IT may have been more advertising genius than substance but Kevin 07 was a political juggernaut and it rolled right over John Howard’s competent, if tired administration. In so doing, it re-wrote the rules showing voters will bench governments when the economic indicators are favourable if they are bored enough. Back then, Kev-0-Sev had the magic and no matter what Mr Howard did, nothing worked, from backflipping on IR, to embracing the first Australians, to going green with a cap and trade scheme.

He can't even cut through when turning a sod / AAP

Voters had simply had enough. Kevin Rudd was future boy. A Mandarin speaking former mandarin. A square peg who had suddenly found a square hole. As the anti-Howard he was “same same but different’‘. What ever it was, it worked in spades - and they were used to bury the Howard decade.

Yet now, less than a term later, that magic has faded. A pallid looking Rudd is struggling to connect, his 07 mojo ebbing just when he needs it to flow. Is it the emergence of “Straight-talking Tony’’ or is it that having the Opposition back in the game has exposed structural weaknesses previously unnoticed?

Let’s be clear. Kevin Rudd PM, is still popular and at this stage, probably eight months out from the poll, remains the firm favourite. But a string of polls and a wealth of less empirical evidence, suggest the situation is again fluid, that uncommitted voters may be open to move back. Kevin Rudd is worried.

So here are 10 things he can do immediately, to get it back.

1) GET more sleep. It seems odd but it is, to use one of the PM’s most over-used words, ``fundamental’‘. Everything flows from this. Therese Rein revealed her husband relies on no more than three or four hours sleep per night. Frankly this is absurd. The PM is perennially tired. ``He’s exhausted,’’ as one insider conceded.You can see it in his face and you can hear it in his slow and searching speech patterns. Take more time off too because 2010 is going to be a bruising year.  Putting some extra zeds in the bank, every night, would pay big dividends and make him more focused in his communication style.

2) LEARN to delegate and do it fast. Ministers admit privately that there are huge log-jams in the Rudd in-tray. Reports and reviews are piled up. Mr Rudd’s pre-occupation with control and micro-management is a major impediment to better performance. And his constant state of being on the cusp of taking action on several fronts at once is tiring those around him - colleagues, staff, and public servants. All would benefit from more order and more down time.

3) SPEND less time talking publicly to allow more time for thinking privately. Barack Obama advocates ``big chunks of time each day’’ for thinking. Kevin Rudd by contrast, too often has nothing new to say yet speaks anyway. Voters are waking up to this. It’s time to get the words-to-meaning ratio back into balance. More time spent reflecting and less time waffling on about ``concrete plans’’ and ``practical action plans’’ would return purchasing power to the devalued currency of prime ministerial utterances.

4) ENCOURAGE senior ministers to be bolder and speak more freely. They should be given room to fail in order that they have the scope also to succeed. The concentration on discipline and narrow message management is stultifying and is strangling the creativity of some very senior people. It is also boring and leaves policy vacuums into which a renewed Opposition will try to move - witness the hospitals announcement recently. Nick Minchin and even Tony Abbott himself used to float ideas publicly when in government. The Hawke/Keating governments also had heavy-weights like John Button and others who would do likewise. While these thought bubbles can be difficult in a day-to-day management sense, they can enliven the culture of the government and uncover fresh opportunities.

5) STOP talking about your opponent. Voters are turned off by this kind of thing particularly from their Prime Minister. The PM must behave like a statesman and must be seen to be totally occupied by the serous business of governing. Besides, it is merely lifting the new Opposition Leader’s profile.

6) RESHUFFLE your frontbench. Peter Garrett is an experiment that has not worked. As he is clearly not being sacked over the disastrous management of the insulation program, he should at least be moved out of Cabinet. Use the opportunity to make other changes. Penny Wong is a very competent minister but has probably done what she can with climate change. A new face and a significant change of policy direction is needed if the climate issue is to be rescued for the Government. Also elevate some new talent such as SA’s Mark Butler.

7) DELIVER on hospitals reform this year - make the announcement this week. The mid-2009 deadline was a long time ago. Voters believed the Kevin 07 message about fixing the problem. Now they want a decision, which by the way, is not the same as a detailed concrete action plan. The much vaunted GP super clinics are also overdue - why more of the stimulus money wasn’t used to get this happening seems puzzling in hindsight.

