It was supposed to be Kevin Rudd who would be "playing with the
Prime Minister's mind", but it seems like the PM is doing some
tinkering of his own. Yesterday's Liberal ad
targets Kevin Rudd's positive attack ad, targetting the Liberals'
negative attack ad, with a school masterly attack on Rudd by the PM
which mirrors and mocks Rudd's own attack ad. (If this is confusing
sometimes you just need to watch the real thing, so just click on the
link).
To understand what is happening here you should also read my blog post of the 29th January,
a quick summary of which is my suspicion that Kevin Rudd was bullied at
Marist Brothers Ashgrove to the extent where he moved schools, and that
he has still not gotten over it.
I remember being regularly bulied at Villanova - the Brisbane
southside equivalent of Marist Brothers Ashgrove - so I can empathise
with Kevin. It was hard being one of the smart kids with all the
answers who wasn't much good at football but who played one of the
leads in the school musical. However, I haven't airbrushed the school
from my CV. In fact, every now and then I go back to the Old Boys
Dinner, because I've got some affection for the place. Yet you could be
forgiven for believing that Rudd never went to Marist Brothers, from
all the mention of it he makes.
My take on the Rudd psychology is that he's never learnt to deal
with whatever it was that happened at Marist Brothers. It looks like
someone in the Liberal campaign team agrees with that analysis.
That interpretation is bolstered by the fact that when big sister
Julia Gillard was sent in to defend Kevin, she described Howard's ad as
"...something you would expect a primary school student to say in a
playground spat."
Which raises the question as to why Rudd didn't defend himself.
Howard believes that Rudd has a glass jaw, and he's trying to hit it.
Did he succeed?
The choice of Gillard as the defender is also interesting. She's
generally unpopular in the electorate, but if she has a constituency,
it is most likely women between 25 and 39, one of the key swing groups,
and one that is most likely to react poorly to the little blonde kid
being snotted by the school yard bully.
Just as Howard won a last minute swing from Mark Latham's physical
monstering of him via an aggressive handshake in a broadcast studio,
Howard runs the risk that this masculine tactic will win Rudd a
sympathy vote.
The government's answer to this risk is presumably that it is a hard
world out there, and if you are going to look after Australia's
interests effectively you need to be able to muscle up to some pretty
nasty players. Speech night displays of school boy Mandarin to curry
favour will only take you so far. You can't expect big sister to bail
you out in real life.
All of which sets up an interesting dynamic for the leaders debate
this Sunday. If Howard's hit the mark, then expect Rudd to extend the
shaky start evident in the stiffness of his speech on the announcement
of the election. But it's equally likely that Rudd could throw down the
gauntlet to the PM - if you're so tough, how about a few more debates?
It's not clear to me at this stage who's the more effective bully.
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