14 May 2025

The Liberal Party and the ABC have this one thing in common, and they're both wrong about it

| Genevieve Jacobs
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Prime Minister Anthony Albanese celebrates his second term election win. Photo: Anthony Albanese Facebook.

For almost two decades as a Canberra journalist, I heard about the Liberal Party “base”.

This mysterious body of voters was sick of “wokeness”, we were told. It was over feminism and political correctness gone mad. It wanted vigorous engagement in the culture wars.

Move further and harder to the right, its champions said, and permanent power is in reach. The Liberals are Australia’s natural party of government and the base, comprising hundreds of thousands of voters, will take you there.

Then the 2022 election rolled along, followed by the 2025 election. Australian voters took a good look at what was on offer and responded, comprehensively, with “yeah … nah”. Preferences tell the story: beyond their diminishing primary vote, the Liberals are nobody’s second choice.

Around a decade ago, the ABC experienced a similar ideological spasm, albeit in a different direction. Senior management decided that in order to capture a younger demographic, they must move with the times, jettisoning much that listeners cherished about Aunty.

The direction from head office was to make content lighter, funkier. Comedians with book contracts could analyse the news rather than professional journalists. Wildly diverse opinions were key: I once heard a Sydney broadcaster declare ethical polygamy was pretty much the social norm as far as she was concerned.

Some readers will recall I was among those moved on across Australia, but the point I want to make is a broader one.

It was assumed the ABC’s rusted-on audience would stay around because of tribal loyalty, while a thousand new flowers bloomed. National ratings indicate this belief was not well-founded.

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The Liberals appear to have made the same mistake. Captivated by the promise of the mythical base, they presumed longtime voters would follow along as they careered headlong into the culture wars.

The teal seats fell in 2022, taking the bluest of blue ribbon Liberal heartlands with them. This time a slew of middle class suburban seats around the country followed.

Admittedly, Anthony Albanese has had excellent luck as Labor leader. Neither Scott Morrison nor Peter Dutton had particularly likable public personas. This campaign’s timing, across Easter, Anzac Day (and the Pope’s funeral), denied oxygen to the Opposition. Donald Trump’s chaos was far less appealing to ordinary voters than many on the right imagined when he was elected.

The federal Liberals did shockingly little policy work. They didn’t bother road-testing ideas like forcing everyone back to the office, or dispensing with most of the Canberra-based APS workforce. Despite endless pleas, they ignored women both as voters and Parliamentary colleagues.

Pity the poor old Canberra Liberal candidates, a bunch of decent people who had to trudge around our suburbs, knocking on doors presumably opened by female APS employees working from home.

For the past 20 years, the Canberra Liberals have eaten themselves alive, permanently in opposition while fighting over who could move furthest to the right in Australia’s most progressive jurisdiction. Zed Seselja eventually suffered the consequences of this madness, and it’s no surprise Senator David Pocock’s vote has doubled.

This year, the federal Liberals reaped the same bitter harvest, one they’ve been sowing for a long time.

READ ALSO Public service breathes a collective sigh of relief after PM repeats his respect mantra

So here’s a news flash for the Liberals and anyone else consumed by ideological rectitude while operating a national institution: Australia is a centrist nation, and we all vote.

The base is in the middle. If your job is to serve the whole nation, start there. Ensure diverse opinions are represented, based on skill and talent. Don’t be captured by the lure of the fringe.

Australians deserve effective conservative politicians. There are more pressing issues confronting us than what flags we stand before, or the welcome to country.

The Liberals might like to put the dog whistle back in the drawer. There is no large cohort of hard-right culture warriors in Australia. If they existed in any numbers, the Liberals wouldn’t be facing the worst defeat since their foundation.

Sir Robert Menzies (who must be executing 360 degree turns in his grave) founded the Liberals as a business friendly, centre right party that would – and I quote Ming himself – “work for social justice and security, for national power and national progress, and for the full development of the individual citizen”.

That sounds like a reasonable basis for a political party. Somebody should give it a crack.

Genevieve Jacobs is the CEO of Hands Across Canberra, the ACT’s community foundation.

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HiddenDragon10:21 pm 15 May 25

Unlike the Liberals, the ABC can go on its merry way doing largely what it pleases because its funding is not linked to its audience share.

If anything, the efforts of the Albanese government in its first term to augment and “Dutton proof” the ABC’s funding (just in case the deplorables had their way in 2025), might suggest a reverse correlation between funding and overall audience share.

The crucial function of the ABC (to its most powerful protectors), when you look past the formulaic mediocrity of too much of ABC TV, the proselytising tendentiousness of much of RN (the network which dare not speak its full name), and the celebration of the vacuous and the self-obsessed on all platforms, is its role at the heart of Australia’s Fabian socialist noise machine – where its influence goes well beyond what its audience share would suggest.

