POLITICAL dropout Peter Costello is unlikely to have spent even a minute watching A-Pac’s live feed of this mundane ALP national conference. There’s every chance the footy-mad ex-treasurer is mooching around the house in his black and red tracky dacks watching Essendon tapes, his mind focussed on tomorrow’s do-or-die clash with West Coast as the Bombers try to keep their spot in the eight.

Julia Gillard with partner Tim Mathieson: will they ever be Australia's first couple

Had he tuned into proceedings from Darling Harbour, John Howard’s perpetual political bridesmaid would probably have had a bit of a knowing grin at watching Julia Gillard make her own transformation to the position he held for so long - warm-up act to a bloke who has no real intention of ever leaving the prime ministership.

Costello has spoken about the sense of tedium and frustration which accompanied his bib-and-bub act with John Howard at the annual Liberal Party conventions.

As a gifted and humorous speaker - but also as a hungry politician who felt he deserved more - Costello would schlep along to convention, take a deep breath, and go through the motions to laughter and applause, firing up the crowd before the immoveable object took to the podium and received a mandatory standing ovation.

It was one of the most galling features of his job as deputy - revving up the party faithful into a kind of three-more-years mania, as he sat back, zoning out as Howard spoke, wondering if he’d ever get his own shot at the title.

Julia Gillard would not be wondering that, or rather, she would not be wondering that yet.

But at some stage in the life of the Rudd Government the point will inevitably arrive where the question of succession is real, and a permanent and destabilising distraction for the incumbent leader.

In this early stage in the life of the Rudd Government, it has been a terrific thing for Labor that Gillard has shown such polish and poise in power. She was widely regarded in opposition as a weakness for the ALP. Her background in the Socialist Left and as a student political firebrand meant she was viewed with suspicion if not alarm by business, by many commentators, and most of all by conservatives within the ALP, especially in New South Wales and Queensland.

Her elevation as Rudd’s deputy was seen by many as a marriage of convenience. The two had never been close, either personally or politically. And Rudd had made no secret of his disdain for her early plays at establishing a profile through outings like her Good Weekend cover spread, regarding them as an attempt to position herself as a contender for a bigger prize than 2IC.

It’s interesting to contrast this ALP conference and the get-together in April 2007, where Rudd made his debut as Opposition Leader, to examine the role which Gillard played.

The party seemed to be hiding her in 2007.

A string of stories involving bovver-boys from Labor’s industrial wing had spooked the party - yobbos from the construction unions in WA appearing on grainy video tapes in Doc Marten boots and braces spouting obcenities, rabbits such as Dean Mighell from the Electrical Trades Union referring to bosses by the evocative term “c**k-smokers”.

Part of Labor’s problem with these industrial dinosaurs was that the woman who would be deputy prime minister obviously seemed quite comfortable in their company, as demonstrated by the leaked footage of Gillard giving Dean Mighell a friendly peck on the cheek at a party get-together.

The 2007 event was purely and wholly the Kevin Rudd show - “My name’s Kevin, I’m from Queensland, and I’m here to help.”

And Gillard was shunted to one side, as the ALP desperately tried to reassure the public that it had no time for the class war of the past, even if some in the party - including the deputy - didn’t mind knocking around with blokes who thought bosses by definition were the scum of the earth. 

Two years and three months on, Rudd has obviously enough taken centre stage again at the conference - but much of his shine has come via his deputy, who has meticulously transformed herself from SL rabble-rouser into a capable and measured politician who is regarded by her former critics as more of a strength than a liability for Labor in power.

Her speech this week introducing Rudd was typical of the stuff you get at Labor conferences - its Ben Chifley-meets-Iwo Jima overtones describing Rudd as “the man who dragged us up the final slopes and planted our flag on the top of the high hill” - but the point is that unlike 2007, where scary pinko Julia was in the shadows, this time we saw measured, responsible, credible, likeable Julia playing a front-of-house role for Labor in power. 

This transformation has been a good thing for the party in these early stages of its life in government. But down the track the last thing Kevin Rudd will want to read or hear are continuing assessments of just how well Julia is going.

