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What We've Been Reading
The Game: A Portrait of Scott Morrison - by Sean Kelly
When Scott Morrison suddenly became the unelected Prime Minister of Australia in August 2018, many Australians didn’t even know who he was. Three and half years later, the man still remains something of a mystery.
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Sean Kelly’s new book The Game: A Portrait of Scott Morrison tries to look behind the carefully constructed public image to find out who he really is. But trying to find the ‘real’ person beneath the carefully constructed ‘daggy dad’ persona turned out to be more challenging than Kelly expected.
The book shows that the basic foundations of our understanding of ‘ScoMo’ fall away under scrutiny. For example, his much-vaunted lifelong obsession with the Cronulla Sharks and rugby league is a relatively recent thing. In fact, in 2005 he claimed to be supporter of the Western Bulldogs in the AFL! As a kid he played the establishment code, rugby union, not league.
I suppose we shouldn’t be that surprised to find out that what Scott Morrison says about his own life is subject to re-interpretation. After all, he has earned a reputation for saying one thing one day, and the opposite thing the next.
Take Mr Morrison’s famous statement during the 2019 Federal election that Labor’s plan to increase the uptake of electric vehicles would “end the weekend”, because an electric vehicle “won’t tow your trailer. It’s not going to tow your boat. It’s not going to get you out to your favourite camping spot with your family.”
But two years later, when Mr Morrison himself announced a new Federal Government of 30 per of new car sales to be electric vehicles by 2030, he rejected the notion that he had previously ridiculed electric vehicles as a “Labor lie”.
Sean Kelly wonders if Mr Morrison is a man stuck in time, where ”each moment stands alone”:
I guess Scott Morrison is not the first politician to tell fibs, but the problem is not just that he lies. It’s not just that he ‘doesn’t hold a hose’, or that he thinks that ‘it’s not a race’. And it’s not just that he sneaks away for holidays without telling anyone.
The problem is that he can’t cope with the chaos of the reality outside his secure little Canberra bubble, and simply doesn’t know how to deal with it. He wants the world to be like the movie Ground Hog Day, where every days resets back to the same point, and nothing ever changes.
Whether it’s dealing with climate change, protecting the future of workers in the resources sector, responding to demand for greater gender equality, or securing a supply of vaccines or Rapid Antigen Tests to protect Australians from a global pandemic, Scott Morrison’s shtick is always to convince us that there’s nothing to see here.
How good is Australia! How good is apathy and ignorance!
When eventually he concedes that something has to give, Mr Morrison assures us that the inconvenience is only temporary. He tells us not to look in the rear-view mirror, and that we need to move forward. By that he means we should ignore everything we have just seen, experienced and learned, and pretend that nothing actually happened.
Scott Morrison’s ‘forward to the past’ style of leadership is exactly what Australia does not need right now. The world is changing rapidly around us, and we need leadership that understands what’s going on and is capable of responding.
The Morrison Government, like Morrison himself, is hopelessly stuck in the moment – addicted to the daily media cycle, where image is more important than substance. They are disconnected from reality, and bereft of any vision for the future. It’s time to give them the boot.
You can find Sean Kelly’s book The Game: A Portrait of Scott Morrison at all good book stores, or online at Booktopia.
Stewart Prins