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Australian Economy
Home›Australian Economy›Anthony Albanese has had a stellar first week as prime minister — but it will only get harder from now

Anthony Albanese has had a stellar first week as prime minister — but it will only get harder from now

By Megan
May 26, 2022
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Anthony Albanese had expected the election might be a week earlier than it was, because last Saturday would bump up against Tuesday’s Quad meeting in Tokyo.

However, Scott Morrison wanted maximum time to try to wear down his opponent.

Then, when it emerged publicly that Mr Albanese was making arrangements with officials to attend the Quad if he won, Mr Morrison accused him of being presumptuous.

Those preparations were prudent and proper, not presumptuous.

The new Prime Minister’s Quad trip has been an obvious success, with leaders — especially US President Joe Biden — impressed he was there at all, so soon after the election.

Mr Albanese’s resetting of Australia’s policy on climate change, which he emphasised inside and outside the meeting, has also gone down well internationally.

The timing of the Quad has been much to Mr Albanese’s advantage.

Immediately after becoming PM, he’s had face-to-face talks, not just with the US president but also with the Japanese and Indian prime ministers, in a diplomatic, top-level job lot.

Anthony Albanese, Joe Biden, Fumio Kishida Narendra Modi stand in line smiling in front of flags.
Anthony Albanese has impressed US President Joe Biden.(AP:  Sadayuki Goto)

As opposition leader, Mr Albanese was focused on domestic rather than foreign policy.

The Quad was an opportunity to get a first-hand feel for issues and positions, as well to indicate the direction his government will take on regional policy.

It’s been a stellar first week for Mr Albanese, but it will only get harder from now, even internationally but, especially, domestically.

Labor fiercely attacked the Morrison government for its Pacific policy failure, after the China-Solomons security agreement exploded into Australian politics during the campaign.

China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, is currently on a diplomatic sweep of the Pacific, with China offering some 10 countries region-wide security and free trade agreements.

Mr Albanese said Australia was paying a big price for cutting aid, but whatever points that might score against its predecessor, the Labor government has to put in place Australia’s response to this fresh Chinese assertiveness.

After the Quad, Foreign Minister Penny Wong flew to Fiji, addressing the Pacific Islands Forum. Her speech strongly focused on the climate issue.

Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong shakes hands on the tarmac after landing in Fiji. 
Foreign Minister Penny Wong flew from Tokyo, where she had accompanied Mr Albanese, to Fiji for a solo trip.(Supplied: Fijian government)

“I understand that, under past governments, Australia has neglected its responsibility to act on climate change,” she said.

“This is a different Australian government and a different Australia.”

Before the election, Labor announced a range of extra assistance measures for the small Pacific nations.

However, some experts say that, to counter China’s Pacific push — if it can be effectively countered — Australia needs to do better than raise climate ambition, boost aid, improve diplomacy and build on existing labour and visas access.

Michael Shoebridge — director of defence, strategy and national security at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) — says Australia should have the same arrangements with the small Pacific states as it has with New Zealand.

This would mean visa-free entry for work and travel, and closer economic arrangements for businesses, far beyond current arrangements. It would be a serious Pacific “step up”.

As in the campaign, when voters were more concerned about the rising cost of living than the national security debate, so over the coming months people’s attention will be primarily on economic issues.

And the picture is grim, as Treasurer Jim Chalmers has underlined this week.

An incoming government has, for a limited period, a sort of immunity from blame. It’s able to say it has “inherited” a bad situation. But this doesn’t last — anyway, the situation itself has to be dealt with, as best the government can.

On Wednesday, Mr Chalmers said he would be “blunt” in the economic statement he’ll deliver when parliament sits.

He highlighted the negatives facing the Australian economy: rising inflation, increasing interest rates, the squeeze on wages.

And he pointed, in particular, to the inflationary spikes in power prices and building costs.

Chalmers gestures as he speaks to media.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers teased a “blunt” economic statement to come.(ABC News: Adam Kennedy)

A day later the Australian Energy Regulator delivered its bad news on electricity costs, with increases of between about 4.5 per cent and 18 per cent in the “benchmark” prices.

This follows a rise in the wholesale cost, driven by higher coal and gas prices, and also contributed to by outages at large coal generators.

On wages, the government has made it clear it wants the Fair Work Commission to deliver an increase of 5.1 per cent — the inflation rate — for the minimum wage. The decision will come before the end of June.

However, much or all of whatever low-paid workers do get — and it may be below 5.1 per cent — will, before long, be swallowed up by price increases, for example for petrol.

Mr Chalmers this week reaffirmed Labor was unlikely to extend the six-month cut in petrol excise that the Morrison government made in its March budget.

For many Australians, the remainder of this year will be very difficult, and there is not much the government can do about it.

The October budget will be a juggling act for Chalmers and Finance Minister Katy Gallagher — who are already searching for savings — and not as benign as the March one.

One feature of Mr Albanese’s first week was his signal that he is apparently determined to try to improve political behaviour.

He publicly rebuked his frontbencher, Tanya Plibersek, for insulting Peter Dutton, who next week will become opposition leader.

Ms Plibersek described Mr Dutton as looking “a bit like Voldemort”, the villain from Harry Potter, saying: “I think there will be a lot of children who have watched a lot of Harry Potter films who will be very frightened of what they are seeing on TV at night, that’s for sure.”

She later contacted Mr Dutton to apologise. Mr Albanese said her comment had been unacceptable.

“I think that, in politics, we need to treat each other with respect. And I think that’s important. Tanya recognises that, which is why she apologised,” the new PM said.

Tanya Plibersek in Parliament house
Tanya Plibersek apologised to Peter Dutton after comparing his appearance to a storybook villain.(ABC News: Ian Cutmore)

Of the man who’ll become his opposite number, Mr Albanese said : “I have a much better relationship with Peter Dutton than I had with Scott Morrison.

“Peter Dutton has never broken a confidence that I’ve had with him.”

“I think it’s very important that the prime minister and the leader of the opposition are able to exchange ideas and information and get co-operation wherever it’s possible.

“I want to lead a government that gets things done for Australia. And I’ll have discussions with Peter Dutton directly if he becomes the leader of the opposition, as I will have discussions with members of the crossbench.”

One message from this election — most notably in the large vote for the “teals” — as well as from extensive other evidence, is that Australians are deeply disillusioned with the way politicians conduct themselves.

They are looking for a more civil discourse. Admittedly, the adversarial system, the nature of today’s media and feral social media work against this.

And broad statements of good intentions — “I want to lead a gentler parliament,” said Mr Albanese on Thursday — are not enough.

However, if Mr Albanese can actually succeed in raising the tone on the political battleground, that will be very welcome for many voters.

Michelle Grattan is a professorial fellow at the University of Canberra and chief political correspondent at The Conversation, where this article first appeared.

Posted Yesterday at 8:03pmThu 26 May 2022 at 8:03pm, updated 11h ago11 hours agoFri 27 May 2022 at 11:11am

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