Like Costello, Gillard is a career political obsessive who from her days on the SRC at Adelaide’s Unley High, and through university and her early political career working in opposition for John Brumby, has been on an upward trajectory, accumulating and wielding greater power with every passing decade.

And again, like Costello she is going to reach a point where she’s a little tired of being the faithful number two, the smiling MC at party get-togethers, destined forever to pump up her   leader’s tyres while dutifully deflecting any talk of designs of the leadership as baseless speculation.

The issue Kevin Rudd will eventually have to face is that not only have her former critics been pleasantly surprised by Julia’s transformation, the party is genuinely in love with her too. Not just her Left Faction, but many members of the Right, who in this age of factional collapse, nowhere moreso than in states such as NSW, will increasingly be prepared to pick leaders on merit and electability, rather then the old tribal lines which count for little in the modern ALP.

44 comments

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    • Terry says:

      07:55am | 01/08/09

      Julia Gillard as Leader???? OMG!  “Polish and Poise” LOL!
      This woman is a sandwich short of a picnic. Can’t you just imagine her up on the world stage representing Australia!
      What. is. it. with. her. speech.? Robot. talk.? Watching her yesterday interviewed on PM Agenda was enough!

    • Lawerance says:

      10:18am | 01/08/09

      Your comment:
      Gillard as leader…LAUGHABLE! Ronald Mcdonald as deputy?

    • goran says:

      10:26am | 01/08/09

      Well, it might happen, if only to finish this mockery of Australian economy based purely on exporting pay dirt. It might work for now but it will not last forever. Advance of unionism, wage indexation, pay increases detached from economic realities, enormous government and private debt, high inflation ... we deserve Julia for prime minister.

    • Brian B says:

      10:34am | 01/08/09

      Yes Terry, she is a bit droney, but there is no doubt that Kevvie will need to check his back regularly for knives in the not too distant future.

    • Tom Griffin says:

      11:29am | 01/08/09

      David, do you mean we are going to jump out of the fry pan into the fire? but then again the Australian people were stupid enough to elect the Show Pony as their PM so I guess anything is possible. For example at the conference Julia wasn’t wearing men’s trousers.

    • Patricia says:

      12:08pm | 01/08/09

      Is Gillard all there?

    • Bob says:

      12:15pm | 01/08/09

      Julia Gillard would make an excellent PM.

    • Kellie says:

      12:35pm | 01/08/09

      It would be music to the Liberals ears if she were to be leader.

    • Kurisu Sonsaku says:

      12:52pm | 01/08/09

      Now Lawerence (10:18) for shame, Ronald McDonald is already the PM, deputy PM has already been claimed by hamburgler. Either way both are caricatures of actual people and at least the motives of hamburgler Julia are clear, if equally laughable.

      ALP=Ship of Fools,

      PM Kev=Assassin in Waiting Julia

      ALP Unity=Shoulderblade pain for Kevvni

    • ronald reagun says:

      01:21pm | 01/08/09

      Julia Gillard is the prize that GenY Australians deserve.

    • brian hill says:

      01:22pm | 01/08/09

      No doubting her cleverness & ambition!...but I, for one, am unable to tolerate
      the endless patronising monotone droning!......or am I being harsh?
      brian…..from the nations capital

    • Gasbo says:

      01:50pm | 01/08/09

      “Julia is looking more and more like a future leader” never been any doubt Peter, the way she handled that “barren” comment by one of we male persons, was excellent, she’s quite safely and efficiently right across her protfolios and a whole heap of others, I’d vote for her…

    • Diver says:

      02:06pm | 01/08/09

      RabRabid-right mischief making. You can’t find a fault in Rudd’s armour so you set to cause dissention and division within the enemy camp. I don’t think they are that stupid. Being a Howard clone, Rudd will want to be there in 15 years time and he may just do it with the circus that tries to pass as an opposition.

    • Patricia says:

      02:30pm | 01/08/09

      Gillard lost all credibility when she ingratiated herself toward the Israeli lobby group. She showed that she is just a mouthpiece for sale.
      A leader needs to have the strength of character to withstand powerful manipuations; she had none.

