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‘We are all little Johnnies now’

by
August 2006, no. 283

The Howard Factor: A decade that transformed the nation edited by Nick Carter

MUP, $29.95 pb, 349 pp

Book 2 Cover Small (400 x 600)

The Longest Decade by George Megalogenis

Scribe, $32.95 pb, 346 pp

‘We are all little Johnnies now’

by
August 2006, no. 283

The provenance of The Howard Factor – a collection of essays by senior writers from The Australian newspaper – is not promising. The Australian is after all part of Mark Latham’s ‘Evil Empire’, cheerleader rather than critic of the Howard government. Yet its sympathy for the régime stems not from partisanship but from the newspaper’s philosophy: neo-liberal in domestic matters, neo-conservative in foreign policy. Populist desertion of elements of the neo-liberal agenda has aroused the wrath of the newspaper: witness its condemnation of the government’s policy funk in early 2001, and of its recent surrender to Snowy River romanticism. Discord has been less in foreign policy, where both government and newspaper have been willing recruits to the ‘war on terror’. So slavish has become the newspaper’s adherence to America’s contemporary wars that it has even repudiated its quite heroic stance on the Vietnam War a generation ago.

Neal Blewett reviews ‘The Howard Factor: A decade that transformed the nation’ edited by Nick Carter and ‘The Longest Decade’ by George Megalogenis

The Howard Factor: A decade that transformed the nation

edited by Nick Carter

MUP, $29.95 pb, 349 pp

Book 2 Cover Small (400 x 600)

The Longest Decade

by George Megalogenis

Scribe, $32.95 pb, 346 pp

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