American polymath, statesman and Founding Father Benjamin Franklin never got to be President. His Macquarie Street namesake, no polymath and certainly no statesman, has. Today. President of the NSW Legislative Council.
I had thought that propriety in government was to be top-of-mind for the NSW Lower House independents, including one Alex Greenwich. It was on this basis, they said, that they offered to provide minority support for the new Government of Chris Minns. I wonder what those same independents think of Minns’ latest trick – to offer the lucrative Presidency of the NSW Upper House to one Ben Franklin, a National (and close friend of Minns, as it happens), thus reducing the Coalition’s numbers by one vote, so giving the Labor Party a working majority in that House and enabling it to pass legislation – as an example of “propriety” in government. You see, it is an offence in New South Wales to offer someone the political bribe of public office for political gain.
One hardly knows where to start.
First, there is the Manchurian candidate, Ben Franklin. We thought he was a National! But no, he turns out to be a closet Labor supporter. In a single act of bastardry – “treachery”, the Liberal leader, Mark Speakman, called it – he has delivered the new Government unbridled power.
Liberal Opposition Leader Mark Speakman described Mr Franklin's nomination as "treachery" and said there had been agreement across the Coalition that no one in either party would run as president.
"If he takes the presidency, takes the money, takes the perks, takes the trappings, instead of serving the voters who put him there, it is an act of treachery to those voters," Mr Speakman said.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-05-08/paul-toole-rolled-as-nsw-national-leader/102317760
Indeed.
The sliver of influence that the election granted to all those who didn’t vote for the Lib-Lab UniParty, via the balance of power in the Legislative Council, has now gone.
It is not as if Benjamin Franklin the Second didn’t owe his Party – the Party that now, rightly, disowns him – since the Nats allowed him to seek a Lower House seat (Ballina, in 2019) and then, when he lost to the Greens, they gave him his Upper House seat back through the casual vacancy process. They filled the vacancy caused by his resignation by installing … him! So, there was no cost to him over his Lower House adventure. How does he pay them back, four years later? By handing Labor supreme power. Labor, who scored just over a third of the primary vote, and barely 30 per cent in the Legislative Council. This was Franklin’s thirty pieces of silver. Or in today’s currency, $315k per year, plus other baubles.
Ben Franklin’s web page states:
Ben’s a passionate advocate for regional communities and is focused on being a strong voice for the people of Northern NSW in parliament.
https://www.benfranklin.com.au/
Well, not any more, he isn’t. He is simply an advocate for himself and for Chris Minns. He will not be allowed to advocate for anything, since he has no vote as President.
Was there any hint of treachery in Ben’s maiden speech (in 2015)? Well, he began as follows:
I do so noting that we are meeting today on the traditional lands of the Gadigal people. I acknowledge them as custodians and traditional owners of this land and I extend my respect to their elders, past and present.
No surprises there. He is reflexively woke, then. An absolute mark of the modern National Party.
I stand here as a passionate advocate for representative democracy.
Really? Except where there is a plum job to be bought and sold.
My political journey has been a particularly complex one. After a very fleeting membership of the Sydney University Labor Club and over a decade spent in the New South Wales Liberal Party.
So, a gadfly without much loyalty to any one party. Complex? He gets around, politically. Let us leave it at that.
We value decency, loyalty and integrity …
Yes, he actually said that. He then referred to his “friend”, Chris Minns. (This was in 2015).
Chris you will go a long, long way in this place and I am delighted that we were able to enter Parliament at the same time.
Well, he got that right. And now Minns will go much further, thanks to Ben. He also made mention of:
… my great friend Matt Kean.
https://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/member/files/133/Hon%20Ben%20Franklin-%20Inaugural%20speech.pdf
Oh dear. So much for Ben Franklin, clearly bored and bereft at the thought of many tedious years in opposition.