    • asproella says:

      03:23pm | 01/08/09

      We are not a communist country yet…so we don’t need a Communist Leader..

    • Jamie Hovan says:

      03:28pm | 01/08/09

      Smugly encapsulating Peter Costello and all his achievements with the glib label ‘Political Dropout’ is a little bit rich coming from an Editorial Dropout (or should that be Editorial Outcast?). Lift your standards please if you’re going to be linked from the Oz main page.

    • Politikos says:

      03:43pm | 01/08/09

      Davo man it is a truism that nothing last forever, and yap yap Howard found that out the hard way..and so it follows Rudd too will learn that he too is not invincible and regardless of how much Chinese smoke he pumps out and how man crackers he throws in time he will unhinge and fall over..Having said that, the Labor camp they is quite well stocked with alternate leader material…and between China Man Rudd, Queen Liz I Gillard, Daddy Cool Tanner, and Wayne McDuck in that order could fill in as leader quite competently . In Liberaldom, they can’t even agree who should lead them full stop, and after Malcolm they really have nobody they can fill in as leader..and or those who be effective Lib leaders are Senators not low house MP shadows, and the biggest shadow is cast by none other than Puggsy Joe Hooky who big frame puffs out lots of wi nd but no substance, and also huge spook shadows.
      Libs are in deep doodohs..and if Queen Gillard does roll China Man Rudd it can’t hurt the female cause nor Australian politics, so long as Julia is not leaned on heavily by extreme left factions demanding pay back.

    • Denis says:

      04:25pm | 01/08/09

      Its funny reading all the put downs of the Deputy PM here.  Most, I would hazard a guess are written because she outshines the authors in just about every aspect.  The main one being that she is “there”.  The major secondary being that a female has made it to that spot.

      And just for humour, Kelly the only “music” the Liberals would hear if Julia were to become the Leader would be the Funeral March.

    • Luke A says:

      06:58pm | 01/08/09

      We shall wait and see. Rudd hasn’t been running the show for very long. He’s yet to leave his mark on Australia. His hard yards are still to come. If everyones as happy with him in 18 months time when we can see if all his talk actually means he knows what he’s doing, then fine hand over to Gillard. Then he can run off to the UN for the job he really wants.

    • Lee says:

      07:03pm | 01/08/09

      The socilaist left has destroyed Britain and women like Julia Gillard are the poster girls for this movement. Unions have been legislated into their place in Australia and the country has moved forward in leaps and bounds. Gillard is now reversing this brick by brick- allowing unions to be on federal government boards is just the start. For god’s sake Australia, don’t let this happen. Britain is broken after 10 years of this kind of politics and unions have brought the UK to its knees and we are now in the worst recession in memory because of it. Don’t break Australia by using the same socialist sledgehammer. Gillard is more dangerous than Rudd could ever be.

    • Kim says:

      07:14pm | 01/08/09

      Anyone would think Labor had been in Government for 10 years. They’ve not long been in power, and you are already talking about a new leader. How rediculas! Rudd and Gillard are yet to prove themselves.

    • Pg says:

      07:22pm | 01/08/09

      As Phil Gould (Chanel 9 rugby league commentator - for those that might not know) would say, ” No, No, No,No, NO!”

    • Simon says:

      11:30pm | 01/08/09

      Get set for a Keating / Hawk style Kirribilli agreement incident.
      Have Labor learned their lesson. Doubt it.

    • Chris of Surry Hills says:

      12:48am | 02/08/09

      Having loathed Gillard for most of the last decade, I am persuaded.  She is a more prime-ministerial than the Ruddbot - every time he is overseas she shines in Question Time - no 17 piles of notes for her.  She may not be perfect, but anything, anythingis better than the anodyne weale who currently resides in Kirribilli.

    • jonsey says:

      04:39am | 02/08/09

      I CRINGE at the thought of Gillard as a potential PM! Tanner or Shorten would be a FAR more palatable choices (you may even get my vote again that way) !!!!  Based of observed Labor strategy (spin), just prior to people becoming “sick to death” of Rudd they may try putting in Gillard, just before an election, to try give us the impression it is a brand new government - this trick is wearing thin Labor! [Look what is happening to Anna Bligh now!].

