Saturday, 16 May 2026

𝐑𝐞𝐚𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝐎𝐯𝐞𝐫 𝐏𝐨𝐥𝐢𝐭𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐥 𝐓𝐫𝐢𝐛𝐚𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐦

Sadly, much of what passes for political discussion online today is driven less by facts than by tribal loyalty, outrage, and selective morality. Too often, people apply one standard to their opponents and another to those on their own side.


I’ve been critical of Liberal and National MPs just as I have been of Labor, the Greens, One Nation, and Independents on a range of issues. But I’m not going to “stick the boot in” simply because social media demands outrage, especially when actions taken by political opponents have merit.


Nor am I buying into the argument that a party “should have done something years ago” without acknowledging that circumstances, competing priorities, legal constraints, and public pressure evolve over time. Governments and oppositions deal with thousands of issues simultaneously, not just the one dominating headlines or fuelling outrage on social media at any given moment.


Those on the conservative side of politics are often quick to condemn dishonesty, hypocrisy, or moral failings when they come from the left, yet many turn a blind eye when the same behaviour exists within their own ranks, sometimes even defending or justifying it. I won’t do that.


Principles only mean something if they are applied consistently, regardless of which “side” benefits.


It is for that reason that I find it extraordinary that some in the “tribe” attack the Liberals and Nationals for attempting to address issues within the Sex Discrimination Act, while completely ignoring those who actively blocked or undermined those same reform efforts. When that happens, all semblance of reason is lost and the debate becomes purely tribal.


A lot of the commentary also betrays a basic misunderstanding of how Parliament actually works. Governments and oppositions deal with thousands of pieces of legislation, legal constraints, and competing national priorities at any one time. No party has the capacity to progress every issue simultaneously, and policy inevitably moves when pressure, evidence, and consequences reach a tipping point, not when social media demands it.


What is even more striking is the selective morality at play, where some are quick to condemn one side while actively promoting another in the belief they will “fix it.” In doing so, they ignore, overlook, or excuse serious issues, including support for a convicted pedophile and rapist, and representatives who have breached AVOs multiple times. You cannot credibly claim to stand for women’s safety while selectively ignoring serious harm when it is politically inconvenient.


Yet Australia’s stability has never depended on unanimity or moral certainty. It has depended on restraint, proportion, and a shared commitment to rules that outlast any single cause. Until recent years, we largely thrived on disagreement and competing viewpoints within a framework of mutual respect. That maturity allowed crises to be managed and institutions to hold without collapsing into chaos.


Increasingly, that is being replaced by warring tribes. When reason is absent, everything becomes outrage and identity politics. When reason prevails, crises are managed, damage is contained, and institutions continue to function as intended.


Being the voice of reason is not about ideology or anger, nor about chasing the loudest crowd. It is about judgment under pressure, choosing what is right over what is easy, and holding principle even when it is politically inconvenient. It requires composure, not reaction, and a willingness to focus on solutions rather than feeding outrage for its own sake.


Hard times do not weaken a country when met with restraint and fairness. They strengthen responsibility and reinforce social cohesion. That is how trust is built.


A politics without reason slides into division and performative outrage. A politics guided by reason resists that pull, values proportion over theatrics, and remembers that unity is earned through fairness, restraint, and respect, not slogans.


We are not going to fix anything by retreating further into tribal thinking. If we are to get out of the hole we are in, it requires people willing to stand against their own “tribe” when necessary and choose reason over reaction.


So spare me the feigned morality, the double standards, and the political cultism that now dominates these debates.

Friday, 15 May 2026

One Nation Has NOT Copyrighted Basic Commonsense or Policy Imperatives

Hanson supporters, and even Hanson herself, are claiming Angus Taylor is “stealing” One Nation policies. No, he isn’t. This is a misplaced argument. He is expanding on policy positions the Coalition has been developing and taking to elections well before this budget reply.

Yes, Pauline Hanson and One Nation have been talking for years about immigration placing pressure on housing demand. That is true. But they did not invent the argument, nor do they own it.


The Liberal Party and the broader conservative movement have long argued for:

  • managed migration in the national interest
  • linking population growth to infrastructure capacity
  • reliable and affordable energy
  • support for mining, gas and resource development
  • lower regulation and opposition to expanding climate bureaucracy
  • housing supply reform and infrastructure-led growth

These positions reflect longstanding policy debates shaped by common pressures that confront all governments: cost-of-living pressures, housing affordability, population growth, infrastructure constraints, fiscal limits, demographic change, and global economic conditions. These pressures inevitably force all major parties to grapple with similar issues, even if they frame or prioritise them differently.


John Howard regularly spoke about immigration needing to match Australia’s capacity to absorb population growth while maintaining infrastructure standards and social cohesion. Tony Abbott repeatedly argued energy policy had to prioritise affordability and reliability over ideology.


