To fix our broken politics, we need a strong movement of the 80% of us in the mainstream of Australian life – people who are grounded in their families and communities, who think good personal and social relationships are the most important thing in life, who do not aspire to be politicians, who are thoughtful in their approach to life and courteous in their manner.
A movement of this kind is needed so that decent citizens can take charge of our parliaments and institutions. If we, the 80%, can’t rise to the occasion and get organised, Australia will steadily decline, a casualty of self-serving politicians, unaccountable elites and vested interests. Without courageous leadership and good governance, Australia’s best days will be behind us.
Many of us have joined a political party at some point in the past, but found it to be a disappointing experience. We found we had no real say. We were constantly asked to attend tedious branch meetings or support endless fundraisers. Most of us who tried this gave it away pretty quickly.
Those who stay in the Liberal and Labor parties tend to be career politicians, many of whom have spent their entire adult lives inside their political machines. They tend to have no record of service to their communities, poor leadership and communication skills, and owe their rise to factional favours and patronage. Most decent people run a mile to get away from this world once we get an insight into its workings.
The trouble is, the party organisations continue on without us. They form federal and state governments in our country, appointing their lackeys to public posts, and allowing unresponsive government departments and dysfunctional public authorities to carry on from one decade to the next. They do this knowing that all they have to do to survive is convince enough voters every three or four years that the other mob will be even worse.
This cannot go on. We can no longer abstain from the task of fixing our broken politics. The stakes have become too high for a once-Lucky Country that is now running out of luck in a fiercely competitive and dangerous world. The time has come for ordinary citizens to get organised and reclaim our country and our democracy.
But in creating a popular mainstream political party that can sweep away the political class, how can we be sure that we won’t turn into the people we want to replace?
In five key ways, we are very different from our current politicians.
1. We are not career politicians. We are citizens, with day jobs and commitments to our families and communities. We want to replace our current crop of politicians with thoughtful citizens – not so that members of our Movement can become politicians – but so they can restore common sense in our institutions and then resume their day jobs and other responsibilities. We will peg politicians’ and senior bureaucrats’ salaries to the median wage ($52,898 in 2017), adjusted annually for increases and decreases in the median wage figure. And we will limit the number of terms we can serve in parliament – three in the lower house, two in the upper house. By doing this, we send a clear message that political representation should be restored as a vocation of service to the public, undertaken for short periods of time – it is not a career.
2. Politics is important but it is not the whole of life. Social institutions, families, communities, businesses and voluntary associations matter as much as politics. The relations between them are critical. But you will never hear this said by Left or Right. Over the last 100 years, politicians from both sides have placed politics and politicians at the top of society, and put big tickets on themselves. In doing so, they’ve created unrealistic expectations of what politics and politicians can do to enhance our well-being. In reality, our well-being is largely determined through our close relationships and our jobs and businesses – politics is important in complementing these, but it is not more important than being a good parent or an active member of the community.
3. We welcome diversity in views and social backgrounds. Australia is a country of diverse people from many backgrounds. We do not expect members of our Movement to all think the same. Some will be country people, some will be city-dwellers. Some will have conservative instincts; others will think of themselves as radicals. Some will have many years of formal education; others will have finished school at 14. We expect, and hope, that our members will reflect the real diversity of Australia. We do expect that our members will respect the views of others, listen carefully to opinions that are different from their own, and treat others with courtesy.
4. We really do want to represent the 80% of us in mainstream Australia. We ask our members to think about the make-up of the Australian population, and to contemplate, seriously, what the 80% of us who are not Left or Right actually want. We think 10% of Australians are committed Left-wingers, and about 10% are solid Right-wingers. The rest of us are not aligned to Left or Right. In an age of extremes, strident voices from Right and Left want to impose their views on others. We will try to resist them. We will emphasise dialogue, negotiation, participation and compromise for the common good, always with an eye to a stable, consensual representation of the common interests of the 80% of us who now have a voice.
5. Bottom-up and top-down are both important. Grassroots initiatives are the motors of social change; they need pathways that are cleared of opponents and protected at the highest levels of government. Without grassroots initiatives, politicians and political parties tend to think they are the centre of the universe, and forget that virtually every significant social reform and innovation has come from the grassroots. But without political support and protection, grassroots initiatives can be steamrolled by governments or deprived of space and oxygen. We need both.