The Budget for the true deceivers
We’ve moved into an age of post-factual politics, where our leaders make up their own reality and expect us to buy it, writes Mark Chapman from Taxpayers Australia.
SO, THERE WE ARE.
After all the weeks of speculation and leaks, all the angst and all the heat, the Treasurer has finally spoken.
Frankly, it was an anti-climax — not least because what we got was
almost exactly what we expected to get. Despite promising surprises,
the speech actually ran exactly as predicted and was exactly as feared.
Once again, the tired old clichés were dusted off and given another outing:
“end of the age of entitlement”
and
“doing nothing is not an option”
as well as
“a nation of lifters not leaners."
To be honest, I was slightly surprised to hear so many of these again.
Quite simply, hardly anyone believes this nonsense.
Everything Abbott and Hockey have said has made it clear that they
are only ending the age of entitlement for those groups they don’t like
and those groups who won’t vote for them. For the favoured few – the miners, the wealthy, the foreign owned media corporations – the age of entitlement rolls on
and the government even throws a few sweeteners onto the pile
(abolition of the Australia Network, cuts to the ABC and SBS, extra fuel
subsidies to the miners, paid parental leave and now the promise of generous largesse to multinational drug companies through the new medical Futures Fund).
And all the polls, the public commentary, the seething anger in the
community indicates that, as a nation, we can see this. We can see that
we are being screwed over and we don’t like it, not one bit.
Now, I’d assume Messrs Abbott, Hockey and Cormann
are reasonably intelligent men and that they would see that their
message isn’t cutting through. Naively, given that Smokin’ Joe kept
assuring us (nudge nudge, wink wink) that we didn’t know everything that
was in the Budget and that he had a few surprises up his sleeve, I
assumed that there would be something in there to soften the pain — to
demonstrate a real and genuine commitment to sharing that pain.
But no. What we got was exactly what the leaks told us we would get.
Unlike their election promises, there were no surprises. Just a
torrent of cuts, all aimed at the jugular of the poor and
vulnerable. This country is no longer a place to be young, no longer a
place to be old, or sick, or unemployed.
But if you’re wealthy or you run a large corporation, come on in, we’re open for business.
Yesterday, the day after the Budget, Cormann and Hockey were out
patrolling the airwaves loudly proclaiming the fairness of the Budget
and dismissing any suggestions of broken promises. Because now all we
have is the ‘fundamental promise’ to fix the nations finances.
All those other ‘non-fundamental’ promises (no new taxes, no
increased taxes, no changes to the pension, no cuts to health or
education or the ABC or SBS) no longer count.
And we’re expected to buy this.
We’re expected to accept this insult to our intelligence and even
thank the government for their largesse in helping to dismantle
everything that makes this country a desirable place to live.
We’re expected to buy this Orwellian nonsense that a Budget loaded
with assaults on the most vulnerable will help to build a better nation.
We’re even expected to accept that the politicians are helping with
the heavy lifting as Mr Abbott − who enjoys a higher salary than the
British Prime Minister or even the President of the United States −
struggles by without a pay rise for a year, which will no doubt to be
recompensed with a double sized rise next year to make up for any slight
inconvenience.
And then, hidden in the Budget papers, is the final kicker.
A few weeks after we learn that $24 billion is to be spent on fighter jets, we learn that the Defence budget is to increase by 2%. Whilst every other department and authority of state takes a hit − including, tellingly, swingeing cuts
to the massively underfunded corporate regulator ASIC − whilst the
budget (if you believe the hype) spirals out of control, we can somehow
afford a real terms increase in the Defence budget.
It’s now reached the stage where this crew have abandoned fact based
reality altogether and appear supremely confident that they can sell us
their analysis of a broken budget based purely on the proposition that if we say it’s true, then it’s true.
We’ve moved into an age of post-factual politics, where our leaders make up their own reality and expect us to buy it.
The evidence so far is that we’re not falling for it but I have to say, I’m nervous.
We have two more years of this and given that this Budget seems to
have been only Stage One in their assault, I fear for where we’ll be by
the time of the next election.
Mark Chapman is head of tax at Taxpayers Australia Inc — a non-profit non-partisan organisation providing advice to taxpayers. You can follow Mark on Twitter @mchapman_mark.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Australia License
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