8) TOUGHEN up on the states. State governments, especially the unpopular Labor outfits in Queensland and NSW, represent a key weakness in brand Labor. State governments are too often associated with policy failures and broken promises on infrastructure, health, public transport, and roads. Their intransigence on key national problems like water reform is frustrating for voters.

9) PROMOTE one really big, economy changing idea to seize back the initiative. Taxation policy probably represents the biggest opportunity arising from the Henry tax review which should be released ASAP.

10) SWALLOW your pride and adjust the stimulus in view of the rapidly improving economy. If the extraordinary expenditure was correct for what was shaping as a major downturn with 8.5 per cent jobless and so on, it cannot also be perfectly tailored for the much better situation we now see. And tough action to reduce debt quicker would undercut a looming Opposition attack.

66 comments

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    • Pete says:

      06:40am | 20/02/10

      Gee I thought delivering on your promises would be the obvious thing to do. But two years of failures is already too little too late. Rudd and Labor are gone.

    • Jason B says:

      06:59am | 20/02/10

      Surprised it lasted this long, you can only fool people with all talk and no action for so long before they wake up and smell the roses. He has many failures that nobody pulled him up on because the opposition was weak.

    • Clive Johnson says:

      07:03am | 20/02/10

      I must be one who saw through Kevin Rudd from the start - he never had any Mojo in my eyes - bring on the Abbott in 10!

    • matt stewart says:

      04:17pm | 21/02/10

      Yes, you are clearly the only politically competent person in Australia.  You must be the only person who voted Liberal at the last election

    • Never vote Labour says:

      10:22am | 06/04/10

      I would never vote Labour and after Rudd’s poor performance am doubly sure I never will!  Rudd is a dud and always was…. his voters are obviously gullible.

    • SincerlyYours says:

      07:03am | 20/02/10

      Kevin Rudd will getting my vote , even if he does nothing. The man is warm out from trying to run this country and its evident everytime you look at him. The reforms for the pensioners were way overdue, it made a difference to the lives of countless elderly people in this country. The Liberals had 11 years to help them instead they just ignored them. That apology to The First Australians was another thing I felt proud of. We stood together as a nation and did what we should have done years ago. Hes done what we asked and tried to get us on the right path for Global Warming but the climate change deniers on the other side blocked every move. There have been many other good things he has achieved in this short period in office. Labor is getting kicked from all sides at the moment and the more they kick the more I am determind to vote for them. My vote, my choice.

    • Steve of Cornubia says:

      11:15am | 21/02/10

      Care to list the ‘many other things’ that Rudd has achieved?

      And as for the Apology, what difference has it made to indigenous Australians’ lives? Just another example of cheap words and no action. If Rudd truly believes in honour, he will issue an apology for the insulation debacle that has resulted in four deaths, but I won’t hold my breath.

    • biff says:

      07:05am | 20/02/10

      Mr Rudd could also improve his standing by rescinding his two most recent decisions and think long and hard. He might then come out and announce a pledge of AUD$250 to assist those with a mental health problem from becoming homeless and at the same time he could announce a pledge of AUD$10 million to assist struggling TV moguls. Until then he is not a PM; he is just an MP.

    • Juju says:

      12:55pm | 21/02/10

      Well said biff.

    • Bigboomer says:

      07:06am | 20/02/10

      Your comment:Is this website on the Liberal payroll? Seems that way

    • Adam Diver says:

      12:31pm | 21/02/10

      If Liberals are in power I can assure you that most pieces will be about thier incompetence. Stop being so politically aligned, there is no point in attacking the liberals as they hold no power anyway. Every incumbent government gets the same treatment the only difference was the lack of outrage for the first couple of years of Rudds term. Seriously 2020 anyone?????

      Plus I swear if I see him in another hi Visibilty vest I am going to lose it.

      Labor supporters be comforted in the fact if you lose this election you get years of ammo to attack the libs smile

    • Bigboomer says:

      07:56am | 20/02/10

      Abbott will bring back workchoice, they have lied and lied to us in the past. Children overboard and The Iraq war was 2 good examples. Once Abbott is elected Workchoice will be back under another name. Rudd just has to sit back and let Abbott hang himself. Many Australians are dependent on overtime to help pay the morgage and boost low wages. The Liberals have backstabbed each other, Malcome Turnbull was a good example and Peter Costello was treat badly by them. If they can do that to their own, they will have no worry with doing to us.

