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‘I don’t hold a hose, mate’

The luck and swagger of Scott Morrison
by
June 2021, no. 432

How Good Is Scott Morrison? by Wayne Errington and Peter van Onselen

Hachette, $34.99 pb, 329 pp

‘I don’t hold a hose, mate’

The luck and swagger of Scott Morrison
by
June 2021, no. 432
Prime Minister Scott Morrison in meeting in Canberra on September 2020 (Nareshkumar Shaganti/Alamy)
Prime Minister Scott Morrison in meeting in Canberra on September 2020 (Nareshkumar Shaganti/Alamy)

Flash back to that election night in May 2019, when Australians, depending on their party affiliation, were either overjoyed or appalled at the Coalition’s return despite the opinion polls. That evening, Scott Morrison – a man little known to Australians until assuming the prime ministership just nine months before after an ugly leadership coup – summed up Coalition sentiment and his own Christian faith: ‘I have always believed in miracles,’ Morrison said, before asking, rhetorically, ‘How good is Australia?’

Paul D. Williams reviews 'How Good Is Scott Morrison?' by Wayne Errington and Peter van Onselen

How Good Is Scott Morrison?

by Wayne Errington and Peter van Onselen

Hachette, $34.99 pb, 329 pp

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Comment (1)

  • The temptation to only concern yourself with the politics of the moment is invariably fatal for Australian leaders. John Howard was adept at managing both the politics and engaging with the policy issues of his time. Scott Morrison's intellectual shortcomings are behind his repeated stumbles. For all their whimsy, the swinging voter in this country is not sympathetic to a stand-for-nothing leader.
    Posted by Patrick Hockey
    18 June 2021