Opinion

With big plans on the horizon, consensus will be crucial for the Albanese government

Michelle Grattan
July 9 2022 - 5:30am
NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meet with SES volunteers in Richmond. Picture: AAP
NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meet with SES volunteers in Richmond. Picture: AAP

It was a sharp contrast. Similar disasters, very different politics.

Responding to the NSW and Queensland floods earlier this year, Scott Morrison couldn't put a foot right. Complaints abounded - over the Commonwealth's response, and his own.

In this week's NSW disaster, federal-state relations have been much smoother. The Albanese government learned from watching its predecessor's problems. Murray Watt has made a (so far) effective transition from vociferous critic to activist emergency management minister.

A notable feature has been the very positive response of NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet. As the federal opposition and other critics hoped to score a political point, the Liberal premier had the Labor prime minister's back.

Appearing at a joint news conference with Anthony Albanese on Wednesday, Perrottet praised the "great co-ordination" between the two levels of government.

He made it clear that the latest response was much better than the earlier one, and had little truck with critics' attempts to claim Albanese (in Ukraine at the weekend, without communications) hadn't been in touch fast enough. "As soon as he could, he picked up the phone to call me."

Accepting that a swallow does not a summer make, this instance of federal-state harmony is encouraging.

The pandemic drove significant changes in Australia's federation, especially by empowering the states, albeit without any formal alteration in the distribution of responsibilities. We are yet to see whether lasting changes will come out of that experience.

But if the Albanese government wants to promote its various reforms, as much harmony as possible with the states will be vital.

For his part Perrottet, facing a very difficult election early next year, has an incentive to get on with a popular new federal government. He doesn't want fights on two fronts.

Where possible, the PM will bring his declared aim of a "consensus" approach to his dealings with the states. Albanese wants a "reset" in the federation.

A "reset" is already being pursued by Education Minister Jason Clare, who outlined his plans at a Universities Australia conference this week.

Political players and commentators have noted a feeling among many people after the election of what's described as "relief". Nowhere is this more evident than in the university sector.

Education Minister Jason Clare. Picture: Katherine Griffiths
Education Minister Jason Clare. Picture: Katherine Griffiths

The Coalition hardly tried to disguise its hostility to universities. It decided they were rich enough not to need JobKeeper. And the pandemic delivered a body blow to the lucrative revenue flow from overseas students. There have been extensive job cuts.

The former government also had ideological issues with universities. They were seen as incubators for left-wing ideas. It wanted them much more directly tied into the jobs market. It reshaped its funding, imposing heavier course fees on humanities students.

Clare will announce in coming months a group to lead Labor's proposed "accord" process to chart future directions for the universities.

This will involve a broad range of stakeholders, and amounts to a major new inquiry into the sector.

Tanya Plibersek summarised Labor's desired approach when she was shadow minister. "The aim of an accord would be to build consensus on key policy questions and national priorities in a sober, evidence-based way, without so much of the political cut and thrust. Building that consensus should help university reform stick."

But Andrew Norton, professor in the practice of higher education policy at the Australian National University, says the word "accord" carries "the implication we're going to seek agreement between conflicting views and interests rather than pursue a coherent new policy direction based on rigorous analysis".

While the collaborative approach is welcome, potential tension points are obvious, especially when the government will be under heavy budgetary constraints for years to come.

A coming test for consensus will be the September jobs summit. This will be an ideas-gathering exercise, but the government will also want to shape it as a prelude to the October budget, and that would require some common messages. The summit needs to reach a degree of agreement on the immediate problems, probably not so difficult given the acute labour market shortages.

To what extent, however, will participants be able to coalesce around solutions, for example the desirable level of migration?

In a bold or foolhardy gesture, depending on your view, Albanese has indicated he won't be deterred by a failure to reach consensus in one of the most sensitive policy areas he faces. This is the plan to hold a constitutional referendum this term to enshrine an Indigenous Voice to Parliament.

Recently he told The Australian: "You don't need a consensus but you need a broad agreement, firstly, among First Nations leaders and then, secondly, you would seek to get as broad a political agreement as possible for a referendum.

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"So that doesn't mean that any group would have veto power because my concern is that unless there is a referendum in the foreseeable future, then the momentum will be lost." If the Coalition was opposed, "we would consider that as a factor but not necessarily a decisive one".

The conventional wisdom is that bipartisanship would be essential for the success of this referendum.

The costs of failure on something so fundamental would be high. The defeat of the 1999 referendum on the republic put the issue off the agenda for a generation (so far). It would be extremely risky for Albanese to go to the people without consensus across the major parties.

On the other hand, it might be that his threat to do so would increase the pressure on the opposition. Would the Coalition really want to withhold its support, and by doing so fuel division in the community?

It's too early to say. But we can say this referendum is shaping up as the highest-stakes social issue of this parliamentary term.

  • Michelle Grattan is a press gallery journalist and former editor of The Canberra Times. She is a professorial fellow at the University of Canberra and writes for The Conversation, where her columns also appear.
Michelle Grattan

Michelle Grattan is a press gallery journalist and former editor of The Canberra Times. She is a professorial fellow at the University of Canberra and writes for The Conversation, where her columns also appear.