    • xiaoecho says:

      02:57am | 22/02/10

      Agree Bigboomer. The Howard government was a far right wing, autocratic Thatcherist steamroller hellbent on systematically destroying hard won social and workplace reforms gained over the last 130 years…..all governments bend and stretch the truth but the Liberals made deciet integral to the way they governed

    • Aitch B says:

      08:04am | 20/02/10

      You’ve pretty much covered it, Mark.

      Point 5, in particular. I reckon the biggest turn-off for a swinging voter is to constantly have to wade through the damning verbage in search of something that vaguely resembles policy and statements relevant to the subject at hand. I’m a regular viewer of question time and it’s so frustrating watching Rudd, Swan and especially Gillard deliver little other than vitriolic attacks on the opposition in response to legitimate questions. If they’d just answer the bloody question and move on I’d be eternally grateful!

    • Cuppa says:

      08:58am | 20/02/10

      Kevin Rudd = FAIL.He is narcistic & he is a liar, & he is a huge liability to Australias future.

    • acker says:

      09:02am | 20/02/10

      11 ...Don’t create embarrasing photo’s for the opposition to use in the election campaign.

      12 ..Don’t drop dirt off your shovel

      13 ..Don’t shovel next to a stronger women who is a better shoveller than you

      14 ..Don’t stand next to taller women (perhaps make Julia where flats heels)

      15. Roll your sleeves up when shoveling

      16. Pehaps do a course in shoveling

      17. Do some weight training

      18. Get some tatt’s

      19. Shave your head (no hairdryers to worry about)

      20. Learn to drive a backhoe (better photo opportunities)

    • Beamesy says:

      12:24am | 22/02/10

      brilliant. I also suggest that he shovel into a wheelbarrow so the real workers on site arn’t double handling his dirt? sorry…Krudd?

    • Lorraine says:

      03:53pm | 22/02/10

      And learn to say “bloody’ like a real Australian . Most of his vernacular sounds rehearsed..

    • steve says:

      09:24am | 20/02/10

      Good article Mark but you know he won’t be told
      When he won Kev 07 some of the more cynical among us said that the win was just a spring board for the left to put Julia G to be the next opposition leader, now there is a sobering thought……

    • KM says:

      09:42am | 20/02/10

      More time for thinking privately.
      I don’t see Kevin Rudd is a thinker. I see him as a bureaucratic administrator who was the only pick labor had a the time has been installed as an unlikely prime minister
      STOP. talking about your opponent
      If Rudd stops talking about his opponent it doesn’t give him a lead in to sling mud at liberal government. And leaves him with no choice. But to actually answer questions strait and to the point! With out all the lead in rhetoric
      DELIVER.
      Kevin Rudd will not deliver on any project name 5 projects they have accomplished in good working order in the 2-½ years????
      TOUGHEN. You forgot to mention Labor in SA they are on the nose big time.
      PROMOTE. If the Henry tax review had anything good in it they would have released it by now Rudd is stalling. Rudd is all about Taxation! The ETS the overhaul of the taxation system as if the take from the GST wasn’t enough now, all designed to get more revenue.

    • Lorraine says:

      05:05pm | 22/02/10

      Agree about SA….. How do we get rid of them. Just heard Isabel will introduce an ICAC… that will stir up a few hornets.

    • Sisyphus says:

      09:43am | 20/02/10

      All very good, but a bit like asking Canute to turn back the tide.  Rudd is a control freak and will never change.

    • kp says:

      09:46am | 20/02/10

      Mark, if you have the ideal solution to Krudd’s problems then what on earth is he still doing as PM. It sounds to me like anyone could do his job !!!!

    • Bubba Ray says:

      09:52am | 20/02/10

      11. Keep a low profile and keep playing the safe boring guy while Tony Abbott shoots both his feet off.

    • NEIL FISHER says:

      10:40am | 20/02/10

      BYE BYE KEVVY

    • 6clegs says:

      10:41am | 20/02/10

      It kills me to write this, and that society is so shallow - but Prime Minister is looking sooooo tired, flabby, and ‘old’...

      Yeah, he has to get some sleep, and a walking/exercise regime to tighten those flabby jowls… the difference in his appearance in 2half years is shocking. The man has aged 10years in just on 3.
      He’s not a lot overweight so it shouldn’t take long to firm up.

