Five things we learned about Tony Abbott’s first week

Buckets of information

It didn’t take long for Tony Abbott’s new government to swing into action, Direct Action. As soon as the official photos were taken on Wednesday,  Operation Sovereign Borders was put into place.

Briefly, this involved deploying the Bintang Army to patrol the beaches and clubs of Indonesia dressed in thongs, t-shirts and shorts, buying “intelligence” and old boats as part of a co-ordinated plan to stem the flow of “illegal” refugees. Operatives – mostly members of the ruling UMBP (Upper Middle Bogan Party) – have been instructed to keep the boats off the Great Western Highway, so that Abbott and Barry O’Farrell can build the roads of the 21st century, which will be completed by the 22nd. The operatives have also been instructed to communicate with their superiors only by code. They will do this by using straws to blow bubbles into buckets of Arak.

Climate conspiracy

At home, the first full day of government coincided with a full moon, a giddy combination. Abbott’s Green Army – another branch of the UMBP – was deployed to pick up litter, plant trees, and remove any sign, repeal any legislation, and dismantle any institution that featured the words “climate” or “clean energy”. Legislation for the repeal of the carbon price, stopping the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, dumping the Climate Change Authority and keeping its recommendations secret was crafted. The Green Army also went on a “graffiti hunt” and reported any public servants that had written the words climate or carbon pricing in note-books or post-it notes. They were promptly sacked, and the two most recent heads of the department of climate change were shown the door.

“No science thanks, we’re Australian”

The word “science” was also removed from any portfolio, and the Climate Commission, which provided independent and professional advice on climate science, was shut and its commissioners sacked, just one week before the release of the IPCC report. The UMBP said it could produce independent scientific analysis itself, apparently misunderstanding the meaning of the words “independent” and “science”. An office junior will compile a report on the IPCC, with the help of columnists from the Daily Telegraph.

Meanwhile, a program was launched to remove references to “coal seam gas” and replace it with a more pleasant association of “natural gas from coal seams”, with the emphasis on “natural”.

This will be just the first step in a comprehensive rephrasing of Australia’s energy sources.

With the agreement of the Motoring, Shooting, Sporting and Palmer United Senate members, the government will introduce legislation from July 1 next year which will require CSG to be known henceforth as “happy gas”, coal-fired generation to be known as Coke, as in “things go better” and its future will represented by an image of a nodding donkey in a sombrero (si, si, yes). Wind energy will be rebadged either as “infrasound” or “chapped lips”, while solar will be known as “sunburn” or “uncloud energy”.

Blowing bubbles

Meanwhile, a large dossier entitled “carbon bubble” was placed on the desk of energy and resources minister Ian Macfarlane, and the messenger shot. It warned that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report to be released on September 27 would likely recommend even tighter “carbon budgets”, meaning that even more than 80 per cent of known fossil fuel reserves would need to be left in the ground to meet climate targets.

There was no time to lose for the UMBP, which is a party of action, Direct Action. Macfarlane announced that he would make sure that “every molecule of gas that can come out of the ground does so”, and issued a “use it or lose it” manifesto to coal miners who have yet to get their projects under way. Those who had not begun production by Friday afternoon would be forced to hand over their permit to the person next in line, as long as they were holding a shovel.

You should always read the back of the book first

As Abbott’s mentor, John Howard, the former leader of the Liberal party, the predecessor of the UMBP, began to write his speech for climate skeptic group The Global Warming Policy Foundation, Abbott’s chief business advisor, Maurice Newman, the former chairman of the ABC, the ASX and other acronyms and anachronisms, declared climate science to be a myth and accused the CSIRO and the weather bureau of having a vested interest in encouraging extreme weather events.

Bars, counseling groups, churches and various charitable organizations began to fill with dismayed members and employees of wind farm developers, solar companies, carbon traders, green think tanks, environmental activists, advisors and other optmists, who all complained that “we didn’t think they would do it. We thought that once they were elected, they’d back off.”

We hate to say this, but we told you so. The UMBP is a party of action, Direct Action. They were always going to do exactly what they said they would do, no matter how ridiculous the idea. Even US President Barack Obama saw this coming, because he has been dealing with Tea Party types and UMPB act-alikes for the last six years in Congress and on Fox News. And so he appointed a gay environmentalist to be the new ambassador in Canberra, which is proposing gay marriage laws that the UMBP – a party of action, Direct Action – is vowing to repeal.

So, shut your eyes and count to 1,071. That’s how many days it is till the next election. Or keep them open and watch the fun. The UMBP has big plans and exactly the wrong tools to implement them. HSBC has given its verdict on what this means for clean energy investment and stranded assets. We think it will be like watching someone trying to nail jelly to a tree.

 

 

 

Comments

9 responses to “Five things we learned about Tony Abbott’s first week”

  1. cathwillems Avatar
    cathwillems

    I’m laughing but I want to cry. Great article Giles.

  2. Hamish McGovern Avatar
    Hamish McGovern

    So the BoM & CSIRO don’t control the weather? – who’d have guessed – good article.

  3. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Makes me want to jump on a leaky boat and seek refuge with a more considered country.

  4. Linda Eggington Avatar
    Linda Eggington

    Makes me want to jump on a leaky boat and seek refuge in a safer country.

  5. Miles Harding Avatar
    Miles Harding

    Just think of the potential for satire.

  6. Chris Fraser Avatar
    Chris Fraser

    I’m counting the days to the next double dissolution, where i may have some hope … does anyone think Abbott could make a good Used Boat salesman ?

  7. JohnRD Avatar
    JohnRD

    You are being a bit hard on upper middle class bogans Giles. Tony’s Tea Party seems a fairer and more accurate description. It is impossible to a bit too hard on the Tea Party.

  8. Terry J Wall Avatar
    Terry J Wall

    Great article well written Giles.
    But the interesting question that all this rabbit silliness is:
    If a government such as the last one, attempts to impose rules and programs that are quite clearly not well thought out and are born without business management experience; and tries to do this on a deficit cash flow; no one trusts them. Labor failed because as most legitimate households and businesses know, you are living in fruitcake land if you don’t understand that cash is God or as many will tell you “cash talks and bullshit walks”. Love that one.

    These truisms where the reason why the Coalition are now in control. Nothing to do with removing the carbon tax or much else. My suggestion to Abbott would be NOT to be cocky about their stupid excessive three word mantras and engage the brain, listen to the experts/ scientists and be humble and think of the big picture.

    1. nate Avatar
      nate

      So dismantling the clean energy finance corp is good business management? that’s just the first week, expect this government to be very short on any long term business strategy, just like Howard and Costello.

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