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Sam Dastyari's dire straits show parties must abandon the myth of money for nothing | Sam Dastyari's dire straits show parties must abandon the myth of money for nothing |
(1 day later) | |
Sam Dastyari must have set a new record for apologies. When the besieged Labor senator finally faced the media in Sydney on Tuesday, the sorrys came thick and fast. | Sam Dastyari must have set a new record for apologies. When the besieged Labor senator finally faced the media in Sydney on Tuesday, the sorrys came thick and fast. |
Dastyari is under excruciating pressure over his fundraising habits for very good reason. | Dastyari is under excruciating pressure over his fundraising habits for very good reason. |
Accepting money from a Chinese donor to pay out an overspend in personal entitlements, and a legal bill, suggests you don’t know where to draw important lines. | Accepting money from a Chinese donor to pay out an overspend in personal entitlements, and a legal bill, suggests you don’t know where to draw important lines. |
Going an extra step of dialling down criticism of China’s aggressive posture in the South China Sea – if that’s what he did (it wasn’t entirely clear at the press conference – he held out the options that he misspoke or was misquoted) puts a significant question mark over his position on the Labor frontbench. | Going an extra step of dialling down criticism of China’s aggressive posture in the South China Sea – if that’s what he did (it wasn’t entirely clear at the press conference – he held out the options that he misspoke or was misquoted) puts a significant question mark over his position on the Labor frontbench. |
Bill Shorten is backing his New South Wales colleague, reasoning he deserves a second chance, and Dastyari said on Monday he hadn’t been asked to resign, nor had he offered to wander off into the sunset to shut down a persistent distraction for his leader. | Bill Shorten is backing his New South Wales colleague, reasoning he deserves a second chance, and Dastyari said on Monday he hadn’t been asked to resign, nor had he offered to wander off into the sunset to shut down a persistent distraction for his leader. |
Dastyari is a significant institutional player in Labor’s ranks, despite Shorten’s efforts to portray him as a young pup, who needs some training up. His position in the internal power structure affords him a measure of protection when trouble strikes. | Dastyari is a significant institutional player in Labor’s ranks, despite Shorten’s efforts to portray him as a young pup, who needs some training up. His position in the internal power structure affords him a measure of protection when trouble strikes. |
But regardless of how this story ultimately ends, whether he toughs it out, or whether he doesn’t, we can thank Dastyari for the following things. | But regardless of how this story ultimately ends, whether he toughs it out, or whether he doesn’t, we can thank Dastyari for the following things. |
The first is, without even being conscious of it, senior players in the Coalition have lined up to make a compelling public case over the past few days that there is no such thing as money for nothing in politics. | The first is, without even being conscious of it, senior players in the Coalition have lined up to make a compelling public case over the past few days that there is no such thing as money for nothing in politics. |
There has been a roster of frontbenchers, from the prime minister down, standing up with loudhailers to argue that Dastyari’s conduct is an example of “cash for comment”. | There has been a roster of frontbenchers, from the prime minister down, standing up with loudhailers to argue that Dastyari’s conduct is an example of “cash for comment”. |
Let’s just think about this for a couple of minutes. The declared conduct from Dastyari involves payment of a $1,670.82 overspend and a $5,000 legal bill. For most Australians, me included, this is a lot of money. | |
But, viewed in the context of all the money sloshing around in federal politics, the money these folks chase as a matter of routine, it’s a drop in the ocean. | But, viewed in the context of all the money sloshing around in federal politics, the money these folks chase as a matter of routine, it’s a drop in the ocean. |
So let’s accept the government’s logic at face value and persist with it. | So let’s accept the government’s logic at face value and persist with it. |
If one Labor senator can be influenced by a comparatively modest sum, there’s an obvious follow-up question: what does millions buy you? Presumably more than $5,000-odd buys you. | |
Perhaps it leads, for example, to Labor having to work for the best part of a year to try and herd cats on the China free-trade deal – the agreement the trade union movement didn’t like. | Perhaps it leads, for example, to Labor having to work for the best part of a year to try and herd cats on the China free-trade deal – the agreement the trade union movement didn’t like. |
Perhaps, as some frank Coalition MPs have avowed publicly, what donors think becomes a live issue when the government is trying to formulate a superannuation policy that curbs tax breaks for high income earners. | Perhaps, as some frank Coalition MPs have avowed publicly, what donors think becomes a live issue when the government is trying to formulate a superannuation policy that curbs tax breaks for high income earners. |
One could suggest that given circumstantial evidence is being deployed against Dastyari, maybe there is a double standard at play. | One could suggest that given circumstantial evidence is being deployed against Dastyari, maybe there is a double standard at play. |
These are just two recent examples, using the government’s smoking gun logic, that might lead reasonable people to form a conclusion that millions from trade unions and from corporates to Labor and the Coalition may not be abstract bursts of charity. | These are just two recent examples, using the government’s smoking gun logic, that might lead reasonable people to form a conclusion that millions from trade unions and from corporates to Labor and the Coalition may not be abstract bursts of charity. |