      Howard managed to keep the younger vote [general populace, not political junkies] because they could see he was fit - he may have been ‘‘old’’ but to them he looked fit and healthy.
      The difference between him and the opposition leader is stark re how ‘fit’ they look on tele. (even in person he’s not looking too great, these days)
      Where’s the cheeky looking and fresh faced Rudd that they voted for?

      And the reshuffle needs to come soon, or it will be too close/late for the election…

      (disclaimer: am NOT a Labor or Liberal ‘hack’—- more emerald wink )

    • True believer says:

      01:08pm | 20/02/10

      You mistakenly assume that our dear leader had any “mojo” to start with.

      Unfortunately, Rudd is like one of those cheap Chinese made outdoor chairs you buy from Kmart.

      At first , it’s all shiny and glossy, you think you’ve got a great deal, and it takes pride of place in your backyard.

      But after two years of exposure to the weather; the gloss has worn off, the paint has started to chip and peel, and if you sit on it,  it’s likely to collapse underneath you – and finally you wake-up and realise that it was a dud buy in the first place.

      Time has exposed Rudd for what he is – the ultimate Hollowman.

      Rudd’s time has come and gone. Bring on Julia, as only she can guarantee a Labor victory at the next election.

    • Matthew says:

      01:29pm | 20/02/10

      1. Be open and honest.
      2. Answer questions succinctly and to the point.
      3. Acknowledge that some of your ideas and colleagues have got it wrong.  Just admit it, it’s ok.
      4. You just had 4 weeks off, if you aren’t rested after that, you’re not fit to be Prime Minister.  Maybe exercise.
      5. Don’t treat above average income people like cash cows.
      6. Don’t be a hypocrite

    • Bella says:

      10:08am | 23/02/10

      And stop pretending you aren’t an above average income earner!! So sick of the “silver-tail vs. working class man” thing. Rudd (and his wife) are millionaires! Please don’t pretend you know what it is like to struggle. He certainly has more cash than Abbott. He needs to start including all of us in his audience - not just “working families” what about poor students, young couples, bachelors and pensioners…. don’t we all count too??

    • Nicki says:

      02:56pm | 20/02/10

      I suggest two things.
      1, stop using “you know what”.
      2.stop using “guess what”

      Just for this my vote will go to Tony.

    • Bella says:

      10:10am | 23/02/10

      or… “can I just say”. Makes my blood run cold.

    • midlred says:

      05:26pm | 20/02/10

      What media out let does this blog belong too

    • Evan Findlay says:

      06:20pm | 20/02/10

      So true. I think Kevin needs to initiate the agenda and not be defensive to everything Tony Abbott says. Let’s face it, Tony is all over the place like a dogs breakfast. The different headline a day is wearing thin, especially when there is little to no substance and the moment anyone questions Tony about the detail he moves onto another topic.Blaming Kevin for this and telling us how wonderful Mr Howard was! Kevin needs to forget about Tony and stop trying to debate him on every topic. Tony can make a complete stuff up of it on his own. You only have to look at Workchoices MKII, first he wants to remove penalty rates then Mr Hockey states they wont and later in the day during a radio interview Eric Albetz states there are other ways to remove penalty rates. They are all over the place when it comes to policy and they are their own worst enemy, so stop wasting breath on them, they will shoot themselves in the foot on their own accord.

      Rudd needs to lead the debate on health. They have been researching and correlating information for a while, they have done their homework, the policy should be reasonably detailed and address the problems. Don’t get caught up in complete details and logistics, just keep it simple. Don’t do what Mr Abbott did.  A quick stop at a local hospital and then policy over lunch. Once again it fails to address the problem and has no substance.

      The insulation problem is wearing thin on the electorate and only rusted on conservatives are blaming Garrett and fanning the embers.  But either sack him or move him on to another portfolio so that we can move onto more important topics. I would say 90% of the people I talk to on the issue believe the issue has been done to death and responsibility lies with the installer and most of them are acutely aware that one died of heat exhaustion and the last installer died because he was still using metal fasteners long after Garrett had banned them. Garrett is not their employer. He is not responsible for their actions or lack there of. If we were to blame everything that has gone wrong in our lives on the minister responsible, then whoever was minister for housing under Menzies should be held responsible for the devastation that cyclone Tracey inflicted. The minster for education responsible for what we saw occur during the week in Brisbane and John Howard should be held to account for the murders of those who fought in Iraq, after all they were sent there on his lies.

