The cunning in Barnaby Joyces climate shuffle
The global climate has deteriorated since Barnaby Joyce launched Australian politics into climate denialism over a decade ago. But the once and once again Deputy Prime Minister of Australia remains where he was â" the strongest point of resistance to change and the arbiter of any national progress.
He has schooled Australia in the power and sheer durability of populism â" a political style offering unworkably simple solutions to complex problems, an ebullient rejection of elite expertise in defence of homespun obscurantism. He gave us a foretaste of Donald Trumpâs political style years before there was one.
Illustration: John ShakespeareCredit:The Sydney Morning Herald
Before Barnaby, Australia had a bipartisan consensus on climate change.
At the 2007 election John Howardâs Coalition and Kevin Ruddâs Labor agreed that Australia needed to cut greenhouse emissions urgently. They agreed that an emissions trading scheme was the most efficient way to do it.
It was Joyce, a mere Nationals backbencher, who started the populist revolt against this national consensus. His barnstorming style of agitation opened Tony Abbottâs eyes to the possibilities.
Remember Abbott openly admiring Joyce as âthe best retail politician in Australiaâ? Abbott, another mere backbencher at the time, followed Joyceâs example. He picked up the rhetoric of rejectionism and carried Barnabyâs revolt into the Liberal Party.
In 2009 Abbott used climate denialism to destroy Malcolm Turnbullâs leadership. The Coalitionâs support for an emissions trading scheme died with it. Abbott continued his campaign and used it to bring down the Rudd and Gillard governments.
He used it to smash his way through to the prime ministership. In the interim, Joyce rose and fell. And this year rose again. He returned to be Deputy Prime Minister to Scott Morrison, a politician trying to move the Coalition back towards some sort of climate realism with the delicacy of a bomb disposal expert deactivating a dangerous explosive.
With this weekâs âCode Redâ climate report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change adding to the pressure on Australia to cut emissions, Joyce responded in trademark style. Metaphor, juxtaposition, rhetoric, bluster, elision.
His objection to committing Australia to cut emissions to net zero by 2050? âI am going to buy the house at the end of the street. OK, how? Just believe me, Iâm just going to buy it. Show me how â" otherwise itâs just a nice thing to say.â
His point? He wonât commit to difficult outcomes without a specific plan. So whatâs the plan?
âOK, weâre going to close the Sydney Harbour Bridge, the M2 and the M5 â" so Sydney should be meeting its obligationsâ to cut emissions, he told me. âThatâd be about the last election youâd have to worry about contesting for the next 20 years.â
His point? He wonât commit to a politically unpopular plan. But hold on. As many have pointed out this week, Joyce is the leader of the National Party and Deputy Prime Minister. Heâs a member of the federal cabinet and its key subcommittees. Heâs the guy who should be developing the plan, not the guy complaining about the absence of one. You canât play the outsider when youâre the ultimate insider.
âAll right, Barnaby Joyce plants 400 trees and sheâs all done. I Barnaby Joyce now decree that we will be at net zero emissions by 2050. Because apparently Iâm an expert.â
No, Barnaby, we donât expect you to do it solo. You have all the resources of the biggest organisation in Australia, the federal government. Arenât its expert agencies capable of developing a plan?
âI canât say the work isnât being done. Iâm aware of work we are doing to meet our current targets, so obviously there are people there who are capable of doing that work. It might be remiss of me, but Iâm not aware of it.â
Barnaby comes up with everything, in other words, except progress. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres declared âcode red for humanityâ. The Australian government appeared to respond with Code Barnaby.
But, beneath the bluster, he has changed. Heâs changed his position on climate change action. Quite markedly. And that opens the possibility for Australia to change.
Joyce invented the $100 lamb leg, remember? It was to be the inevitable result of any attempt to price carbon. âHow will signing a piece of paper in Canberra change the global temperature?â was another of his creations, trumping all arguments in favour of any agreements or actions on climate change. And then there was the ice age:
âWhen the ice age does arrive temperatures will drop around 10 degrees. A warmer planet will be a disconsolate chronicle and many, maybe most, will die from starvation as is the usual experience of man or beast in previous ice ages,â he wrote a couple of years ago. âThe weather is going to brutally win the population problem and the Parliament of Australia has no power against it. One may suggest that warmer weather is the better problem of the two.â
This was obscurantist Barnaby at his best worst. Even just last month Joyce told The Financial Reviewâs Phillip Coorey that there was âzeroâ chance he would agree to any policy of net zero emissions by 2050. He would lose his post as Nationals leader if he tried, he said.
But this was the point where Joyce changed. Or was forced to change. Cooreyâs piece was posted to the internal National Party parliamentary WhatsApp group. There was a reaction:
âThere were some people in the party room who said to Barnaby, âMate, thatâs not your right, thatâs a decision for the party roomâ,â says a fellow Nationals MP. âIt was a stern lesson for him. He understands that heâs leader of the party now and he has to represent the party.â
Till then, say his colleagues, Joyce had been representing the views of himself, his understudy Matt Canavan and the all-purpose rogue George Christensen in a party room of 21.
Not that the rest of the party are now climate activists clamouring to join Extinction Rebellion. But the deputy leader, David Littleproud, whoâs also Agriculture Minister, tells me that the party collectively will consider whatever plan Morrison puts to it: âWe will see this and have a look at the detail. I would never blindly say ânoâ â" we need to sit down as a party room and decide one way or the other. Thatâs the responsible thing to do on such a significant issue.â
âWhat worries us,â says Littleproud, âis that the bill keeps getting sent west,â from Canberra and the eastern seaboard cities to the rural hinterland. âWe want to be honest with people about how we get there and who pays, and the fact that weâve paid the bill out hereâ â" Littleproud represents the vast electorate of Maranoa in south-west Queensland â" âthatâs the opportunity to square the ledger and get paid.â
Thatâs a reference to resentment over the Kyoto accord that Howard signed in 1998. Under the terms of the deal that Howard struck with NSW and Queensland, farmers lost some measure of control over their land-clearing rights. The carbon credits that this generated were used to offset emissions growth in other industries.
Barnaby is no longer flatly ruling out any progress. Itâs not arguments against any action. âIf we are going to take further steps, then we have to tell people what those steps are,â he says.
Itâs now about the price of the Nationalsâ support. âNo one ever talks about compensating the people in the towns,â he tells me. âYouâve gotta remember the vast majority of Nationals voters arenât farmers, they are people living in the regions and towns.â In his own seat of New England, for instance, only 12 per cent of the electorate are farmers.
âYouâve gotta have an empirical basis for figuring out the plan, and confidence in the acumen of the people developing the plan so you can take it back to the electorate and tell people honestly where the pain is.â
He points out the fact that the interests of farmers donât necessarily converge with those of town and village dwellers. Some farmers are selling their land so it can be used as a carbon sink to generate carbon credits, for instance. âOK, whoâs the beneficiary? The farmer who sells the land. Whoâs hurt by that? People in the town who lose the economic baseâ of a farm no longer delivering farm produce.
By demanding a detailed plan, Joyce is actually putting the onus on Morrison to produce one. The game has changed. Barnaby the obscurantist denialist is now Barnaby the negotiator. This casts him as a more traditional Nationals leader, the junior Coalition partner seeking benefits from the senior. The negotiations havenât yet started, but they will need to soon. The Glasgow climate summit, where countries are expected to pledge revised emissions reduction plans, is in November.
Peter Hartcher is political editor and international editor of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.
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