Sunday, April 24, 2016

QandA Preview: Lyle Shelton

The Australian Christian Lobby held its “Cultivating Courage” conference in Sydney yesterday, a courageous conference, considering the controversial guests who appeared: Australian Treasurer Scott Morrison, and American commentator Eric Metaxas amongst others. These two are curious guests at a Christian event: Scott Morrison is best known as the Stopped the Boats man who presided over thousands of detainees in offshore gulags, and created a uniformed Border Force who look like they belonged on the Death Star. Eric Metaxas is an American conservative, best known for likening Christianity’s response to the “rise” of gay culture to the Church’s acceptance of the rise of Nazism* in the 1930s.

While social media is busy debating everything from whether a man like Metaxas should be allowed to preach his brutal intolerance of the LGBTI community in Australia, to whether people with his attitude should even be considered to be Christians, Lyle Shelton, high profile Managing Director of the ACL is suggesting that life for Christians is increasingly tough because everyone is mean to them. 

"We face false slurs and labels, designed to demonise us into silence," he said.
"Bigot, homophobe, hater, are just some of the pejorative terms that have been used to characterise us ordinary Australians, who simply believe that marriage [should be] between a man and woman."

This is, of course, in response to the ACL’s assertions that same sex marriage is the next step on the all-permeating slippery slope, and that it will harm children by denying them access to one parent. Name calling is never justified, yet when one segment of the population is repeatedly told that it is less equal, less worthy, and that making them equal would pose a greater danger to their children than the rest of the population, a few names seem at least, understandable.

If Mr Shelton and Treasurer Morrison are going to defend the rights of Eric Metaxas to speak, they must also defend the rights of same sex marriage advocates to speak with equal fervour.

We’ll get to see just how well that pans out when Mr Shelton appears on the ABC’s QandA tomorrow night, as part of a panel that includes John Haldane, Visiting Professor and Catholic intellectual; Julie McCrossin, Church elder, journalist, activist and speaker; Ray Minniecon, Indigenous Anglican Pastor; and Rev. Tiffany Sparks, Anglican Priest and representative for A Progressive Christian Voice.

It’s only 2 months since Mr Shelton appeared on QandA – he was a guest on February 29, when he hogged 27% of the conversation  by airtime. The heated topic was the Safe Schools Programme, which the ACL lobbied, unsuccessfully, to have removed from schools. I can’t remember the last time a guest has ever appeared twice in within two months, or if it has ever happened. I can imagine the producers at QandA offering that kind of open invitation to a Prime Minister, possibly even a senior Minister, but Mr Shelton is not a politician. He’s the head of a minor lobby group. 

The ACL, as their name suggests, is not a church, or even an organisation of churches. It is a powerful lobby group, professing to represent Australian Christians. As a lobby group, they bat far above their weight, with powerful contacts and supporters within both major political parties.



It’s also a registered non-profit organisation, a charity, with around 50,000 supporters on their mailing list, and a structure that they describe as similar to that of GetUp. Their 2015 Financial Statement indicated revenue approaching three million dollars, all from donations. The organisation receives no government funding.

In their defense, the ACL is skilled in the use of social media, particularly twitter. Aside from a couple of very public faux pas by Wendy Joy Francis and Jim Wallace, Lyle Shelton is almost always willing to engage in discussion and debate with his opponents. It rarely goes well for Lyle, whose basic arguments are quickly dismissed. You can follow Mr Shelton’s tweets at @LyleShelton.

If this week’s QandA is anything like Mr Shelton’s appearance two months ago, we should at least acknowledge his courage. While the ACL has a disproportionately high profile, it is not the peak body for Christian representation in the country, and many Christian organisations have openly denied any connection with the ACL. Mr Shelton will be representing the ACL and their 50,000 supporters. I don’t envy him, facing down what will be a largely hostile audience, an informed and passionate panel, a barrage of tweets and the facts, none of which seem to be on his side. 

Prepare your tweets, people. You have 24 hours.




*Invoke Godwin’s Law as appropriate

Friday, April 22, 2016

Rock the Casbah

They must often change, who would be constant in happiness and wisdom.