      And if the figures are still stacking up come budget time then yes cut back on the stimulus and start redirecting those monies towards health, education and infrastructure. These are the policies he was voted in on and the electorate wants to see addressed after twelve years of neglect by the coaliton.

      It won’t take much to turn the tide, just sound and viable policy. The conservatives have never been good at policy and under Abbott that is coherently clear, but Rudd needs to lead and force Abbott to give more detail. Reverting back to 1950’s health boards and paying big business to pollute with taxpayers money will not wash with the electorate and Rudd needs to highlight this whilst promoting his own agenda. Keep it sort, simple and to the point and all we’ll hear from Tony is the usual “umm tch” that is annoyingly heard after every second word whilst he rambles on with his shallow rhetoric.

      The same shallow rhetoric that 48 hours later passes as coaliton policy.

    • Bella says:

      10:16am | 23/02/10

      No Australian died in Iraq. All 11 soldier casualties have been in Afghanistan. 3 during Howard’s reign and 8 during Rudd’s….... Howard sent them in, but Rudd has kept them there.

      Oh, and if Rudd and Garrett hadn’t been so desperate to throw money at everyone and everything, there wouldn’t have been so many unskilled, opportunistic low-lives out there trying to get free money off the government for stuffing some insulation in our roofs. If these people had to actually work at getting customers, they wouldn’t have been in the business in the first place.

    • elhombre says:

      07:12pm | 20/02/10

      Just ignore this kruddy, you don’t have time to read this sort of stuff anyway. Just keep on doing what you’re doing and hopefully we will be able to limit you and your corrupt government to a single term of damage.

    • stephen says:

      07:17pm | 20/02/10

      No, I think he is too much a great letter writer ( which is what happens when you have, as a bureaucrat, been writing letters for 30 years ).
      Our hero thinks linear, e.g. one word after another, and this is bad for imagination. (No, he’s not a Poet. )
      His back-up should be more apparent. Julia’s fine, where’s Lindsay ?

    • Nicki says:

      07:31pm | 20/02/10

      1,no more “you know what”
      2.no more"guess what”

    • BUT WILL HE LAST says:

      07:58pm | 20/02/10

      Rudd has his perfect opponent, Abbott for the time been as he tries to give him his run for his money.  A very much on-par MP combination.

        Rudd with head down and bum up, took on his dream job of Government with such excitement and zest it boosted his energy level to an extremely high level.  It must be a great honor to have been chosen for the job of Government, but along with it the knowingness of mind and body balance.  The balance between the physical self and the mental self.  It takes a hell of a lot of practice to handle the pace of Government.  Perhaps Rudd is happy to just make it to his 3 year term, happy to’ hang his boot up’ so to speak and thinks, ‘I’m out of here folks’. 
      With that in mind Rudds 3-4 hrs sleep stints are just a short term goal as he figures I AM THE MAN FOR NOW,  I will catch up with more shut-eye latter.

    • Beamesy says:

      12:31am | 22/02/10

      yeah a good match up because Tony will kick his arse. On-par? give me a break.

    • John Freeman says:

      10:05pm | 20/02/10

      11) STOP the talk and actually DO SOMETHING!

    • Barry says:

      10:07pm | 20/02/10

      The day that Kev starts taking advice from the right wing cronies at News he really should turn his badge in. Voters who connect with Kevin, who are still in the majority - Mark, do so for none of the reasons you have listed.

    • ant says:

      09:55am | 21/02/10

      Some good comments in this article. Rudd could make a clean break from Howardism by declaring an end to immoral middle-class welfare, to address the elephant in the room that is we’re writing cheques for the future that we can’t honour. 

      Government expenditure needs to be re-focussed on the public good, not poured into the pockets of people who don’t need it.  He could try to re-orientate peoples’ thinking away from themselves, and onto society as a whole; shine a light on greed and rampant self-interest so that those who indulge in it were shamed. 

      This is what Howard did to our country and it’s time someone had the guts to reverse it.