Peter Dutton took the migration-and-housing issue directly to the 2025 election campaign, proposing lower permanent migration and arguing Australia should not bring in more people than it can house. Angus Taylor is now expanding on that framework with additional focus on housing supply and economic capacity.


And the numbers explain why this debate has become mainstream.


In 2024–25 Australia recorded net overseas migration of around 306,000 people while only about 175,000 homes were completed. The year before, migration was about 429,000 against roughly 178,000 homes built.


That gap places pressure on rents, housing prices, infrastructure and services. Recognising supply and demand realities is not uniquely “One Nation policy.” It is basic economics.


One Nation supporters may argue the Liberals are “copying Hanson,” but acknowledging these pressures does not make the underlying policy direction exclusive to any one party. The real distinction lies in how each party chooses to respond, what they are prepared to fund, and who ultimately bears the cost.


And “commonsense” is not, and never has been, the exclusive property of Pauline Hanson or One Nation.

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

The White Trash of Asia? With Labor in Charge it’s a VERY Real Possibility

Lee Kuan Yew’s 1980 warning to Australia was as blunt as it was prescient: without bold economic opening and reform, the country risked becoming the “poor white trash of Asia”. 

The Singaporean founding Prime Minister saw a complacent nation coasting on resource wealth, high tariffs, a rigid labour market, fixed exchange rate and import-substitution policies that stifled competitiveness. He urged massive deregulation, export orientation, and a shift from digging up minerals to building ingenuity and productivity. The phrase stung precisely because it was true at the time: double-digit inflation and unemployment, chronic current-account deficits, and a sense that Australia was living beyond its means. 


The response, ironically delivered by a Labor government under Bob Hawke and Paul Keating from 1983, was exactly what Lee prescribed. They floated the dollar, slashed tariffs, deregulated finance, introduced enterprise bargaining and opened Australia to Asia. The result was 30 years of unbroken growth, rising living standards and the transformation Lee said was possible. His warning became a catalyst, not a curse. 

Four decades later, the warning feels relevant again. After four years of the current federal Labor government (elected May 2022), key indicators echo the pre-reform stagnation Lee diagnosed.


Productivity and competitiveness have stalled


Australia’s long-term productivity growth is among the weakest in the OECD. Labour productivity in the market sector posted a five-year average near zero or slightly negative in recent periods, with multifactor productivity also languishing. Whole-economy labour productivity fell in 2024-25 before a modest rebound in late 2025 data (1.0% for the year in some measures), but the trend remains far below the 1.5–2%+ averages that drove the Hawke-Keating and Howard eras. 


This is not just a post-pandemic blip. The Productivity Commission and ABS data show the slowdown began well before 2022, but the per-capita outcomes under the current government have been particularly weak. Real GDP per capita fell for six consecutive quarters in 2023–24 (an 18-month per-capita recession) and remains below 2022 levels even after modest 2025 recovery. Headline GDP growth of around 2.6% through 2025 masks population-driven expansion rather than genuine per-person prosperity. 


Living standards have come under pressure


Real wages initially lagged inflation sharply after 2022. While nominal Wage Price Index growth has been solid (above 3% for 14 straight quarters by late 2025), real wages were still reported as lower than pre-2022 levels in some early 2026 assessments, with cumulative purchasing-power losses for average workers estimated in the thousands of dollars during the high-inflation period. Recent cooling inflation had allowed some real-wage recovery, but inflation is creeping up again, and the overall story is one of squeezed disposable incomes, bracket creep and cost-of-living strain that has outpaced wage gains for much of the term. 


The 2026 federal budget has intensified concerns


The May 2026 budget projects gross debt rising above $1 trillion (peaking around 35–36% of GDP in coming years), with ongoing structural deficits rather than a return to surplus. Critics across business groups and analysts describe it as a “tax grab” that punishes aspiration: negative gearing is now restricted largely to new builds only (effective 2027 for post-budget purchases), the 50% capital-gains-tax discount is replaced by inflation-indexing only, and a minimum 30% tax floor on certain gains and trusts has been introduced. The stated aim is to rebalance toward workers and housing supply, but the immediate effect, according to property, investment and accounting bodies, is to deter private investment, raise the cost of capital and discourage risk-taking precisely when productivity and business investment need to rise. 


These measures add to revenue but do little to address the underlying productivity trap Lee warned against: over-reliance on resources and population growth instead of ingenuity, capital deepening and competitive reform.


Lee Kuan Yew was never anti-Australian,he was pro-reform. He saw what resources-rich complacency could do and what openness could achieve. The Hawke-Keating era proved him right. The question now is whether Australia has the political will to repeat that discipline or whether, four decades on, the “poor white trash of Asia” risk is once again a live warning rather than a historical footnote. 


The data,sluggish productivity, per-capita stagnation and a budget that tilts against investment, suggest the complacency Lee diagnosed has returned. Without a renewed focus on deregulation, skills, innovation and competitive incentives, the standard-of-living gains of the reform era risk eroding. History shows the warning worked once. It may need to work again.