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45 responses to “Smooth operator, smooth transition”

  1. Anthony_

    I wonder what company will win the next major infrastructure tender in Queensland under Bligh? lol

    Hint : Beattie will be there soon

  2. Mark

    I think that’s a misreading of Beattie. He doesn’t need to do a Mackenroth and go and work for a developer and he knows it would cheapen his reputation to do so.

    But Mr Beattie said he was thinking of a long holiday and spending more time with his family and would not give a firm indication of his next position.

    “I have not thought about jobs here or overseas,” he said.

    “But you know I have very strong ethical standards. And it would be very difficult for me to take most jobs because frankly I would never use the knowledge that I have as Premier for personal gain,” he said.

    “I couldn’t do it morally. I couldn’t pick up the phone and call Anna Bligh or Robert Schwarten or Paul Lucas or Judy Spence or Desley Boyle.

    “I just couldn’t do it.”

    http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/news/queensland/is-beattie-going-to-london/2007/09/11/1189276662615.html

  3. Sacha

    Mark, wasn’t Wayne Goss originally part of the AWU faction? Didn’t he and another of its members leave the faction before he became leader?

  4. Mark

    Yes, Sacha, actually that’s right. I should have written that he wasn’t a member of any faction while he was Premier.

  5. hc

    This reads like party propaganda from a cheer squad rather than a press posting Mark. Fresh, young, talented, articulate … where’s the bathroom and your sense of proportion, Mark?

    The fact is that Beattie wasn’t much of a Premier though he was quite a nice bloke which went well with his goofy grin and bland populism. A loveable turkey.

    Its hard to see his lefty successor failing to do better.

  6. Mark

    Thanks for that well informed comment, Harry. I don’t know much about Victorian politics so I generally refrain from comment on it. I’m surprised you have expertise in Queensland politics.

    I’ll have a thread up on Beattie’s legacy tomorrow so save up your stoushing urges.

  7. Anthony_

    Hmm I don’t know about “personal gain” and “ethics” the word is he will be in some way part of Babcock and Brown.

  8. patrickg

    This reads like party propaganda from a cheer squad

    Ha ha ha ha ha! Harry Clarke wrote that! About someone else!

  9. Mark

    We’ll see, Anthony. The word is often wrong.

  10. Anthony_

    Mark true…just like Howard resigning we will see soon enough cheers!

  11. FDB

    Sade is Beattie’s replacement?

    I’m moving north.

  12. steve

    The latest Printgate developments that cut across state and Fed politics are here.

  13. steve

    Bligh and Lucas - Briabane Times view

    - Courier Mail View

  14. paul walter

    I notice most recognise the likeliness of Bligh and some also question the substance. Both approaches can be correct. Yes, she looks the goods, but in what sense?
    Is she ok with policy and leadership, is she merely a reactive, clutching “politician”. “Vision” or image and self-preservation, this time in a power-suit?
    I can ask Mark for an intelligent response to the following without expecting a rasonable answer, but will ask anyway.
    Any chance that the new regime will pull QLD out of a Lennonist Stone Age, as per ecology, environment, “development” and neoliberalism?
    Or just ( yet another ) replay of the same old- same old “vested- interests rule”, regardless of harm or damage ?

  15. Mark

    I think we’ll need to wait and see, paul, for a lot of the answers. I would hope that the “development” at all costs mentality is on the way out, but I’m not holding my breath. Bligh showed a fair bit of vision before becoming Treasurer – it’s harder to judge her in that role (except to say she was very competent) as she was really implementing Beattie’s decisions and agenda. In general, I think we will see a more overt support for a socially liberal agenda, and perhaps more emphasis on social spending.

    I don’t think she’s a “reactive, clutching politician”.

    I can ask Mark for an intelligent response to the following without expecting a rasonable answer, but will ask anyway.

    I’m at a loss to know what you mean by that.

  16. brokenleftleg

    The Libs have had a smoother transition. Over the last 11 years, nearly every moderate has left the party or died. At grass roots level, the Libs are now a bunch of lunatic fringe right Christian/market fundamentalists hell bent on the biggest election train wreck the country has ever seen.
    Toot Toot Mr Howard, keep that foot on the accelerator

  17. Danny

    Mark:
    Care to elaborate on Madam Bligh’s “fair bit of vision before becoming Treasurer” while in the education portfolio, probably her longest, and therefore the one where she should have made her mark most?

    Arts? State Development? Any crumb will do. Getting kelvin Grove housing estate investment opportunity through as an education initiative?

    I reckon her Mätresse-stroke has been raising the use of the “The Glossy Brochure” as propaganda device to an art form. I wonder if it would be possible to audit the various departments’ glossy brochure deployment over the life of the Beattie gov’t, who was champion GB’er?

    Looks like they are going into risk management mode, in case GB’s don’t work so well any more: there’s a tender out, -
    -(well not exactly out, but a ” FORWARD PROCUREMENT SCHEDULE ONLY and as such is only an anticipated purchase for the 2007/08 financial year”)-

    for “Critical customer confrontation training” services.

    Qld state gov’t agencies being confronted by critical customers? Surely not, were all happy happy joy joy aren’t we?

