' Waters explained. 'But the Greens remain entirely committed to strong advocacy on truth telling, on treaties, on justice, on healing, on reparations. Our policies are still very firm for First Nations justice and we won't be changing course in that regard.' Read the full story here. The Greens are reeling after WA Senator Dorinda Cox announced her move to Labor, but party leader Larissa Waters says there's no animosity and wishes her well. 'Dorinda spoke for herself yesterday and said her values aligned more closely with the Labor Party. And people need to have values fit with the party they seek to represent,' she told ABC News Breakfast. 'Dorinda called me an hour before her press conference with the Prime Minister. And we had a very calm and measured conversation about it. And I did genuinely wish her all the best. 'There's no animosity there. It's disappointing for us to lose a Greens senator. But Dorinda says her values lie there. You need to be true to yourself, don't you?' Read about Dorinda Cox's surprise move here. Mental ill health and poor father-son relationships have been revealed as key factors that could contribute to men's violence against women. A longitudinal study conducted by the Australian Institute of Family Studies (AIFS) surveyed men and boys in 2013/14 and again in 2022 for critical insights into factors influencing the use of violence. The research has produced the first national estimate of male intimate partner violence perpetration, with the 2022 study finding more than one-in-three Australian men aged 18 to 65 have used intimate partner violence in their lifetime. This is up from one-in-four men who reported ever having used intimate partner violence among the same cohort surveyed in 2014. The latest study also found an estimated 120,000 men nationally were starting to use violence for the first time each year. Read the full story here.

Sky News AU
an hour ago
- Sky News AU
Shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien doubles down on Coalition's conditions for super tax support, demands Labor ditch key elements
Shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien has reaffirmed the Coalition will not support Labor's proposed superannuation tax changes unless the government scraps the tax on unrealised capital gains and agrees to index the $3 million threshold. The government's widely criticised proposal to increase the tax rate on superannuation funds exceeding $3 million, while also targeting unrealised capital gains, is likely to pass parliament as Labor's majority in both houses means the party's sole obstacle is gaining approval from the Greens. The controversial policy would raise the earnings tax on superannuation balances above $3 million from 15 per cent to 30 per cent. Treasurer Jim Chalmers has refused to index the $3 million figure. Mr O'Brien has doubled down on earlier declarations the Coalition would consider offering bipartisan support for the plan if Labor scrapped taxing unrealised gains and indexed the threshold in its controversial superannuation proposal. 'We think that Labor's super tax is super big and super bad. I can't think of one element of it I like, candidly,' he told Sky News Host Sharri Markson on Monday. 'If, though, that Labor does want to speak to the Coalition, then they'll have to walk away from a lot of those aspects of what they've put forward. 'There's no doubt in opposition we will be constructive where we can, but critical where we must." Mr O'Brien said there was 'no choice but to be absolutely critical' as the two aforementioned aspects of the policy were clearly "egregious'. The government also faces pushback from the Greens, which has expressed support for taxing unrealised gains but urged Labor to lower the threshold to $2 million and index this with inflation. Labor's proposal is set to impact more Australians than the Greens' counterproposal over the long term, according to the Australian Financial Review. The Greens' plan to lower the threshold by a million would mean an additional 16,000 taxpayers would be roped in throughout the first year, however, it would hit fewer Aussies after about 16 years. Mr Chalmers claimed the tax would initially only hit 80,000 Australians. However, Assistant Treasurer Daniel Mulino conceded about 1.2 million, or 10 per cent of taxpayers, would be impacted within 30 years. Mr O'Brien said the Coalition would 'always be open' to discussions, but stressed this did not mean it would offer unconditional support. 'If indeed Jim Chalmers wants to come and have a discussion with the Coalition about his super tax, well, he would have to firstly walk away from the unrealised capital gains component, and at least, he should be compromising on indexation," he said. 'Now, if he caves in on all those things and wants to talk about super reform - then let's have a chat about super reform.'

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Greens fuming over Senator's defection
Isabella Higgins: WA Senator Dorinda Cox has quit the Greens and joined Labor in a shock defection. She says it's about getting results and not rebellion, but her exit has left the Greens blindsided and fuming. Political reporter Olivia Caisley joins me from Parliament House. Olivia, why did she walk away from the Greens? Olivia Caisley: Well, standing alongside the Prime Minister in Perth yesterday, Senator Dorinda Cox says that her values align more closely with Labor and that she believes she'll be able to deliver better outcomes and results for the people of WA. She was a member of Labor briefly in her youth before she did join the Greens. Her switch though comes after months of internal tensions within her former party, so she failed in her bid to become deputy leader following the party's poor showing at the election, and there were also growing doubts that she'd secure a winnable spot on the next Senate ticket. The Greens say they were blindsided by this, that Senator Cox only called the Greens leader Larissa Waters about an hour before announcing her shocked defection, and there have also been allegations of bullying or a toxic workplace culture in her office, which emerged during the last term of Parliament. Anthony Albanese was asked about this yesterday and he says that he's confident that those issues have been dealt with. Here's, Senator Cox, yesterday announcing her defection from the Greens. Dorinda Cox: Being in the government and alongside the wonderful team that the Prime Minister has, you are able to make change. You are able to do the things that raise up and represent the voice of Western Australia and Canberra, and that's what they elect me to do, so I will continue to do that. Isabella Higgins: And Olivia, what does this mean for the Senate and for both of those parties? Olivia Caisley: Well, when it comes to the composition of the Senate, it's not a major shift. The Greens will still ultimately hold the balance of power. So this defection takes Labor's senators in the upper house to 29. The Greens, meanwhile, will drop to 10. But Labor will still need to rely on the Greens for votes in order to pass legislation. Symbolically, though, this is a major blow to the Greens. So at the election, they lost three of their four lower house seats and also their former leader, Adam Bandt, who was unable to retain his seat of Melbourne. And now they've got a high-profile senator defecting without warning. There is a question about how Senator Cox will square some of her policy positions with Labor's party platform. So for example, just last week, she criticised the Albanese government for extending WA's North West gas shelf, a move that environmentalists have also slammed. So how she reconciles those views while inside the Labor tent remains to be seen. Isabella Higgins: Olivia Caisley reporting there.