    • Mark says:

      11:03am | 21/02/10

      So hilarious to see Rudd supporters assuming his loss of popularity is something not really of his doing, just circumstance, don’t worry everyone, he is perfect and will bounce back. Um, actually, the electorate is seeing through the spin and wondering why, after two years in power, he has done NOTHING. NOTHING. Voters are seeing he has no substance, no direction, and is a fraud.

    • Evan Findlay says:

      01:55pm | 21/02/10

      Mark, he is still thirty points in front of Mr Abbott as preferred PM. Labor still leads the coalition by 4 to 6 points which is still a swing away from the coalition. At some point during the election Abbott will have to show some policy and if it’s the same drivel he has already displayed to the electorate, taxpayers funds thrown at big polluters for doing nothing, re-introducing hospital boards that out wore their usefullness in the 1950’s and a penchant for winding back workers rights and entitlements, I don’t think all will bode well for Mr Abbott. He also has Mr Joyce to contend with, who might be flavour of the month with the country folk, but in the big smoke he is seen as incompetent and dangerous. I agree that Mr Rudd hasn’t achieved anywhere near what could have been accomplished but by the same token he has dealt with a financial crisis not of his doing and instead of going into the next economic boom with double digit unemployment and a dead economy we are poised to make the most of it’s benefits and hopefully this time, unlike under the Howard government, the money will be spent on infrastructure to increase productivity, improved health and educational services and more policy to deal with future problems rather than buying votes to win the next election.

    • NANA says:

      03:19pm | 21/02/10

      MARK, son,
      It may be a good idea to study politics.  It is an extremely interesting subject to get into (along side law but not every ones cup-of-tea) . It is Australian, i.e. Australian Politics and it covers topics both domestic and global.  Your view point may be different.  That is to say, it may be softer.

    • What mojo? says:

      12:42am | 22/02/10

      Evan,

      Im sorry you mentioned spending on infrastructure? oh like the school halls, the 3 childcare centres and 1 GP superclinic? you mentioned not buying votes? Oh like the stimulus hand-out which we didnt need? If Rudd hadn’t blown the surplus he could have used some of it for climate change and he wouldnt need to tax us with an ETS!!! The GFC might be an excuse for not delivering on promises but its not an excuse for incompetence.

    • Julia says:

      12:18pm | 21/02/10

      Tony Abbott ‘010!
      The Messiah is coming.

    • Had Enough says:

      12:31pm | 21/02/10

      It too late for the insincere bureaucrat and he is in trouble in his own seat. Julia Gillard should be the leader of the ALP. She is feisty and has conviction.

    • Bruce says:

      01:04pm | 21/02/10

      I dont think Kevin Rudd had any mojo or wanted any. I believe many Australian voters at the last federal election wanted a “softer” style of government and were sick of “tough” liberal style government.

    • BobM says:

      01:14pm | 21/02/10

      Had Enough says:01:31pm | 21/02/10 says “Julia Gillard should be the leader of the ALP. She is feisty and has conviction”. - She is also a self-proclaimed Marxist.  (Marxism: Ideology and socioeconomic theory developed by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. The fundamental ideology of communism, it holds that all people are entitled to enjoy the fruits of their labour but are prevented from doing so in a capitalist economic system, which divides society into two classes: nonowning workers and nonworking owners. Marx called the resulting situation ‘alienation’, and he said that when the workers repossessed the fruits of their labour, alienation would be overcome and class divisions would cease). Yeah, sure - it’s going great guns in Russia and China. SO, any Australians like to see a Marxist Australia? Maybe this is why our PM speaks Mandarin so fluently….and they don’t call Julia the Red Setter for nothing.

    • Had Enough says:

      03:28pm | 21/02/10

      @BobM, to call Julia Gillard a Marxist is absurd. Representing the left of the increasingly bland Labor Party is hardly representative of the fundamentals of communism. Give me the feisty Red Setter to the insincere passionless do nothing bureaucrat any day.

    • Peter says:

      02:11pm | 21/02/10

      Rudd will be re-elected in 2010 and will retire account ill health or family problems a la Bracks , Beatty etc;  and the unwanted Socialist Left faction under Gillard will take over.
      In Victoria,  Brumby is a puppet to Hulls because the Left gave him the “Premiership”.

    • Steve of Cornubia says:

      04:23pm | 21/02/10

      Rudd’s ego will not allow him to go gracefully. If ever Gillard supplants him while Labour are in government, Rudd will put up a fight then ‘do a Turnbull’ and spit the dummy.

