logo
Coalition of the unwilling: Climate wars will soon eclipse reunification relief

Coalition of the unwilling: Climate wars will soon eclipse reunification relief

That gets close, but, in truth, Ley didn't even go that far. All she agreed to was that the Coalition would support an end to the moratorium on the building of nuclear power plants. She emphatically did not agree to finance and build seven nuclear power plants. Not even one.
On the other three areas that Peter Dutton's Coalition had taken to the election and that Littleproud insisted remain, Ley has agreed but so hedged them with conditions that they are almost meaningless.
Loading
And what of Littleproud's other early demand – that Nationals' members of a Coalition shadow cabinet should not be bound by the principle of solidarity? He quickly abandoned that when it was roundly rejected.
He achieved nothing he couldn't have accomplished with a quiet conversation behind closed doors, as is customary between the Libs and Nats. All he's managed to do is make himself a laughingstock with a limited leadership lifespan. And diminish the entire Coalition in the process.
So far, the Liberals have done two things right since the election. First, they elected a woman as leader. Second, that woman handled the Nat spat with calm and steely grace. But the really hard part lies ahead, and the Coalition ruction was the opening act.
'It wasn't a fight about four policies,' says a Liberal. 'It was really about us being totally fine with them running all over us in three or six months' time when we reach a policy on climate change.'
The climate wars are over. And the Coalition lost. But it will have great difficulty in accepting this fact. The Liberals have undertaken to review their policy; it will be traumatic.
Ley will want to bring the party to a recognition that climate change is not only real but a reality that the party must embrace in its policies: 'You won't see any climate denial from Sussan,' says a Liberal from her camp. 'It's about respectful engagement, so voters understand that we are believers.'
The pollster Jim Reed of Resolve Strategic says that this is an irreducible minimum for any party that hopes to win power. 'In the early to mid-2000s we regularly asked a question in our polling – do you believe in climate change? Very quickly, over two or three years, it became redundant,' he tells me. 'Speaking to tradies in focus groups, a no-nonsense group who, in the past, would have had some of the doubters in it, today, they say 'yes, and we can see it happening, we see the effects.' The ship has sailed.'
Yet climate disbelief runs deep in the surviving members of the Coalition. In the Nats, certainly. Littleproud says he supports the pre-existing Coalition commitment to reach net zero emissions by 2050. But Barnaby Joyce, Matt Canavan, Michael McCormack, Colin Boyce and Llew O'Brien, at a minimum, will fight to defeat it.
Loading
But climate scepticism also runs strongly through the ranks of the Libs, as Andrew Hastie reminded us this week: 'I think the question of net zero, that's a straitjacket that I'm already getting out of,' the new shadow minister for Home Affairs told the ABC. 'The real question is should Australian families and businesses be paying more for their electricity?'
Other Liberals, even climate sceptics, think it's time for the party to bow before the electoral reality. 'Some of the colleagues still haven't absorbed the magnitude of our loss,' says one who, like Hastie, is a frontbencher from the party's conservative side.
'When they walk into the House, and they're confronted with the wall of Labor MPs, it will be a reality check for them. We'll see the final numbers and see what we have to do if we want to get back into government – it'll be of the order of 30 seats or around a 7 per cent swing.' A daunting prospect and extraordinarily difficult to accomplish in a single term.
'I can't think of a single seat in the country that we'll be able to win without a commitment to net zero.'
Liberal Zoe McKenzie points to a statistic that should rivet the party's attention. Of the 151 seats in the House, 88 are metropolitan. Of those, the Coalition occupies just eight. This is, in effect, the banishment of the Liberal Party from the cities of Australia.
Even if the Coalition can hold those eight and win all the other 63 city seats in the parliament, it would hold a total of only 71. In other words, it's mathematically impossible for it to win a majority, which is 76, without returning to metropolitan Australia.
And belief in climate change is the price of admission to city seats. McKenzie, factionally non-aligned and freshly elected to a second term in the seat of Flinders covering Victoria's Mornington Peninsula, hopes that the party retains its net zero commitment. As it debates the policy, she wants the party to 'keep the voices of the ghosts alive,' meaning all the moderate Liberals who lost their seats in recent elections. The former MPs who'd be arguing in favour of net zero and climate-friendly policy.
Loading
Overarching all of this is the larger question of the party's political philosophy. Fundamentally, the Liberals have to decide whether they are the party of Robert Menzies or Rupert Murdoch.
Menzies was a great pragmatist, principled but not ideological, who adapted to his times. He was preoccupied with the concerns and interests of the suburban middle class, not the capitalist class but the ordinary men and women of aspiration. Murdoch is a right-wing populist interested in pressing always further rightward to build constituencies favourable to his own business interests.
The Liberals have to choose. Once they decide whether to continue following the Murdoch pied piper to electoral irrelevance or to rediscover the Menzian attachment to middle Australia, all their other choices will become clearer.
And the Nationals? They are now reduced to four senators. The same number as One Nation. And, like One Nation, the Nationals won a touch over 6 per cent of the national primary vote for the House. 'We, as Liberals, would never allow One Nation to determine our policies,' points out a Lib. So, his logic runs, why should the party accept the Nationals' terms?