Next, we have Chris Minns, the freshly minted NSW Premier. He has been (correctly) banging on about the sleazy Liberal National Government for years. Almost as if to reassure New South Welshmen that we sill inhabit a third rate, low rent polity ruled by chancers, his first act is to offer a job-bribe to a mate to get himself an Upper House majority. Good work, Chris. No chance of cleaning up the sleaze on your watch.
As reported by Sky News:
Mr Minns acknowledged Mr Franklin being appointed president could make it easier for Labor to pass legislation. "I'm being upfront about that.”
Well, bully for you, Mr Minns. The sheer gall of the man is breathtaking. This sorry saga reminds us, as if we needed reminding, that you can do just about anything in politics now, admit it, and get away with it, such is the woeful-bordering-on-non-existent level of scrutiny and accountability we have now reached. They got away with (literally) murder with Covid. A little bit of minor corruption won’t be a problem.
Minns’ deputy (Prue Car) is also in the news. She called the decision by the Nationals’ State Chairman, Andrew Fraser - who once, as the Member for Coffs Harbour, chased a parliamentary opponent around the chamber and got him in a choke hold – to refer this all to the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) a “hissy fit” and a waste of ICAC’s time. She had no such qualms, I am sure, about seeing Gladys or John Barilaro forced to front ICAC a year or so ago over similar sleaze. There is more than a whiff of the Nick Greiner-Terry Metherell saga in the 1990s about this, Ms Car. This is precisely what we have ICAC for. To root out political inducements involving public office.
(In 1992, the then Premier, Nick Greiner, offered a former Liberal (Minister) and then Independent member, Terry Metherell, a senior public service job in order to trigger a by-election in the hope of winning a Lower House majority. Greiner was forced to resign by a clutch of Independents, who perhaps had more scruples in those days than they do today. When they demanded probity in government, they actually meant it. Such has been the decline in governance standards in one short generation).
Then we have the leader – sorry, former leader – of the Nats, Paul Toole, privately telling Ben Franklin to “go for it” and that it would not be a problem in nominating for the Upper House presidency job, then publicly chastising him for his act of betrayal. Toole has been dumped as leader, only to be replaced by someone else no one has ever heard of. To lead a party of almost total irrelevance to their own voters and to the conservative cause they once were proud to serve.
Once upon a time, a Nationals leader (John McEwen) had the power to stop someone from the Liberals (Billy McMahon) from becoming prime minister (in 1967). His threat was to walk out of the Coalition. Now, the leader of the Nats can’t even summon the wherewithal to stop one of his own members from deserting the cause.
These days, the Brokeback Nats are now utterly subservient to the gay-euthanasia-abortion lobby led by Alex Greenwich, in no small measure as a result of the efforts of one Ben Franklin, when he was the Party’s State Director. (Ben was also one of the key WorldPride ministers in the NSW Government just before the election). The Nationals’ only other purpose is to “get stuff” for the regions. What we used to call “pork barrelling”, and what some Nats still do. Well, with the Party’s chance to influence Upper House votes now in the toilet, there won’t be any Nats-led pork barrelling going on for quite some time.
Perhaps the Nats might use the time to reflect on their decline into woke irrelevance, as they gaze upon the regal presence of President Franklin in the big red chair.
Benjamin Franklin the First once said:
He that falls in love with himself will have no rivals.
And in another setting, he claimed:
He that lies down with Dogs, shall rise up with fleas.
I think the first Ben Franklin might have been onto something. It is little wonder that around a third of the electorate now routinely cannot bring itself to vote for either major party.
Paul Collits
9 May 2023
This affair looks like a rerun of the Peter Slipper (LNP -QLD) for speaker of the House of Representatives. Another Labor (sorry, Uniparty) sleazebag stunt.
I can't see much hope for this country given the overall standard of our ruling class. Maybe we will muddle through as we have in the past.
Then again, maybe we won't
We are ruled by the uni party. The NSW nationals continue their race to the bottom. NSW Labor show once that we are again in for the usual corruption and dirty deals. We continue to have Greenwich with his death cult in charge.