So again, let’s step through this, firmly in possession of the government’s logic. | So again, let’s step through this, firmly in possession of the government’s logic. |
Dastyari has done us all a favour by highlighting one problem in the current system: the capacity for foreign interests to try and assert influence in our democracy. | Dastyari has done us all a favour by highlighting one problem in the current system: the capacity for foreign interests to try and assert influence in our democracy. |
But China’s assertion of soft power isn’t the only problem. By muscling up aggressively against Dastyari, the government has thrown open the door on a wider question, about institutional influence more generally. | But China’s assertion of soft power isn’t the only problem. By muscling up aggressively against Dastyari, the government has thrown open the door on a wider question, about institutional influence more generally. |
Institutional backers do influence policy outcomes in Canberra – it’s just not something the major political parties generally like to acknowledge in polite company, lest people form a conclusion that their representative democracy isn’t about them. | Institutional backers do influence policy outcomes in Canberra – it’s just not something the major political parties generally like to acknowledge in polite company, lest people form a conclusion that their representative democracy isn’t about them. |
So when the attorney general, George Brandis, goes on morning radio and argues reform of the donations regime is a “different conversation” from the travails of Dastyari – he is dead wrong. | So when the attorney general, George Brandis, goes on morning radio and argues reform of the donations regime is a “different conversation” from the travails of Dastyari – he is dead wrong. |
Hiding behind a construction that this is an “unconventional” donation just doesn’t cut it. | Hiding behind a construction that this is an “unconventional” donation just doesn’t cut it. |
If you’ve got a problem with what Dastyari did – and we all should – you have a problem with institutional influence in Australian politics and, once you open that conversation up, it’s impossible to build a rhetorical firewalls. You can’t bend the conversation to suit your political convenience. | If you’ve got a problem with what Dastyari did – and we all should – you have a problem with institutional influence in Australian politics and, once you open that conversation up, it’s impossible to build a rhetorical firewalls. You can’t bend the conversation to suit your political convenience. |
So, where to from here? | So, where to from here? |
It is entirely possible that the broad-ranging policy conversation we absolutely need to have will founder where it so often does, in the territory of self-interest. But there are some promising signs and I think we need to look through the distractions, grab them and drive them home. | It is entirely possible that the broad-ranging policy conversation we absolutely need to have will founder where it so often does, in the territory of self-interest. But there are some promising signs and I think we need to look through the distractions, grab them and drive them home. |
Labor says it will ban foreign donations, require near real-time disclosure of donations, lower the thresholds for disclosure and support increased public funding. | Labor says it will ban foreign donations, require near real-time disclosure of donations, lower the thresholds for disclosure and support increased public funding. |
It’s not nearly enough but it’s a start. The Greens would support those things and more. Promisingly, various Coalition folks are also busting through the “all about Sam” political containment line. | It’s not nearly enough but it’s a start. The Greens would support those things and more. Promisingly, various Coalition folks are also busting through the “all about Sam” political containment line. |
Cory Bernardi says donations should be limited to people on the Australian electoral roll – a change that would sweep out the institutional and foreign money – and a position in synchronicity with the prime minister’s previously expressed views. | Cory Bernardi says donations should be limited to people on the Australian electoral roll – a change that would sweep out the institutional and foreign money – and a position in synchronicity with the prime minister’s previously expressed views. |
Two cabinet ministers, Steve Ciobo and Darren Chester, have sent positive signals about banning foreign donations and about continuous disclosure in the past 24 hours. | Two cabinet ministers, Steve Ciobo and Darren Chester, have sent positive signals about banning foreign donations and about continuous disclosure in the past 24 hours. |
Malcolm Turnbull is on the public record supporting change to the disclosure regime and is a prime minister in need of a substantial win. So why not take control of this issue and make a meaningful downpayment on change? | Malcolm Turnbull is on the public record supporting change to the disclosure regime and is a prime minister in need of a substantial win. So why not take control of this issue and make a meaningful downpayment on change? |
The choice is stark. | The choice is stark. |
We can either indulge in a bout of hand-wringing and a flurry of hurled off headlines to get us all through another, febrile, waterfall news cycle – or the parliament, led by the prime minister, at the request of the voters who absolutely deserve a stake in a healthy system, can knuckle down and do something about it. | We can either indulge in a bout of hand-wringing and a flurry of hurled off headlines to get us all through another, febrile, waterfall news cycle – or the parliament, led by the prime minister, at the request of the voters who absolutely deserve a stake in a healthy system, can knuckle down and do something about it. |
• This story was amended on 7 September 2016 to correct the amount of Dastyari’s legal bill. |
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