In any electorate, it can be an interesting exercise to look at the local media's election coverage.
With a circulation of more than 24,000 in the Victorian seat of Batman,
last week's edition of The Northcote Leader offered a telling glimpse
of the substantial reach but narrow focus of some local election
reporting.
With only three editions to go before polling day, the
election didn't make the front page this time around, though the
previous week saw some glancing coverage identifying climate change as
a big issue with Batman voters in the safest ALP-held federal seat in
Australia.
Make it to page five and we get a Q and A of the candidates'
'favourite local hangouts, from restaurants to parklands'. But it's on
page seven that cynical amusement could begin to creep in. 'Sticky John
riles Rudd' reads the headline above a large colour pic of a Northcote
resident (one Cathy Rudd) holding her Martin Ferguson placard
besmirched with a glued-on, photo-copied portrait of a smiling PM with
a 'Howard 07' caption – Ferguson the victim of a hideous head
transplant.
Martin Ferguson, MHR for Batman and the ALP's safest bet,
declares the vandalism of the frontyard promotion 'beyond a joke',
describing the admittedly silly act as 'clearly thought-out and
orchestrated'.
Curiously, he then expresses doubt that the Liberals are
behind the prank. Obvious but unanswered questions are who he thinks
might have hatched the devious masterplan and what political mileage is
in it for them.
This Batman mystery is not Murder on the Orient Express
– with only six candidates
, the political suspects are limited; one – the Liberals – apparently
already ruled out. If I were more optimistic, I'd be pleased to see
Ferguson take this stand, because voters could read it as a rejection
of the kind of tactics the ALP itself used in a misleading propaganda
campaign against the Greens in the contest for Northcote at the
November 2006 Victorian State election.
Of course one could argue that
it's an entirely different ballgame, except for the fact that back in
November 2006 Ferguson was spruiking on the steps of Northcote Town
Hall for then ALP candidate and later Northcote MP, Fiona Richardson . It was Richardson's husband, ALP State Secretary Stephen Newnham, who authorised the so-called 'Gotcha
' campaign against the Greens.
So this time, if he is sincere, Ferguson
seems to be signalling that we'll see no unbranded but ALP-authorised
flyers appropriating the Greens logo and featuring the heads of
prominent Liberals at its centre. Transplanted heads? Is Ferguson
insinuating some kind of ham-fisted Greens payback in the current
stunt?
That, of course, is the less optimistic view: Ferguson's cryptic
comments in the 'Sticky John' report could signal just the kind of
stupidity that besieged our letterboxes last November. Of course, this
is all somewhat complicated by the preference deal
that now seems to have been sealed between the Greens and Labor. How do
you falsely insinuate a deal between the Greens and other parties when
you've done a deal with them yourself? Maybe you insinuate questionable
campaign tactics instead.
While we'll have to wait and see if a
misleading ALP campaign becomes a feature of the federal contest for
Batman, the trouble with this kind of beat-up masquerading as election
coverage is that it displaces real issues and fails to engage in actual
debate. The previous week's edition of the paper devoted a tiny
paragraph to the key issues for Batman as identified by Roy Morgan
research – improving health services and hospitals (39 per cent of
responses); improving education (25 per cent); and fair workplace and
employment regulations (23 per cent).
Fast-forward to last week's
'Sticky John' edition and two of these issues are implicated in a
worthy commentary piece ('Stomach it?', p.6) by Heather Gallagher, who
was admitted to the emergency department of a local hospital during the
recent Victorian nurses' dispute. Unfortunately, the issues covered in
the article were not followed through in the paper's election coverage,
so we were given little indication of where the candidates stand on
issues that clearly concern many Batman voters.
Given recent events,
however, a closer analysis would have challenged the major parties,
with the Victorian Labor Government having invoked WorkChoices in its
attempt to break the nurses' dispute, and the Federal Government badly
embarrassed by the seeming failure of its pork-barrelling takeover of
Tasmania's Mersey hospital.
While it would be easy to frame serious
questions around these events to bring out the positions of all the
candidates, it seems the best we can hope for in the coverage is
trivial shenanigans that distract us from the issues. In Ferguson's
case, it's a distraction based on a double-standard regarding
appropriate campaign tactics. Let's see if some substantial issues
emerge in this week's edition of the paper.
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