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Kristina Keneally is digging her heels in. The Labor senator’s decision to switch to the lower house seat of Fowler in western Sydney at the expense of local hopeful Tu Le has drawn anger from within and outside the ALP.
Keneally parachuting into one of the country’s most multicultural electorates ahead of Le, a child of Vietnamese immigrants with deep ties to the community, has finally focused attention back on the shocking lack of cultural diversity in Australian politics — an area in which Australia lags stubbornly behind the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Canada.
In Australia, people from a non-European and Indigenous background make up 24% of the population (21% non-European and 3% Indigenous). Human Rights Commission research in 2018 found just 4.1% of federal MPs came from a non-European background, with 1.5% Indigenous. In NSW and Victoria, 9% and 10% of MPs respectively have non-European, non-Indigenous heritage.
The whiteness problem looks even starker when compared with other Western democracies. Take the UK, where just 13% of the population is from a Black, Asian or minority ethnic (BAME) background. After the 2019 election, 65 MPs, or 10% of the Commons, had BAME heritage, and one in four Labour MPs came from a culturally diverse background.
But Boris Johnson’s Tories are still doing better than all Australian political parties combined. Senior ministers, including Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak and Home Secretary Priti Patel, have south Asian backgrounds.
In Canada, where a similar proportion of the population comes from a non-European background, 17% of MPs are “visible minorities”. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet also includes numerous First Nations and non-white MPs. New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh is the first visible minority to lead a major political party there.
In New Zealand, the Parliament is 53% Maori. And in the United States, a quarter of the 117th Congress are people from racially or ethnic minority groups.
In all these countries, cultural diversity increases at every election. But so far it’s unlikely Australia will make big strides to improve diversity when we go to the polls some time in the next few months.
Keneally’s decision to run in Fowler means the focus has been on Labor’s failure to preselect culturally diverse candidates (although the Coalition is no better). The response from senior Labor figures has been defensive. On Friday Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese pointed to Penny Wong and Ed Husic (who once quit shadow cabinet to make way for Keneally) as evidence of the “great diversity” in Labor’s ranks. On Insiders yesterday, Tanya Plibersek tried to spin Labor’s challenge as evidence of the “fantastic women” in the party.
Some of the only internal criticism within Labor has come from some of the culturally diverse MPs on the backbench. This morning, federal ALP MP Peter Khalil criticised Parliament’s lack of ethnic diversity: “We should not be token, or be just be making up the numbers.”
Anne Aly, Australia’s first female Muslim MP, was the only Labor MP to directly criticise Keneally’s move, labelling it “hypocrisy”.
“Diversity and equality and multiculturalism can’t just be a trope that Labor pulls out and parades while wearing a sari and eating some kung pao chicken to make ourselves look good,” Aly told the ABC yesterday.
The Liberals have been full of glee. But Parliament’s diversity problem isn’t just a Labor problem. And it will only be solved if parties take it seriously beyond the occasional preselection headache and political gotcha moment.
Do you think Keneally should parachute into the safe Labor seat, pushing aside Tu Le? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name if you would like to be considered for publication in Crikey’s Your Say column. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
I do not think Patel and Sunak are the best examples of usefulness, a spiv and a bully. What this really reflects is Labor’s death wish in that Keneally who is an effective senator could not be laced in one of the top 2 positions on the ballot. That this results in such local stupidity in Fowler just makes you crankier.
I agree.
Exactly – Who TF are the two above Keneally on the Senate paper? Put her at the top of the stack. Factions are what kill talent, not promote it. Andrew Leigh is not in the Shadow Cabinet because he refuses to sign up to a faction, yet he is a better performer and harder worker than some of the mediocre bench warmers in front of him.
Krudd was dumped as PM specifically because, among his many, many other faults, he would not kow-tow to the faction bosses.
That’s the fatal flaw of the Machine, just one of too many worms-in-the- bud.
Deb O’Neill is number 1 – the Shoppies’ chosen candidate [they and the AWU continue to have the whip hand in these matters]
in case you haven’t heard of her, it appears that her big claim to fame is confronting a Fair Work dude about a semi-porn statuette in his office
not so long ago, people were decrying the lack of women in winnable seats and leadership positions – it’s good we’ve moved on a bit from that, but it seems we’re back to factional and sub-factional intrigue
All this does is highlight the failure of our bicameral democracy. MMP like in Germany or NZ would have allowed Kenneally to stay put in the Senate.
I quite liked Keneally, I was leaning strongly towards voting Labor in the next federal election – until this.
Such a selfish own-goal will deservedly have consequences and if Albo’s ALP goes on being so tone-deaf I fear the horrifying result will be the return of the Morrison Gang. Gorblimey!
“……leaning strongly towards Labor”
Ah, bless, they’ll just have to kick Morrison’s arse without you.
Labor kick Morrison’s arse? They might win through sheer exasperation with the Libs, but limp wristed hand slapping doesn’t really equate to a kicking…
To paraphrase Pete & Dud, “it’s difficult for a monopedal to kick anything“.
Perhaps vote Greens, although they mainly support Labor, they certainly won’t if Labor are doing something that’s not in the interests of all Australians and their health and welfare.
Are you in that electorate??
It would be sound advice, in every electorate and the Senate.
Anything but B1 or B2, playing musical chairs.
Now you can vote for the men’s party and keep your spirit pure.
I am glad she’s going to the lower house but one of the old white males should have asked to step aside Joel Fitzgibbon is going which is a good thing but I guess the Hunter is a bit far away.
Optics are not good,but no one has mentioned Tu Le’s views or policy positions, so it is possible though not probable that this makes this decision more palatable.
Indeed, the ‘diverse’ covid crazed areas are not so diverse when it comes to progressive attitudes.
It would surprising if SE Asians were vaccine hesitant.
West Asians (the strange circumlocution of the ABS) though are a different matter.
Not that far.
I’d say KK’s going for deputy/prime minister in waiting. This is the only way to become PM. Sadly her position in Senate is so important and KK does a great job. Perhaps too great?
she has to move because the Shoppies won’t let her have number 1 spot on the ticket