Fine Radar
The News Hub

The Liberal Party and a 1970s brutalist car park have one thing in common

Brutalism sprang from utopian socialist ideas around liberating the workers. But I reckon if the contemporary Labor Party was a building it would be less a brutalist monument than a gleaming CBD tower in which we see ourselves reflected. And unlike the corporate and professional classes around 50 years ago, the people who work in the CBD now will include a large number of Labor voters because university graduates lean leftwards politically. Labor has scaled beyond its socialist foundations.

Meanwhile, the Liberals have been scaling down – to the metaphorical basement. We can see the party’s internal plumbing, and it’s ungracefully bursting.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

John Pesutto is at loggerheads with Peter Dutton over who is to blame for the Aston loss and much else too.

Shadow attorney-general Julian Leeser resigning from the opposition cabinet, less than a week after the Liberals confirmed they will oppose an Indigenous voice in the Constitution. Leeser has said he will campaign for a Yes vote.

This came just days after former Coalition Indigenous affairs minister Ken Wyatt quit in protest over Dutton’s rejection of the Voice to parliament. “I still believe in the Liberal Party values but I don’t believe in what the Liberals have become,” Wyatt has said.

Tasmanian Liberal MP Bridget Archer warned her party colleagues they must recover their ambition to be a viable alternative government, or else resign themselves to infighting and decay. The party, she says, is “at a crossroads”.

Loading

In the aftermath of the Liberals’ loss in Aston, Peter Dutton deflected criticism of his leadership, saying one of his biggest strengths had been holding the party together after its battering in the federal election.

Even without that unity narrative crumbling in the past week, it doesn’t change the reality that a sturdy exterior cannot redeem a party – or a building – if its overall purpose hasn’t shifted with the times. To return to the Carlton car park; in the era it was built, the motor car represented freedom and opportunity. It still does; even deep in Greens’ territory a car park has its uses.

Nonetheless, a resident irate with the council’s decision on heritage listing argues – not unreasonably – that in an inner city well serviced with public transport, a car park is an invitation to persist with bad old polluting habits. Preserving such an anachronism, she says, is like “protecting a cigarette factory”.

To be brutally frank, at this moment the Liberal Party is like a heritage car park. It retains some (superficial) nostalgic appeal, but is otherwise functionally inert, outdated and moderately bad for public health. Cold and dingy on the inside, a magnet for shady types and other folks resistant to sunlight. A natural setting for the striking of dodgy deals. A space in which women tend to feel on edge. A holding pen in a holding pattern.

Loading

It doesn’t have to be this way. During the Kennett government the slogan on number plates read, “Victoria on the Move” – the message was about new roads, yes, but it also conveyed a sense of dynamism and daring. The Liberals’ state leadership in Victoria and NSW want the party to lurch towards progressivism. But the ghosts of the Morrison government are yet to be exorcised. The Morrison government – lest we forget – sought to sway Liberal and marginal seat voters with commuter car parks. The bid failed.

So if the Liberal Party is a heritage car park, might it be capable of adaptation? Can it win from a fast-changing, socially progressive, climate-conscious electorate a reprieve from demolition?

Perhaps we might visualise the challenge this way: can the Liberal Party metamorphose from a car park into a cool exhibition space or dance venue?

Julie Szego is a regular columnist.

The Opinion newsletter is a weekly wrap of views that will challenge, champion and inform your own. Sign up here.

For more latest Politics News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! FineRadar is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.
Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.