    • BigSean says:

      05:41am | 02/08/09

      Julie GIllard is in this role to serve one purpose and one purpose only. The female vote… Just as Garret had the sole purpose of drawing some of the green vote to the side of labour,  Penny and her climate change asian vote and more green support. Yep there is a place for everyone in the ALP and everyone gets put in there place. She has her place not through ability, not thru skills, not through knowledge but simple she has contacts and a litte power which helped pull the unions into line during the election campaign. How many strikes have we seen since Rudd came to power compared to the numbers we saw under the Liberal government. Qld and NSW are dealing with union backed industrial action now over wage disputes wth ALP state goverment. HOw long do you think they agreed to go wuiet federally before GIllard can not control them any longer ad becomes of no use to the ALP machine ??? my thoughts are nt long

    • bhu vidya says:

      08:11am | 02/08/09

      whilst i am labor left in views, i find julia gillard’s media style **unbearable** - her slow robotic speech actually offends me! yes julia, i can understand what you’re saying, even if you said it 3 times as fast - she also falls for the ‘message of the day trap’ instead of directly answering questions - people are fed up with that shite - if she works on that side of her gig she’ll go a lot further….

    • Jim from Gosford says:

      08:53am | 02/08/09

      The thing that annoys me most about Julia Gillard (apart from everything she says and does) is the monosyllabic drone of her delivery. She sounds like she is talking slowly and deliberately to a bunch of kindergarten kids. She is most certainly talking down to her audience, treating us like a bunch of dumbed down intellects. It not only sounds patronizing and arrogant - it is!

    • Alan says:

      08:55am | 02/08/09

      I see the usual suspects are peddling their usual brand of invective here. Kevin Rudd is a very different political animal to John Howard, and will not make the same self-serving, party-destroying mistakes regarding his succession. Howard cut his political teeth in a very different media era and, demonstrably, never quite managed to wrap his head around “new media” (witness JWH’s first foray into YouTube, which he began with the words “Good morning”).  By contrast, Rudd is as comfortable and conversant with a range of internet, FM radio and (shock! horror!) popular TV as he is with more traditional forms of communication (such as the essay). As such, he will understand that high-profile politicians’ shelf-lives are far more limited in the 21st century, as the public simply becomes sick of seeing the same faces and hearing the same voices for years on end.
      Long before anyone in the ALP feels the need to shaft their leader, Rudd will have sniffed the wind and organised an orderly succession. Half way through his third term as PM (around 2014) he will resign our top job -yes, probably to take up a prominent international role- and Julia Gillard will make history as Australia’s first female PM. I have no doubt that she has all the skills required to do the job very well.

    • Woodsy says:

      10:12am | 02/08/09

      Someone so glowing in her praises for Mark Latham. She curried favour with him - he fell over spectacularly. The party knew what he was like, and she knew what he was like. There was a resigned inevitability and Labor weakly accepted three more years of the awful Howard. She would have paired up with Genghis Khan if it meant she could further her career. Why should someone so opportunist not have their motives questioned? She is not suitable for high office.

    • Nathan says:

      10:29am | 02/08/09

      Actually, Jamie Hoven, you smug git, I find more typographical and semantic errors in The Australian’s webpage than I do almost anywhere else on any other news site in the world (that I read, and I try to read them all.)

    • Hebs says:

      12:10pm | 02/08/09

      Julia is extremely quick witted, intelligent and personable.  She would make a great leader.  She was hidden away because of the LIberal Party’s scare campaign in 2007 about unions and communists which is completely rubbish.  She has proved her worth in government and is one of the best-performing ministers.  I hope one day Australia is mature enough to elect a female PM and I hope it is Julia

    • nf says:

      03:01pm | 02/08/09

      Lee,
      Totally agree - UK is ruined thanks to Labour’s 10 years of ruling.
      Here in Australia, almost every model is an exact copy of Labour’s in Britain - super GP clinics (they don’t work in UK), super schools (the model failed), the inclusion of unions. All polices Labor adopted are from UK, there is nothing new or at least “austalianised” in it.
      For Labor’s policies borrowed from UK is only one thing is missing - huge amount of immigrants who are given accommodation, money for life, vehicles - they are the people who would vote Labor here. So I guess it is still to come. Would Guillard make a good PM? Yes, but the price will be wrecked lives of millions of australians.
      Remember aussies, sensible poms came here to escape the life in would be third world country, we have nowhere to go. Only NZ comes to mind.

