Michelle Grattan: Albaneseā€™s Qantas upgrades saga erodes trust

by Pelican Press
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Michelle Grattan: Albaneseā€™s Qantas upgrades saga erodes trust

A major takeout from the inquiry into the national response to COVID is that a lack of trust would likely mean a less co-operative public during a future pandemic.

Trust spiked early in the crisis, as fear ran high and people turned to known institutions and authority figures. Later, trust declined and frustrations rose, with people reacting against harsh measures.

Criticism has grown in retrospect. In a 2024 survey, 54 per cent said the Governmentā€™s handling at the time was appropriate. This had been 80 per cent at the pandemicā€™s peak.

The review, by an independent panel, stressed the importance of better communication and co-ordination in planning for future crises. But a few wrinkles should also be considered.

If we had another pandemic in five years, people would indeed be more resistant to restrictions. But if the next similar crisis was, say, 50 years on, the then-publicā€™s attitude would be anyoneā€™s guess.

The change in views is unsurprising. Looking back, memories of the threat fade somewhat ā€” because overall Australia did well ā€” while those of the restraints loom larger.

The pandemicā€™s lift in public trust was a blip ā€” driven by extraordinary circumstances ā€” in a long-term decline. This decline is a serious intractable problem in our democracy, as in many other countries.

Youā€™d have to be super optimistic to expect a revival in trust in the foreseeable future. But if it continues to fall away, the foundations of our political institutions and our society will become shakier.

In the United States, Donald Trump made a huge assault on peopleā€™s trust in the electoral system after the 2020 election.

Thankfully, in Australia trust around election management remains absolutely solid. But thereā€™s mounting concern about the corrosive effect of misinformation and disinformation in the political debate and, equally, distrust of proposals to curb these.

The polarisation in our media is a much paler version of what we see in the US, but is still wearing away at trust.

Distrust and cynicism are closely related, and can be fuelled by relatively small things.

Australians have always been disrespectful of the political class. To a degree this can be positive, if it is healthy scepticism. But if it descends into a belief politicians are more likely to serve themselves than serve the public good, that pulls democracy downwards.

The furore over Anthony Albanese obtaining Qantas upgrades, arising from Joe Astonā€™s just-published The Chairmanā€™s Lounge, might be seen as small beer, as ā€œscandalsā€ go.

But it raises suspicions, justified or not, in votersā€™ minds about decision-making. If big corporations are so cosy with politicians, are the politicians more likely to lend them sympathetic ears?

After all, the pursuit of access and influence is behind much of the money thatā€™s donated to politics. The same applies to privileges extended.

Integrity is vital to trust. It didnā€™t pass the integrity test for Albanese to have accepted upgrades from Qantas, especially for personal travel, when he was transport minister in the former Labor government, overseeing regulation of the airline.

After dodging for days ā€” he said it took a long time to check his records ā€” Albanese finally denied ever contacting then Qantas chief Alan Joyce (or other executives) to request upgrades. But, it will be asked, did a mates network mean he didnā€™t need to?

Albanese is highly sensitive over the Qantas story, insisting to colleagues and others it is just a media beat-up.

The affair has chipped away at public trust not just in the Prime Minister but, to an extent, more generally, as scrutiny stretched to travel largesse received by opposition figures, including Peter Dutton asking to use Gina Rinehartā€™s plane.

Research for the COVID inquiry showed a distrustful public wants more transparency from their politicians.

Itā€™s a paradox that weā€™ve seen an expansion of mechanisms for transparency ā€” registers of MPs interests, of lobbyists, etc ā€” yet thereā€™s the perception, and often the reality, of things being deeply opaque.

Albanese has made much of the fact he declared everything on his parliamentary register of interests. Yet that doesnā€™t get us to the core of the relationship between a senior politician and key people in an airline.

Itā€™s the same with the gambling industry. What has been going on behind the scenes to delay the Governmentā€™s decision on gambling reform?

The increasing professionalisation of politics may have worked against trust. It distances voters from the politicians, and provides more tools for manipulating public opinion.

This may be one reason why ā€œcommunity candidatesā€, with their grassroots approach, have appealed. But the apparent shyness of Simon Holmes Ć  Court, whose Climate 200 fund donates to some of these candidates, about finding himself on the Australian Financial Reviewā€™s ā€œcovert powerā€ list only turned more attention to the backstory of money and politics.

Concern about integrity and trust was a driver of the Albanese Governmentā€™s establishment of the National Anti-Corruption Commission. Now a scathing report released this week threatens to undermine public trust in that body.

It followed the NACCā€™s decision not to investigate six people referred to it by the royal commission into robodebt.

Robodebt had delivered a massive blow to peopleā€™s trust in government and the public service, and it was vital full accountability was pursued.

The NACC head, Paul Brereton, delegated the decision-making on whether to open an investigation to another commissioner, because heā€™d had a professional relationship with a referred person. But the Inspector of the NACC found Brereton had not adequately excused himself.

Breretonā€™s response has been to say mistakes happen, the important thing is to correct them, and this will be done ā€” via an ā€œeminent personā€ reviewing whether the referrals should be investigated.

Both Government and Opposition are declaring faith in Brereton. But ACT crossbench Senator David Pocock argues Brereton should go. Is that the price of maintaining trust in this institution that was supposed to help restore trust?



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