As political editor of The Age, Michelle Grattan was obliged
to cover the broad spectrum of events in Australian politics. Her brief was not
to pick and choose what she wrote about, but rather to decide how to interpret
and report the events of the day, every day, whatever they may be.
But last week, Grattan left The Age to take on a teaching
role with The University Of Canberra. At the same time, she signed on with
independent news & opinion website The Conversation as an associate editor
and their chief political correspondent.
Yes, Michelle Grattan has entered the blogosphere. And, as
new bloggers are wont to do, she has embraced her new-found editorial freedom by
writing about what really, really interests her.
Sadly, that seems to boil down to two words: Kevin Rudd.
In the five days thus far that Grattan has been writing for
The Conversation, Grattan has published five articles. All five are (to some
degree) about Labor, and all five are less than complimentary.
Four of the five mention Rudd.
Article one, A Fresh
Start To An Important Political Year, is ostensibly Grattan’s introduction
to The Conversation. Yet it focuses primarily on Julia Gillard and her
government, and is unable to list a positive without countering with a
negative. And in the third paragraph, even before any mention of Gillard or
Labor, we get this:
“Of course, in a
parliament where the unexpected is the expected, that could change – for
instance, if Kevin Rudd were to achieve the Herculean challenge of seizing the
leadership.”
Article two, Not So
Super Profits Tax Has Labor In A Bind, is more overtly critical of Labor
and their apparently-underperforming mining tax. But Grattan sets the tone of
her article in the opening paragraph:
“In a notable
bookending, the mining tax that helped destroy Kevin Rudd’s leadership late
last term is causing Julia Gillard serious budgetary and political problems as
she heads towards the election.”
Grattan also uses treasurer Wayne Swan to reiterate the bad
blood:
“Rudd bitterly blamed
Swan for the vicious reaction to the original tax from the mining sector,
because there was not enough consultation beforehand.”
And comments from government whip Joel Fitzgibbon are
reported as a backlash from “Fitzgibbon,
a Rudd supporter”.
Article three, Rudd
Puts Gillard And Swan In His Sights Over The Mining Tax, is pure
cheerleader material for Rudd. The inconvenient fact that Rudd publicly backed
Labor to win the September election under the Prime Minister’s leadership was
buried by Grattan deep in the article, well after revisiting the events that
had “destroyed” his leadership and labelling the tax a “fiasco” (a point of
view not necessarily shared by all political commentators).
Article four, The Paucity
Of Information Overload, is the only article of the five that makes no
mention of Rudd. It’s essential a reprint of part of a speech given by Professor
Robert Picard (from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism), but is
bookended (to use a Grattan expression) by references to the Prime Minister and
Communications Minister Stephen Conroy, and their unwillingness to “upset” the
media companies.
And finally, article five, An
Adrenaline Charged Rudd Increases Pressure On Gillard, is 100% leadership
speculation. Nothing more, nothing less. There is nothing in the article that
explains exactly how or why Rudd is “adrenaline-charged”; in fact, there were
no new facts or events since Grattan’s earlier Rudd missive, three days
earlier. This is simply a case of Grattan warming to her favourite subject and
writing about it with impunity, with such pearls as:
“If Kevin Rudd were to
wrest the prime ministership back from Julia Gillard”
And:
“Rudd’s bid has
revived on the back of the impression of government “chaos””
And:
“Rudd knew that… he
was directly undermining the leadership.”
It’s pretty clear that Grattan, freshly released from the
shackles of the mainstream media, is indulging herself and, it has to be said, writing
these articles largely for herself. And while it seems incongruous that I, a
blogger for only three years, could possibly hope to offer advice to Grattan, a
political journalist with over 40 years in the industry, I feel compelled to
say this:
Michelle, if you keep writing articles based on what you
want to read, rather than the actuality of events that are unfolding around us
daily, then you may as well pack it in now. Bloggers rise and fall on their
integrity and willingness to question; to ignore the truth is to doom yourself
to irrelevance.
Sadly, it may already be too late.