BOB LAWRENCE, GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
After a period of soul-searching and hand wringing by Coalition members, new Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has produced the first round of healing medicine; a Ministry that includes many Abbott supporters but most importantly a clutch of gleaming, new, hopefully competent, younger Ministers. He described them as the ‘Ministry of the 21st century and the future’; and on first appearances they fit the bill.
- Of the 20 changes to the full Ministry, an estimated 17 were Turnbull backers in the Party room vote. Among the departed is strong Turnbull supporter, Industry Minister IanMacfarlane, supporting the theory that the new Ministry is more about renewal than revenge . Abbott’s front bench was little changed from the one he inherited when he rolled Turnbull as Opposition Leader six years earlier. Scott Morrison will bring his energy and administrative skills to Treasury. History will treat the outgoing Treasurer Joe Hockey more kindly than media commentators are doing. He inherited a poor Budgetary position from Labor and his main problem in selling his two Budgets was the unsustainable promises Abbott made to win the 2013 Election.
- Morrison’s Assistant Treasurer and Small Business Minister is Kelly O’Dwyer, who was an adviser to Treasurer Peter Costello for many years before entering parliament.
- Another former Costello adviser, the effective Mitch Fifield, fresh from success with disability issues, takes on Communications and the money-devouring National Broadband Network (NBN). The NBN has diverted too much of the communications budget to its long- term outcomes, leaving regional Australians screaming for better coverage. Fifield would do well to snuggle up to the Nationals and regional Liberals for support in extracting better funding for the ground level infrastructure needed to quickly link regional homes and small businesses to the upcoming satellite-delivered services. With the telecommunication needs of the disabled a growing issue, Fifield’s previous portfolio experience will be invaluable.
- Environment Minister Greg Hunt should relish having a more environmentally-conscious Prime Minister on his side in the Cabinet Room and not having to face the wind farm- hating Hockey holding the purse strings.
- Education and Training now has Senator Simon Birmingham at the helm. As the former Director of the Winemakers’ Federation of Australia, he is experienced and equipped to align industry and educators to maximise training efficiency. Education, his big ticket portfolio, will be a challenge. Observers are waiting to see if he is as ideologically pure as his predecessor Christopher Pyne.
- The energetic Pyne should relish the change to Industry, Innovation and Science. His State of South Australia is a microcosm of the national desire for innovation and science, notably in defence supply, to replace a retreating industrial base. Pyne will be ably assisted by Josh Frydenberg as Minister for Resources, Energy and Northern Australia. Frydenberg’s ability and effectiveness as Assistant Finance Minister outweighed his loyalty to Abbott in the mind of Turnbull.
- Industry will also benefit from having the former Chief Executive of the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Dr Peter Hendy, as Assistant Minister for Productivity.
- The appointment of Senator Marise Payne as the first female Defence Minster was a left field nomination. The club of military leaders at Russell Hill have historically treated their Minster with some disdain, so the gender swap could have interesting results as Australia negotiates a new submarine supply contract. How much of that spend is retained within Australia remains a key issue.
While there has been a focus on the Ministerial changes, many major and core portfolios are unchanged. The Ministry retains Deputy PM Warren Truss in Infrastructure and Regional Development, Julie Bishop in Foreign Affairs, Andrew Robb in Trade, George Brandisas Attorney General (but not Arts), Matthias Cormann in Finance, and Sussan Ley in Health (assisted by the promotion of Ken Wyatt, the first indigenous member of a government executive). Barnaby Joyce remains in Agriculture (with water) and Peter Dutton in Immigration and Border Protection.