  18. steve

    National Member for Gympie fires broadside at Seeney and Flegg for being absent.

  19. wpd

    Hmm I donâ??t know about â??personal gainâ?? and â??ethicsâ?? the word is he will be in some way part of Babcock and Brown.

    While anything is possible, I don’t believe he would even contemplate that option. Certainly his public service chief went down that road in the not too distant past, but Beattie has a sense of history and ‘right and wrong’ that IMHO rules that out entirely.

    Look for him to accept a public service type role either within Australia but more likely as some type of government representative overseas.

  20. derrida derider

    I reckon wpd’s right. He’s got a job lined up (ambassador, trade rep, whatever) working for the Rudd government

  21. derrida derider

    Oh and while I agree its a bit rich for harry to complain about it, this post was not exactly a critical appraisal of Beattie or Bligh.

  22. paul walter

    Thanks for considered response, Mark. Sorry about the spelling error, obviously created a misapprehension.
    Was not suggesting she IS a grasping politician, was wondering if she might yet be proven one, “in the eating”, so to speak.
    If we have Lennon-style politicians elsewhere, could not the current climate create equine flu like conditions for more of them?
    As to doubting the response I received, I was only going on responses I have had from other experts concerning specific issues, particularly ones as Foundational( if only to me) as development/ neolib/ ecology.

  23. Mark

    No probs, paul.

    Incidentally, I read someone in the Fin saying something along the lines of “as a left winger, she’s predisposed to place importance on education and social services”. What have we come to!!!

    dd, it’s mostly a political commentary. It’s just a statement of fact to say that she’s a good communicator, and perceived as competent etc. In part I’m drawing on some polling we did for the state election last year. I don’t know whether Harry understands genre, but I’m sure you do – I’m not setting out to write a detailed policy appraisal of Bligh’s record, or to assess Beattie’s legacy, but to provide some short commentary on the politics and background for Crikey readers many of whom aren’t familiar with Qld politics.

    There certainly is a lot of room for debate on Beattie’s legacy, which is why, as I said earlier, I’ll be posting something about that later on tonight.

    Danny, I’m thinking of raising the school leaving age, the Education 2020 planning process, the emphasis on embedding voc ed with school ed, the creation of state colleges with particular specialties – ie maths/science, creative arts, aviation, etc. There’s a lot more, and again, some of it, like Prep, arouses debate. But there’s no doubt that she was a reforming Education Minister. Welford really has just implemented and tweaked stuff. Education, as you’d be aware, has long been an area in which Queensland has lagged seriously, and the Smart State isn’t just about industry policy.

  24. Mark

    wpd, yep, the article I linked to was speculating about him becoming Trade Commissioner in London. I think Beattie does have more to offer in a public role down the track.

    Anyway, FWIW, I like Anna Bligh and I’m glad she’s become Premier. (Lucas is a mate from Uni so I’m obviously pleased he’s to be Deputy). If Beattie had stayed on, as well, Seeney may well have been in with a chance come election time. And it’s very good for Rudd in Qld.

    I will also be very interested to see whether she departs from the populist/big boss style of leadership that’s characterised almost all Qld Premiers.

  25. CK

    There is something about that bright, sunny, optimistic, Queensland smile …

  26. hc

    dd, It certainly isn’t critical. Is the word syncophantic? One glowing adjective after another. I guess to Mark it’s like asserting the faith but it is very tedious writing that says little more than ‘I am a Labor supporter’. And you are saying that – echo, echo – on a blog that panders to those with the same beliefs.

    As an occasional reader I was struck by the pointlessness of it.

    Also it is dishonesty – no-one ever claimed that Beattie was a great Premier. He just was not a man of intellect or substance. He squandered a decade of possibilities for reconstructing Queensland’s infrastructure in one of the fastest growing areas in Australia – energy, ports, transport, water, health all ignored and dumb subsidies retained.

    He was a former railway union hack and his replacement is a community relations ‘social worker’ with smaller teeth than her predecessor and who is probably only slightly more reticent than he is to turn every media occasion into an opportunity to sprout populist cliche.

    Yes, Queenslanders are different.

  27. Danny

    Forget attracting the likes of Boeing, I reckon we’ll see a manolo blahnik factory established here pretty soon.

  28. Danny

    Just remembered, last time I saw Kev in West End was at a footpath table at the Swiss Deli with Anna. Should have guessed something was up.
    I’m not sure of LP’s product placement policy, but they do make the most delicious snackerals. Not swiss either, more portuguese.
    And the company you can keep…

  29. Brian

    I like Anna Bligh too. She’s very calm and relaxed inside her own skin. One of the bravest things she did was to face the Traveston Dam protestors. They showed a bit of it on TV tonight. She seemed totally unflappable.

    Mark, you are right that there was a fair bit going on in education when Bligh was there. On Prep, which I know most about, the policy was a crock, but that is probably not her fault. Primary principals have long wanted to get their hands on Preschool and domesticate it. So did the curriculum development boys and girls at system level.

    The implementation was crook too. Top down and wanting to hear good news only. But that style seemed to go right across government. I have no reason to believe, though, that this would change if the other mob got in. When I enquired about the National Party’s policy on the public service I was told they didn’t have one.

