I read a lot in The
Spectator Australia about the supposed pervasive left-wing bias of the
Australian media, particularly in the papers published by the Fairfax group.
But not being a frequent reader of the mainstream Australian press, I rarely see direct
evidence of it.
However there’s a telling line in a piece reprinted in
today’s Dominion Post by Anne
Summers, a leading Fairfax columnist and former editor of the company’s Good Weekend magazine, which is
published with the Sydney Morning Herald
and Melbourne Age.
In a highly sympathetic article about the latest crisis to
envelop prime minister Julia Gillard, Summers suggests that previous Australian
leaders have been through similar turmoil and eventually emerged with their
reputations intact and even enhanced. She mentions Gough Whitlam – “now revered”
– and Malcolm Fraser, once seen as a “chaotic and divisive figure” but now greatly
admired by the left.
Then she delivers the line that most interested me. “Maybe
even John Howard will eventually become beloved”.
Hang on a minute. Howard won four elections in a row. He was
the second longest-serving Australian prime minister ever, after Sir Robert Menzies.
That suggests the Australian public liked him well enough, even if the Canberra
press gallery didn’t.
That one short sentence is massively revealing. It exposes the
enormous conceit of the left-leaning political commentariat.
They so despise Howard for being popular that they can’t
bring themselves to admit that he was. Election after election, they forecast
his defeat. Election after election, they were wrong. But they remain in denial
even now.
Worse than that, columnists such as Summers display contempt
for the Australian public. To them, it counts for nothing that Australian
voters thought highly enough of Howard to elect his government four times. Stupid,
naïve voters – what would they know? Why couldn’t they listen to their betters
in the media? There’s a deeply anti-democratic streak evident here.
I’ll admit Howard’s personal appeal was lost on me, but he
obviously struck a chord with the ordinary Australian. What’s more, his prime
ministership coincided with a golden era of prosperity and stability – not something that
could be said of the chaotic, shambolic government led by Gillard.
But commentators like Summers still insist Howard was a failure.
He must have been, because they say so. (The rest of her column, incidentally, was so risibly sycophantic about Gillard that I could only conclude that it doesn't matter to Summers whether anyone takes her seriously.)
On a similar note, it was intriguing to hear Kerry-Anne Walsh –
another Fairfax commentator – discussing the latest Australian leadership
crisis on Morning Report yesterday.
She repeatedly referred to Labour politicians by their first names – “Kevin”
for Kevin Rudd, “Simon” for Simon Crean.
As a dinosaur who still believes journalists should exercise
professional detachment, I thought this struck a jarring note. But if Walsh is
going to breach journalistic convention, then she should at least be
consistent. I therefore expect that the next time we hear her mention the leader
of the Liberal Party opposition, she’ll refer to him as “Tony”. And pigs will
soar aloft on gossamer wings.
2 comments:
The media's open hostility to John Howard is not limited to Australia. I heard Kim Hill interview him here on National Radio shortly after he retired and released his biography.
Kim is not known for her generous treatment of more conservative politicians, but her treatment of John Howard was the worst performance I have ever heard from any interviewer, ever.
She finished up by saying in her dry acerbic tone something like "Mr Howard, I'm sorry you didn't enjoy your interview this morning" To which he graciously replied to the effect that he was more than happy to have the interview and to answer her questions.
It was so bad, that I lodged a formal complaint, my first ever, which was rejected on the basis that John Howard was an experienced politician and was well able to deal with the kind of crap that Kim served him (paraphrase mine). Well, no doubt he could, but did that justify her dishing it up in the first instance?
Not one question about what Mr Howard considered to be his greatest achievement in office, no questions about his undoubted political success, just negative carping from start to finish.
I didn't listen to her often, but now I refuse to bother at all, it's offensive behaviour and unwelcome in my house.
I remember the Howard interview very well. It was a shocker. I wrote about it on this blog and in an article for The Spectator Australia. Like you, I have given up listening to Hill.
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