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Charge of a Young Gun

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  • Charge of a Young Gun

    The Sun Herald (Sydney, Australia)
    May 25, 2008 Sunday
    First Edition


    Charge of a young gun

    by Paul Daley


    The Libs' man-in-waiting faces a threat by Kevin Rudd's mate -
    opportunity permitting, of course.

    LIBERAL leadership speculation orbits the ambitions of one man -
    Malcolm Turnbull.

    It is widely assumed he will be the next leader. But perhaps it is
    time to cast the net wider, to look beyond the front pages to who
    might come up the middle, if and when Brendan Nelson finally stumbles,
    or is tripped.

    It is largely a question of timing.

    Turnbull would become leader tomorrow if the leadership "blew up" -
    that is, if Brendan Nelson called for a spill of leadership positions
    or if Turnbull challenged. That is unlikely. But with such a febrile
    atmosphere inside the Liberals it would be foolish to rule out either
    eventuality; the unanticipated can have disastrously magnified
    consequences.

    Understand this: while he is undeniably showing his leadership wares,
    Turnbull is not setting deadlines. Like most Liberals, he purportedly
    believes Nelson is a short- to medium-term proposition. He will not
    force the inevitable now because he does not want Nelson to say he was
    not given "a fair go".

    Such a cry from John Howard helped paralyse the Liberals in the late
    1980s and early '90s, after Andrew Peacock undermined his
    leadership. Turnbull will not be held responsible for a repeat.

    He is well aware that if Nelson's tenure drags on into 2009, a
    possible election year, another candidate may emerge.

    At 42, Joe Hockey is almost eight years younger than Nelson, more than
    a decade younger than Turnbull and nine years younger than deputy
    leader Julie Bishop. Hockey entered Parliament in 1996 and served on
    John Howard's front bench in a string of portfolios from 1998. Nelson
    made the front bench in 2001, Bishop in 2003 and Turnbull in
    2006. Experience counts in politics.

    Hockey is close to Kevin Rudd. He knows the Prime Minister better than
    anyone else in the Opposition. He likes to tell friends: "Kevin's a
    mate. But really he's full of shit - I know his weaknesses."

    >From 2001 to 2007, Hockey and Rudd shared a weekly spot on the
    Sunrise television program, where they exchanged light-hearted
    banter. It helped Rudd enormously in the public recognition
    stakes. Similarly, it made a political brand of Hockey, a great bear
    of a man and a considerably more solid parliamentary performer than
    Rudd.

    Friends argue he brings a huge dose of humanity - and policy reform -
    to the Liberals. His father, Richard, is of Palestinian-Armenian
    descent. A Catholic, Hockey is the only person with a Palestinian
    background in Federal Parliament.

    In late April, he attended a ceremony in the Israeli desert capital,
    Be'er Sheva, for the opening of a park to commemorate the 1917 Battle
    of Beersheba when Australian Light Horsemen audaciously stormed the
    Turkish trenches and captured the town. It was the beginning of the
    end of hundreds of years of Ottoman occupation of Palestine.

    The Beersheba story resonates with Hockey, whose paternal grandfather
    was deputy administrator of the town under British mandate. Hockey
    used the charge, in his maiden speech, as a metaphor for seizing
    opportunity.

    He was one of three Australian federal politicians at the dedication
    of the park in Be'er Sheva, as the city is known today. Two heads of
    state, our Governor-General Michael Jeffery and Israel's President
    Shimon Peres, were also present. But it was to Hockey that young
    Australians, dressed in boardies and VB singlets, flocked for
    photographs.

    Little wonder NSW Labor was hugely relieved when Hockey recently ruled
    out a switch to state politics, perhaps - recent reports maintain -
    initially suggested by Turnbull himself to get the sizeable member for
    North Sydney out of the big pond.

    "We'd have been f---ed if Hockey became leader of the state Libs. He'd
    win the next election," says a prominent member of the NSW
    Right. Such, it seems, is the potency of the Sunrise factor.

    Hockey was one of two ministers who privately urged Howard to quit in
    favour of Peter Costello prior to the last election. Howard and Hockey
    had not spoken properly since the election. But they have buried the
    hatchet and the younger man thanked the former prime minister for the
    opportunities he had given him in government.

    Howard, despite last year's loss, enjoys enormous influence. The value
    of his patronage should not be dismissed.

    But will Hockey get the chance? He is telling friends that "right now"
    he is genuinely not interested - a politician's answer, in every
    sense, because the leadership is not vacant.

    Hockey has two young children and is relishing being a far less absent
    father and partner. To friends, he makes no secret of his ambition but
    is not overtly promoting himself as a contender. It is an approach
    that might appeal to Liberals put off by Turnbull's bullishness.

    In the near future, the Liberal leadership must decide whether to
    oppose the Government's substantive industrial relations legislation
    (covering, among other things, the re-introduction of unfair dismissal
    laws), thereby offering the Government a trigger for an early double
    dissolution election.

    The Liberals hold more than 20 seats by under 4per cent; unless things
    improved dramatically, they would lose many of them.

    Turnbull, it is safe to wager, is more cautious about opposing the
    industrial relations legislation in the Senate, where the Coalition
    has a majority until July. After that, it needs support of either
    independent Nick Xenophon or Steve Fielding. Hockey, as the previous
    industrial relations minister, might also think carefully about
    fighting another election on that front.

    The debate could yet spill into the leadership tensions. In politics,
    as in life, the big opportunity arises rarely.

    It is there to be seized; you cannot dictate its timing. Consider
    Howard and Costello. Then consider Joe Hockey's light horsemen.
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