    But if we are going to have rampant neoliberalism and managerialism anyway you could do worse than Anna Bligh methinks.

  30. Mark

    Yep, nice spot, that Deli.

  31. Mark

    Also it is dishonesty – no-one ever claimed that Beattie was a great Premier.

    Lordy, Harry, do you read or just infer? I don’t state in the piece that Beattie was a great Premier. He was a brilliant politician. As a Premier, he wasn’t bad, but he wasn’t a detail person, and he can be rightly criticised in some areas but also rightly praised in others.

    his replacement is a community relations ’social worker’ with smaller teeth than her predecessor

    I don’t think you know a thing about Anna Bligh, quite frankly.

    Yes, Queenslanders are different.

    As others have noted, it’s quite bizarre to be lectured on impartiality by you. Not that Crikey is supposed to be impartial anyway – it’s opinion and commentary.

    And as to that remark, you, sir, and any other Mexicans who share your view, can shove it where the sun doesn’t shine. I mean Melbourne of course.

  32. Hal9000

    I’m also in the Bligh admirer camp, about which enough panegyrics have already been written.

    Lucas, however, is a self-important windbag and a dud. I can only assume his more talented colleagues – eg Mickel, Welford and Robertson – have been overlooked in order to ensure, Brian Howe-like, that the Deputy slot goes to someone held in such universally low esteem that he can’t be a threat.

  33. Mark

    Well, I disagree with that, but as I said, I know Lucas so can’t be objective on it.

  34. Hal9000

    So do I, Mark, and neither can I.

  35. Mark

    Well, I like him, Hal9000, but I get the sense that you don’t. But, to be honest, I haven’t followed his portfolio performance so I think anything I would say in his defence would be coloured too much by our personal history.

  36. Danny

    It’d have to be a unique situation whereby the PM’s and the Premier’s jobs are at the dispensation of the one smallish localised group of people, such as the electors of Griffith/South Brisbane, wouldn’t it? Half a dozen pages of the refidex would cover the catchment.

    Hmmm, we could set up leader-watch pressure group, provide a conduit for delivering the will of the larger electorate, harvested via a blog. If we got say 500 people geographically dispersed throughout the seats so flyers/polls could be quite easily and comprehensively dispersed and collected, and a decisive vote unleashed, we’d have both of their attentions under pain of losing their jobs next time round.

    There’s gotta be a way of exploiting this extraordinary situation to improve the democratic process.

    All schemes considered, except of course Brisbane Southside Votes For Sale.

  37. Hal9000

    Fair enough. My own experiences are more recent and more professionally-oriented than yours which relate to a carefree youth in the Barbagallo-dominated Uni of Qld students union, I believe. I do know public servants in Transport have fingers crossed he’ll move, while those in other agencies are trembling in terror lest he be inflicted on them. Mr Micro-management, I believe he’s known as. Perceived as being very much in the same mould as the thankfully departed McGrady. I could say rather more but will refrain, as Lucas and ilk are known for their vindictiveness and I have a mortgage to pay and dependents to support. But trust me on this Mark, he may be a great mate but as a minister he’s a dud. Perhaps we should leave it at that.

  38. Mark

    Barbargallo was gone by the time I got involved, Hal9000, but his ghost certainly lived on.

  39. Anthony_

    And as to that remark, you, sir, and any other Mexicans who share your view, can shove it where the sun doesn’t shine. I mean Melbourne of course

    Always found that term Mexicans stupid…does that make us Queenslanders “north of the border”…try hard Americans Canadians? We have are own version of a crazy Quebec as well…its called Bundaberg lol.

  40. Mark

    I’ve always thought Canada was a great place!

  41. Alex on a Bus

    We have are own version of a crazy Quebec as well…its called Bundaberg lol.

    Er, I thought it was Rocky and everything north of it that’s always threatening to cut itself adrift. That said, would anyone admit from coming from the same state as Bob Katter? :P

  42. Mark

    I went to uni with Bob’s daughter! I’m sure we shared a XXXX or two at a few Law Society pool parties!

    Bob’s a nice guy actually. (If a little mad.)

    Just sayin…

  43. Anthony_

    Er, I thought it was Rocky and everything north of it that’s always threatening to cut itself adrift

    North of the Sunshine coast the crazies start…I think the heat and humidity melts their brains..

    Bundaberg is from my experience alot worse than Rocky.

  44. wpd

    I’m thinking of raising the school leaving age, the Education 2020 planning process, the emphasis on embedding voc ed with school ed, the creation of state colleges with particular specialties – ie maths/science, creative arts, aviation, etc.

    These ideas had been around the Department of Education for years. Much of that agenda was developed by Terry Moran who left to head up the Premier’s department under Bracks.

    Bligh’s strength was that she got the funding to implement those programs. That’s to her credit.

    Lucas is considered to be lazy. Hal9000 is on the money.

  45. dinoworx

    Bundaberg is from my experience alot worse than Rocky.

    Being a Bundaberger and having just moved back after a decade further afield… is there something I’m missing about these crazies? Maybe I moved back too soon?