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The Manichaean Candidate

Peter Dutton’s black and white politics
by
September 2024, no. 468

The Manichaean Candidate

Peter Dutton’s black and white politics
by
September 2024, no. 468

Bill Hayden, the first Queensland policeman to lead  a federal political party, wrote of his experiences as  a constable – the violence, the squalor, the tragedy – in his autobiography, Hayden (Angus & Robertson, 1996), and concluded: ‘All of these led me to feel a great anger at the injustices some people had to bear.’ At one point, the former governor-general noted that his ‘humanist’ reaction to injustice reflected his background as the son of a father who was an illegal immigrant and a mother who suffered domestic abuse.

By comparison, Peter Dutton, the second Queensland copper to lead a federal political party, had a sheltered upbringing. Perhaps that’s why, in his 2002 maiden speech, his anger was directed more at individual than systemic failings:

I have seen the best and the worst that society has to offer. I have seen the wonderful, kind nature of people willing to offer any assistance to those in their worst hour, and I have seen the sickening behaviour displayed by people who, frankly, barely justify their existence in our sometimes over-tolerant society.

Judging by Dutton’s 2023 appearance with journalist Annabel Crabb on ABC TV’s political-cooking show, Kitchen Cabinet, this Manichaean mentality still influences his approach to politics.

CRABB: I’ve read something that [your wife] Kirilly said – I’ve always remembered it – that you’re a very black-and-white person, that’s there’s no shades of grey. So, you make your mind up about something super-fast and then you just proceed on that basis. Is that what that means?

DUTTON: Yeah. I’m pretty sure that’s what she would have meant by it, which I think is a bit of a police trait, and it’s dealing with the problem that’s before you and then moving on to the next one and trying to deal with it efficiently, I suppose.

CRABB: Is black-and-white a help in politics? To have really clear views?

DUTTON: I always think the job of prime minister – you know, having worked closely and watched a few others fairly closely – I think you’ve got about twenty issues of the day, so twenty balls in the air, and I think the people who know what they believe in, I think they can land eighteen of those balls pretty early and then they sweat the two which are really tough issues. The ones that aren’t good and don’t have a clear sense of who they are or want to say something that they know people will want to hear or – that sort of approach – I think by Tuesday they’ve got forty balls in the air, and I think it becomes overwhelming.

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