    • Shad says:

      06:20pm | 02/08/09

      I pray that Alan is correct…

    • LeonT says:

      06:40pm | 02/08/09

      She is as two faced, patronising, self important, exploitative, deluded and as economical with the truth as any other politician, so she must be a chance I suppose.

    • Graeme says:

      07:09pm | 02/08/09

      Australia’s answer to Helen Clark?  No thanks.  I am not convinced she is across her portfolios.  She lacked the courage to take on the more demanding Treasury position, her right as Deputy, despite Wayne Swan’s lack of aptitude for the job (to my mind an acknowledgement she wasn’t up to the job).  She seems incapable of answering questions, capable only of repeating the message of the day endlessly following up with an inane giggle.  Stick to kicking heads Julia.  Wheezes about mincing poodles are more your style.  Or maybe Bill Heffernan’s.

    • Aussie Ron says:

      07:15pm | 02/08/09

      Good to see the “Old Rednecks"are still alive and kicking, thought they were still under their beds with their money and their “Commo” fantasies. I think Julia is one of the most effective ministers in the Rudd Government.Will she eventually rise to the leadership ? I like the rest of you, don’t know! But, I thought, obviously wrongly that the topic for discussion, was the ascent of Julia Gillard. Don’t quite see the relevance of the Labor party in the U.K

    • globular says:

      07:45pm | 02/08/09

      Julia is fantastic, and everyone knows it. Even Tony Abbott is in love with her. Rudd will win the next election, and then - hopefully -  two years in, hand over to Julia. If not, the election afterwards. It’s not as if the Libs are going to be a credible threat in that time, are they?

      Roll on Australia’s first female PM. She’s smarter, funnier and infinitely more talented than anyone in the quivering mess that she has reduced the Coalition to. Smarter and more talented than most in the ALP as well, barring John Faulkner and Lindsay Tanner, and they know a winner when they see one.

      And as DPM to Julia? Maxine McKew, just to annoy the halfwits who still spout the tripe that NF does.

    • STEVE says:

      07:32am | 03/08/09

      You will also see LABOR IN THE UK DEFEATED AT THE NEXT ELECTION..

    • G says:

      08:59am | 03/08/09

      Looking forward to Julia as PM in the future.  Not comparable to Costello though because she’s not a spineless ditherer.

    • BiBi says:

      06:11pm | 04/08/09

      Forget Gillard…did I hear Anna Blight correctly on Q&A last week? Has she been elected as the National President of the Labor Party from 2010??? If so, how come? Blight has shown nothing but contempt for unions in Queensland what with proposing to sell assets and the stoush with the QTU over their pathetic offer in the current EB dispute and their cynical manipulation of the Queensland Industrial Relations Commission. She appears to have abandoned ALL Labor principles and was nominated by her OWN Labor Party branch to be thrown out! May God save Queensland because it appears that no one else can!

    • Havern Maven says:

      02:40pm | 10/08/09

      Yeah I liked her so much better than Poh…oh…..

    • david wood says:

      01:26pm | 11/08/09

      you have got to be joking…..if she ever becomes prime minister i’m packing my bags and going overseas to tassie i guess!  she can’t even tell me what social inclusion is and she has that port-folio!

    • The Diluvian says:

      07:23am | 04/09/11

      Well well, odd how the leadership question from June won’t go away. Nor will it. They cats out of the bag, and if axing didn’t work then, it aint going to work now - its just hammer and nails in the town square. Poor old Gillard’s going to get bulldozed no matter what she does.

 

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