Twenty-first century wisdom suggests that Confucius was not referring to Australian Prime Ministerships, although there is a case to be made that changing Prime Ministers often is a sign of a healthy, functioning democracy.

Australia has changed Prime Ministers six times in the past decade, the first of these changes being when John Howard lost his government – and his own seat – in November 2007. Three of those changes have been as a result of mid-term spills, not a general election. By any standards, such a turnover is unusual and so it’s reasonable to ask why our elected representatives are turning on their own leaders.

This isn’t a global phenomenon, which rules out the easy answers like the compression inherent in the 24-hour news cycle, the relentless scrutiny and unregulated mutterings of social media, or the dominance of political polling and focus groups, although those trends may play a role.

It’s probably more to do with the indifferent standard of leaders we’ve elected; politicians whose flaws have been exposed while under the pressure of leadership, combined with the uncaring attitude and dreadful ignorance with which too many Australians cast their vote.

Leaders, Spills and Elections, 2007-2016
But really, is a shuffling of the deck chairs such a big deal? Our constitution accommodates a political party wishing to change leader, even if that party is in government, and the their leader is the Prime Minister. It’s legal, and a helluva lot more acceptable than some of the shenanigans that have gone on in Canberra.

When you look closer at the events of the last decade, we may have had six Prime Ministers, but only three times has the PM changed due to a spill. Compared to the rest of Australian parliamentary history, three prime ministerial spills within a decade is a huge number, yet the reaction seems out of proportion. News.com.au ran the below headline when Malcolm Turnbull defeated Tony Abbott for the Liberal leadership and Prime Ministership last September. 



It’s easy to say that our reputation abroad has taken a hit, that our international relationships have suffered, yet the reality is that policy is of more significance than the leadership. Obviously, when a Prime Minister is making Captain’s Calls that influence policy, the line is blurred. Still, leaders are people, and people either like each other or don’t. Most of the business between nations is conducted by Foreign Ministers and their equivalents anyway.

The Australian Institute of International Affairs (AIIA) asked the question, and the majority of the expert panel polled were more interested in the personalities involved in the change (from Abbott to Turnbull) than in any substantive changes to policy. Only Samina Yasmeen mentioned the so-called revolving door of Australian Prime Ministers. 



Aside from a major reshuffle, Malcolm Turnbull's policy changes have been minor – the end of Knights and Dames, for example – and with major policies remaining largely as they were under Abbott, much to the disappointment of swinging voters who were looking for a more moderate Liberal than the Abbott administration. Commentators are finding few differences to talk about, other than a more outward-looking, collaborative tone and a greater female presence.

Business Insider is cautious, yet concedes that so far, the economy has not suffered as a result of changing leaders so often. 

Ratings agencies can’t see a major impact from the latest change in prime minister in Australia, but there will be a downside if the revolving door of national leadership doesn’t stop soon.

Fitch ratings says the high turnover of prime ministers, with five changes in eight years, has had little impact on economic policies, investor confidence or the nation’s credit profile.

“The driving forces have been more to do with personalities than economic policy,” says Fitch.


Such was the national trauma after the Rudd-Gillard-Rudd years, the Abbott government must’ve been genuinely desperate to risk dumping Abbott. The two spills during the six years under Labor happened relative close to a scheduled election period. If the electorate disapproved of the change at the top, they could say so via the ballot box.


Prime Minister Turnbull’s priority in heading to the polls in July is less about allowing the electorate to vote on the new leader, and mostly about demolishing the cross bench and establishing clear, Abbott-free air in which to pursue his agenda for next three years.

And yet, where is the harm? Looking at a timeline of the last decade, prime ministerial spills have not increased the number of elections held; governments have been running near to term. The Gillard-Rudd Government was stunningly effective in passing legislation, if that’s a statistic that matters.

On winning the party room ballot last September, Prime Minister Turnbull’s media conference included words borrowed from the boardroom.

The Australia of the future has to be a nation that is agile, that is innovative, that is creative.

By any definition, the position of Australian Prime Minister has developed an unenviable agility. Is this rapid change a new paradigm in leadership, or a transitory series of blips? More experienced commentators than I insist that it’s the latter, and under the benign leadership of a competent, popular leader, equilibrium will return. 


I’ve always preferred to challenge the status quo.