Politics with Michelle Grattan
News:Politics
As a veteran of the Rudd-Gillard-Rudd years, former treasurer Wayne Swan is a politician with a great deal of experience with parliamentary instability. With the outcome of the election still uncertain, Swan tells Michelle Grattan Labor should approach the next period ahead in a very positive way.
“We put [forward] a comprehensive agenda for inclusive growth. What you saw at this election was the defeat of the Abbott-Turnbull agenda of trickle-down economics,” he says.
Swan says Malcolm Turnbull’s authority has been “shattered” and that he will find it very hard to assert any authority in his partyroom.
“His glass jaw-shattering speech after midnight on election night I think effectively ended his authority not just in his party but I think in the country.”
Swan says he wants to continue to speak about issues he is passionate about from the position of a backbencher rather than from the shadow cabinet.
“I want to use my time as treasurer to add to critical national debates and speak about them in a much more open way than I would otherwise if I had some form of executive responsibility,” he says.
The battle for Wentworth
Clare O'Neil on Labor’s listening tour for banking victims
Brendan O'Connor on Labor’s industrial relations agenda
View from the crossbench: Cathy McGowan and Rebekha Sharkie on the role of community candidates
Judith Troeth on the Liberal party’s woman problem and asylum seekers
Barnaby Joyce at his provocative best
Wayne Swan on Labor’s byelection victories and beyond
Katharine Murphy ‘On Disruption’
Tanya Plibersek on Labor’s taxing times
Frances Adamson on being secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs
Attorney-General Christian Porter on a crowded agenda
Brotherhood of St Laurence’s Conny Lenneberg on Newstart, poverty and inequality
Michael McCormack on Barnaby's future, latte sippers and other matters
Anthony Albanese on Labor’s National Conference
Dean Smith on the pros and risks of new religious freedom protections
Politics podcast: Mathias Cormann and Jim Chalmers on Budget 2018
Tim Colebatch on the 2018 budget
Chris Bowen on the budget and Labor's policies
Robert Kelly on the Korean summits
Clive Hamilton and Richard Rigby on Chinese influence in Australia
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free