At its heart, the ABC is assiduous in pandering to grievance and entitlement and in arguing for ever more government spending and regulation as the solution, while rarely bothering to look at the real costs and benefits or ask the inconvenient questions about who is paying for it all and whether it is sustainable – except, of course, when asking “where is the money coming from?” in response to policies they don’t like (i.e. LNP policies).

Fiscal reality will eventually catch up with Australia and when very hard budgetary choices have thus to be made – even by the side of politics which finds the ABC such a handy ally – a publicly funded broadcaster which is substantially indistinguishable from much of what is available commercially will be dangerously vulnerable.

Until that day comes, they will have a lovely time in their taxpayer funded echo chamber.

The average voter not sophisticated. Labor won with 33% of the primary vote and happened to claim a bunch of seats. That’s not an overwhelming victory.

Mandatory voting by uninformed voters gave the incumbent government another sitting. As yet woke socialism hasn’t worked anywhere in the world. Our falling economics will see the end of Labor rule in 3 years.

We don’t have a first past the post system Henry, so it’s ridiculous to point at primary votes as if that means something significant about the result… but that said Labor still beat the LNP comfortably on primary votes 34.6% to 31.9% so the logic of your argument doesn’t hold up anyway.

Strange that you’re against “Mandatory voting by uninformed voters” but you don’t seem too informed yourself.

As to socialism, where? Where is the socialism? What would Dutton have done to get rid of this socialism?

And I’ve asked you before and I know you won’t answer (at least not sensibly) because it’s impossible to answer without sounding like a fool, but please do define “woke”.

“Our falling economics will see the end of Labor rule in 3 years.” Australian elections are won in the middle, landslide losses historically have taken more than one election to recover from. So I’d suggest you’re also not particularly well informed about history.

Sterling Stillwater7:52 pm 15 May 25

Henry, you appear uninformed that Australia has a preferential voting system.

The ALP obtained nearly 55% of that vote, including more primary votes than any other party. That “bunch of seats” they “happened to claim” is an overwhelming majority chosen by voters.

It might be helpful if you could define “woke socialism”.

Because voters that don’t support your preference must be stupid, ignorant and lazy….

Spot on about the ABC. Initially I sent feedback, as requested, but quickly learned to save myself the trouble. The ABC News app in particular is dire. The same items repeated ad nauseum, and the headlines are clickbait, to the extent that at times the headline words aren’t found in the article. I look at it perhaps once a day, when previously I would check often for ‘new’ news. It’s astonishing how little they wish to hear from their consumers.

Excellent. Many thanks Genevieve. “… put the dog whistle in the drawer …” is very sage advice for a party that has more than lost their way. And a party that shows no respect to either public servants or the citizens of #CBR — since they were prepared to decimate our economy and had little or no understanding of the effects of such drastic cuts.

In summary: “the middle is the best because the middle is the best and bunch of largely uninformed Australian voters (either because they are stupid, lazy, too busy etc.) agree.”

Brilliant

Sterling Stillwater1:31 pm 15 May 25

Hate to break it to you Vasily M but we live in a democracy, so representation normally tends to the median position of the voters. That, in fact, is the whole idea.

That you might prefer to dictate choices leaves you free to choose for yourself any of the epithets you used: uninformed, stupid or lazy.

Stephen Saunders11:38 am 15 May 25

If Ley Liberals are silly enough believe the superficial “analysis” here, as also offered up by ABC Laura, SMH Peter, and Guardian Amanda, they’ll never regain government.

Culture wars are mostly on the Labor side – UN open borders, UN net zero, woke education, stacking electorates Indian or Chinese, wanton rental crisis and homelessness.

If Dutton were a Randwick jockey, he’d get 5 years for pulling the horse. He refused to criticise Albanese’s lies and betrayals, led with his massive own-goal of nuclear net-zero, and was happy to preference Labor second. He’s “hard right” the same way that Bambi is.

Having said that, it’s obvious, Libs need someone a bit clever like a Menzies or Howard, or better, like a Curtin, who really did care. To hear Albanese now claim “progressive patriotism” is just too much altogether, he is the reverse, Orwell must be eating his heart out.

Sterling Stillwater1:35 pm 15 May 25

If Liberals were silly enough to believe the superficial “analysis” as offered up by Stephen Saunders, the fact they would then never regain government would be a great win for Australia.

By the way, the Liberals almost entirely preferenced PHON, not the ALP.

“Culture wars are mostly on the Labor side”….Ok I’m listening…”UN open borders, UN net zero, woke education, stacking electorates Indian or Chinese, wanton rental crisis and homelessness”….

bwhwhahahahahahaha….seriously dude hilarious. Accusing Labor of being all about culture wars whilst posting a steaming pile of right wing culture wars conspiracy theories and nonsense gave me a genuine laugh.

I don’t know where you’re getting your “information” but the Libs preferenced PHON second, and maybe if they’re wrong about that whoever is feeding you this complete pile of BS is wrong about some of the other stuff.

Food for thought.

Hayward Maberley5:19 pm 15 May 25

Nonsense on Stilts as Jeremy Bentham would have called it!

Well said Genevieve

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