    • Razor says:

      02:37pm | 21/02/10

      Just resign and put us all out of our misery

    • Dingo_aus says:

      03:54pm | 21/02/10

      He is gone once people realise how poorly the Asylum Seekers issue has become.

      We have 2000 people in detention because Rudd weakened out border protection laws.

    • Evan Findlay says:

      04:59pm | 21/02/10

      Under Howard we had 9000 asylum seekers enter the country, your point being?

    • Bruce says:

      08:31pm | 21/02/10

      Evan, point being, Howard put actions in place to stop the “queue jumpers” after an outcry from the then Labor opposition and the Australian public. At the moment we are seeing NO real action to stop the “queue jumpers”. The current government has no “ticker” to take on hard issues.

    • iansand says:

      07:49am | 22/02/10

      Howard then, and Abbott now, played and is playing politics with human misery.  It is shameful.

    • matt stewart says:

      04:24pm | 21/02/10

      My prediction - Rudd will win the next election by a small margin.  Over the subsequent 12 months it will be more of the same, and labor will slump in the polls.  Back room figures will act decisively and Rudd will be replaced by Gillard, just as Hawke was replaced by Keating.

      You read it here first.

    • Don says:

      06:04pm | 21/02/10

      Well it seems the simple things to do would be to not run the government via the channel 7 Sunrise show and to deliver results but this government seems to enjoy doing things the complicated way with very little if any positive results.

    • Max Power says:

      06:37pm | 21/02/10

      Well done Evan Findlay, you can compare your hero to John Howard. The fact that you Labor Hacks keep comparing Rudd to Howard is amusing. After all, all you Labor Hacks apparently despise john Howard, yet you always do your best to compare Rudd to him. Congratulations, you and Chong have successfully convinced me that Rudd is the mini me of Howard.

    • NoWoRkChoices says:

      07:47pm | 21/02/10

      We all know The Liberals are liers, I laughed when 2 Aussie men on the Insiders said this same thing this morning, seems the workshop I am are not the only ones saying it. They will bring back workchoices under another name and we will be out on the streets again. Why lose wages? Just avoid them to start with. I don’t trust Tony Abbottt at all he was Howards protege and is probably still getting advice from him and following his lead. Don’t assume The Labor ship is sunk until it actually goes down

    • shell says:

      11:58pm | 21/02/10

      Mr Rudd if you want to win this election - Do NOT let your Government remove a woman’s right to make choices in health care during pregnancy and birth like Nicola Roxon seems determined to do (under the pressure of one of the biggest lobby groups in our country - the Australian Medical Association)

      Watch the women of Ballarat take on Rudd and Roxon at the Community Cabinet Feb 18
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iK_Vt18eq0s

    • Geoff Hinds says:

      06:39am | 22/02/10

      That was brilliant Mark Kenny - I just hope Theresa reads The Punch because she is the only one who can get him to see the wisdom of your
      words -  the fear of what Tony Abbott might do is still with me

    • Matt C says:

      08:29am | 22/02/10

      This was surprisingly insightful! I have come to expect Punch pieces to be thinly-veiled link bait with tabloid-esque topics like “Parents - who needs ‘em?”

      Instead, this piece is quite a sober, balanced look at some genuine failings of Rudd and his Government. I disagree regarding the stimulus (IT IS ALREADY BEING WITHDRAWN, JOURNALISTS. See Chart 1.2 of MYEFO: http://www.budget.gov.au/2009-10/content/myefo/download/01_Part_1.pdf) but other than that this is all pretty sensible.

      It’s enough to keep me reading the Punch for another week or so, in the hope that more non-sensationalist articles will sneak in.

    • Milky Bar Kid vs Bad Priest? says:

      09:16pm | 22/02/10

      The best thing about Kevbo is Therese. Start listening to your wife Kev and treat other women better. Stand up and show some difference from Tony Abbott. Tony is a loud mouth misogynist, Rudd is a sneaky one.  Taking women’s rights in childbirth, handing them to the AMA and through this showing us he is piss weak re health reform. Maternity is the largest volume area of health, screw this up you have no chance in overall reform. This time women’s rights will have a BIG impact. AMA have cocked the gun and Rudd is running their policy agenda.

 

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