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Emma Dawson "Hanson Reveals Howard’s True Victory" The Age September 17, 2004
So Pauline Hanson's baaaack! Declaring herself on Andrew Denton's talk
show like some sort of scary, Shining-inspired political apparition, she
announced that she wants "accountability" in government, and for
Parliament to return to the "ordinary Australians" it was set up to
serve. Admirable.
Fascinating. And bewildering, given her "rocks in my head"
statement of just a few months ago. But surely
the most interesting part of this comeback declaration was Hanson's statement
that the Howard Government has "tackled" a lot of the issues she
raised in her maiden speech, and adopted many of the policies she advocated. She's right
in saying this proves she had a point in the first place. She's absolutely
correct in stating that much of her work has been done for her by the Howard
Government. What's scary is that she believes there's still more to be done. Excuse me,
everyone, but where's your reaction to that? These
claims, which Hanson also made during her appearance on a Brisbane radio talk
show last week, seem to have gone virtually unnoticed by the majority of our
political commentators. It's apparently an unremarkable statement of fact. And yet,
only eight years ago, Hanson's maiden speech to Parliament, in which she
famously lamented the fact that Aborigines are "given everything"
and declared that Australia was in danger of being "swamped by
Asians", exploded on to national front pages and radio airwaves as
people reeled in shock that anyone dare voice such feelings in public, let
alone in Parliament. How far
we've come since then. The most
obvious thing about the reaction, or lack thereof, to Hanson's claim that
Howard has effectively appropriated her original policies is that Australia
is no longer the place it was when she was dumped by the Liberal Party after
speaking her mind and went on to win the seat of Oxley as an independent. Hanson
didn't say anything, it's now clear, that Howard didn't agree with in his
heart of hearts. Hanson's
maiden speech, and just about every comment she made thereafter, was covered
in 1996 by a mesmerised media that couldn't believe that anyone would have
the hide to declare such intolerant and clearly old-fashioned views. It was
seen as political suicide, and indeed was the reason the Liberal Party dropped
her like a hot potato. But Hanson
didn't say anything, it's now clear, that Howard didn't agree with in his
heart of hearts. And just like Howard did, Hanson's "ordinary
people" responded to her because she was saying things that they were
too afraid to speak aloud in the aftermath of the rapid - obviously too rapid
for some - social and cultural changes wrought by the Hawke and Keating
governments. While he
publicly lamented her words, Howard was quite open about the fact that he
welcomed an Australia that was "relaxed and comfortable" enough to
let Hanson speak her mind. It was an "end to political
correctness", in Howard's view. For too
long the "cultural elites" (read progressive thinkers) had
dominated the development of our national culture. Although he was determined
to win back some ground, Howard apparently could see that a subtle approach,
a gently-gently winding back of the more radical, as he considered them,
social and cultural developments was his only hope of engaging with the
Australian public as it was, or as we thought it was, in the early '90s. Hanson
changed all that. She gave Howard the appearance of credibility in the
culture wars - a veneer of progression in comparison with her deep
conservatism. In fact, the ideological difference between them can barely be
distinguished. She might
have been saying things that, in 1996, shocked a population that had come out
of 13 years of economic and social reform. But to Howard, she was speaking a
language he had long thought dead and wanted desperately to revive - the
language of division. And since that time, he's softened it, mastered it and
spun it so often it's become the dominant discourse of our political
landscape. That is
because Howard has succeeded, with the political nous Hanson so clearly lacks
and the power of the Liberal Party behind him, in turning this country back:
from a forward-looking, independent nation seeking to engage with its closest
neighbours with the confidence of a strong and inclusive cultural identity,
to a place of fear and division, of lies and obfuscation; a place which looks
to Western superpowers to reinforce its sense of self, and turns away from
its neighbours, from its indigenous people, from those in the most desperate
circumstances who throw themselves on our mercy - perhaps because they had
heard, long ago, that Australia was a welcoming and tolerant place. A place
that, in 1996, was rightly shocked and disgusted at the xenophobia and
ignorance being spouted by the independent member for Oxley. No matter
who wins the election on October 9, the change in Australian society that has
transformed Pauline Hanson from radical redneck to representative of the
people is John Howard's real victory, and it's already been won. The only
question is how much we can claw back, and how soon we can start. In 1996,
Hanson was shocking. In 2004, she looks almost mainstream. Is that OK with
you? *Emma Dawson is a Fellow at OzProspect |
OzProspect ABN 74 286 196 836