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What will Albanese give Trump on defence? Not much
What will Albanese give Trump on defence? Not much

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

What will Albanese give Trump on defence? Not much

US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth's demand for Australia to nearly double defence spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP has gone down like a bucket of cold sick in Canberra. Anthony Albanese, who chose to ignore the Coalition's calls earlier this year for him to travel post-haste to Washington and prostrate himself before President Donald Trump to secure Australia a tariff exemption, feels his judgment has been vindicated. Fresh from being re-elected with a historic majority, Albanese is in no mood to bow down to the Americans, especially when dislike (or at least distrust) of the current US administration aided Labor's victory. At present, Australia spends about 2 per cent of GDP on defence, or about $59 billion a year, and that figure will rise to 2.3 per cent by 2030. Going to 3.5 per cent would mean spending an extra $40 billion each year, approximately the annual cost of the entire NDIS. Delivering this would require significant tax rises or a big increase in federal borrowing – maybe both – and potentially swingeing cuts to the expanded social programs that Australians just voted for. Loading The prime minister's response on Monday was cautious, measured and a polite rejection of our closest ally's request. 'What you should do in defence is decide what you need, your capability, and then provide for it. That's what my government's doing ... we've provided an additional $10 billion of investment into defence over the forward estimates [four years],' he said. 'What we don't do is do what the opposition did during the election campaign, where they announced an amount of money, they couldn't say where the money was coming from and they couldn't say what it was for. That makes no sense.'

What will Albanese give Trump on defence? Not much
What will Albanese give Trump on defence? Not much

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

What will Albanese give Trump on defence? Not much

US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth's demand for Australia to nearly double defence spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP has gone down like a bucket of cold sick in Canberra. Anthony Albanese, who chose to ignore the Coalition's calls earlier this year for him to travel post-haste to Washington and prostrate himself before President Donald Trump to secure Australia a tariff exemption, feels his judgment has been vindicated. Fresh from being re-elected with a historic majority, Albanese is in no mood to bow down to the Americans, especially when dislike (or at least distrust) of the current US administration aided Labor's victory. At present, Australia spends about 2 per cent of GDP on defence, or about $59 billion a year, and that figure will rise to 2.3 per cent by 2030. Going to 3.5 per cent would mean spending an extra $40 billion each year, approximately the annual cost of the entire NDIS. Delivering this would require significant tax rises or a big increase in federal borrowing – maybe both – and potentially swingeing cuts to the expanded social programs that Australians just voted for. Loading The prime minister's response on Monday was cautious, measured and a polite rejection of our closest ally's request. 'What you should do in defence is decide what you need, your capability, and then provide for it. That's what my government's doing ... we've provided an additional $10 billion of investment into defence over the forward estimates [four years],' he said. 'What we don't do is do what the opposition did during the election campaign, where they announced an amount of money, they couldn't say where the money was coming from and they couldn't say what it was for. That makes no sense.'

‘We need': Albo's call on controversial target
‘We need': Albo's call on controversial target

Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

‘We need': Albo's call on controversial target

Anthony Albanese says Labor was 'not being ideological' on its climate change target, but being 'real' on the need for immediate and long-term strategies to tackle climate change. The Prime Minister made the comments while visiting drought affected farming communities in Fischer, about 96km from Adelaide, where he was asked about the impact of climate change and how he plans on achieving bipartisan support on Labor's net zero targets. While former Liberal prime minister Scott Morrison initially committed Australia to reaching net zero by 2050, the topic has become a point of political argy-bargy, with some members of the Coalition calling on the party to abandon the promise. However, Mr Albanese said science had shown that extreme weather events were becoming more common, and said climate wars were 'pretty pointless'. 'Getting in a debate about whether, you know, any specific event is because of climate change is, in my view, a cul-de-sac that leads you back to the same place,' he said alongside SA Premier Peter Malinauskas and Agriculture Minister Julie Collins. 'The place is that climate change is real and we need to respond to it.' Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visited drought-affected communities in South Australia on Monday. NewsWire/ Roy VanDerVegt Credit: News Corp Australia He said government had a 'responsibility' to tackle both the immediate and long term issues related to climate change, and that the response was not political. 'We're not being ideological about this, we're being real about this … the farmers that I meet know there's something going on with the weather,' he said. 'That's why we engaged in the lead up to setting those emissions targets that were going forward.' Labor has so far committed to reaching net zero by 2050, while also reducing emissions by 43 per cent by 2030. The government has also been under pressure to release the 2035 target, however it is waiting on further consultation with the Climate Change Authority, headed by former NSW Liberal minister Matt Kean. Speaking on Sunday, Energy and Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen said he believed Australia was 'by and large on track' to meet the 43 per cent 2030 emission reduction targets, despite figures released on Friday revealing that emissions had increased year-on-year by 0.05 per cent. Energy and Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen said Australia was 'by and large on track' to meeting its 2030 emissions reductions target. NewsWire/ Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia On Monday, Mr Albanese also announced that the 2025 National Drought Forum will be held in nearby town of Gawler, with the state experiencing some of the driest conditions on record. Mr Albanese also committed an extra $2m to the Rural Financial Counselling Service, on top of the $36m in previous funding for the Future Drought Fund Communities Program to bolster social resilience among agriculture-dependent communities. The funding pledge has been welcomed by the National Farmers Federation president David Jochinke who said farmers were facing conditions which 'have to be seen to be believed'. 'Things are really tough right now in large parts of South Australia and Victoria, as well as areas in Tasmania, NSW and Western Australia,' he said. 'We're not just talking about dry paddocks and low rainfall. For some regions, there's been multiple bad seasons and entire communities are under pressure. 'We thank Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Minister Julie Collins for showing up and listening. We hope the visit will help them see the urgency of the situation and the need for action.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store