Bulldozed: Scott Morrison's Fall and Anthony Albanese's Rise
by Niki Savva
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Between 2013 and 2022, Tony Abbott begat Malcolm Turnbull, who begat Scott Morrison. For nine long years, Australia was governed by a succession of Coalition governments rocked by instability and bloodletting, and consumed with prosecuting climate and culture wars while neglecting policy. By the end, among his detractors -- and there were plenty -- Morrison was seen as the worst prime minister since Billy McMahon. Worse even than Tony Abbott, who lasted a scant two years in the job, whose show more main legacy was that he destroyed Julia Gillard, then himself, and then Turnbull. Morrison failed to accept the mantle of national leadership, or to deal adequately with the challenges of natural disasters and the COVID-19 pandemic. He thought reform was a vanity project. He said he never wanted to leave a legacy. He got his wish. Niki Savva, Australia's renowned political commentator, author, and columnist, was there for all of it. In The Road to Ruin, she revealed the ruinous behaviour of former prime minister Abbott and his chief of staff, Peta Credlin, that led to the ascension of Turnbull. In Plots and Prayers, she told the inside story of the coup that overthrew Turnbull and installed his conniving successor, Morrison. Now she lays out the final unravelling of the Coalition at the hands of a resurgent Labor and the so-called teal independents that culminated in the historic 2022 election. With her typical access to key players, and her riveting accounts of what went on behind the scenes, Bulldozed is the unique final volume of an unputdownable and impeccably sourced political trilogy. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
'Even though they could see the ship heading straight for the iceberg, they did not mutiny. Instead, they waited on deck without life jackets, without lifeboats, for the captain to ram it.'
Savva from the outset launches into former Prime Minister Scott Morrison with an absolute blistering analysis. No one is spared as Savva calls those who would not challenge and those who enabled Morrison. How the inaction decimated the Liberal Party at the election and how they stand on the cusp of being made irrelevant. Savva balances out the book by looking at the rise of Albanese, the impact of the Teals and the Greens.
It is a great summary and wonderfully pulled together. With interviews, observations and a journalist who truly knows her stuff. show more Compelling reading. show less
Savva from the outset launches into former Prime Minister Scott Morrison with an absolute blistering analysis. No one is spared as Savva calls those who would not challenge and those who enabled Morrison. How the inaction decimated the Liberal Party at the election and how they stand on the cusp of being made irrelevant. Savva balances out the book by looking at the rise of Albanese, the impact of the Teals and the Greens.
It is a great summary and wonderfully pulled together. With interviews, observations and a journalist who truly knows her stuff. show more Compelling reading. show less
Scott Morrison is the prime minister who went on holiday to Hawaii during the 2020 bushfires, lied about it, and when tackled by the press said, "I don't hold a hose, mate." And that's the tip of the iceberg. He is the top contender for Australia's worst prime minister ever, an absolute gift to the Labor Party, which won the May Federal election.
Niki Savva is a respected, experienced political journalist with access to politicians on all sides of politics. A lot of them have been very honest and forthright, and it's a shame Morrison's colleagues covered for him for so long when they didn't support what he was doing. This is a rushed book, and the prose is clunky, but I read it with glee.
Niki Savva is a respected, experienced political journalist with access to politicians on all sides of politics. A lot of them have been very honest and forthright, and it's a shame Morrison's colleagues covered for him for so long when they didn't support what he was doing. This is a rushed book, and the prose is clunky, but I read it with glee.
I very much looked forward to reading this over Christmas, but I have to say I was a bit disappointed.
Perhaps I should start by saying I wasn’t aware this is the third book in a trilogy about the Liberal National Government of Australia from 2013-2022 (although probably not planned as a trilogy). The Road to Ruin (2017) tracked the machinations of then PM Tony Abbott and his chief of staff, Peta Credlin, while Plots and Prayers (2019) was the story of the coup against Malcolm Turnbull and the ascension of Scott Morrison.
Bulldozed continues into the rule of Morrison, how he trashed political conventions and failed to deal with climate change, economic pressures, China, the teal candidates and a resurgent Labor Party to become generally show more recognised as the worst Australian PM in 50 years. Whatever he did right regarding the pandemic, for example, is overshadowed by the wrong things he did, and the things he did wrong.
The new book wastes no time with scene-setting, perhaps assuming I will have read the first two books (I haven’t). I’m OK with that, since I’m pretty up to date with Australian politics.
It also quickly makes clear that Savva does not like or respect Morrison. It’s not long before she moves from others’ views – “They knew he was secretive and that he lied” – to her own – “He was petty and vindictive”, which is, at least, interesting for a former advisor to conservative politics and a Nine Fairfax columnist.
Since this is billed as the “inside story”, written by “Australia’s renowned political commentator, author, and columnist” (there’s only one?) with extensive contacts in the Coalition due to her background as a senior media adviser to former Liberal treasurer Peter Costello, I was hoping for some insights beyond the existing media coverage.
My hopes were not well-founded. Savva does do a terrific job of summarising what Morrison did, relaying what his colleagues and opponents thought of him, and occasionally theorising on the role of his faith or how he came to even be elected.
What I didn’t get, though, was any new information. I felt like I was mostly re-reading what I already knew from all kinds of media coverage over the last few years. What few revelations are in the book are not exactly world-changing. For example, Josh Frydenberg has been mostly quiet about Morrison’s political tactics, including making himself a party to the office of Treasurer without telling his closest colleague. However, Savva extracted from the former member for Kooyong that he thought Morrison’s actions were “a considerable over-reach.” Whoa! That’s giving him both barrels!
There really wasn’t anything in Bulldozed I didn’t already know, although every time I thought about quitting the book, the quality of the research and writing kept me hanging on – just. Savva is an engaging writer and maintains a newspaper column style in tone and phrasing, rather than going all book-ish and authorial. And she does get a few quotes from some interesting and interested observers.
On that basis, if you haven’t followed AusPol very closely and are wondering what exactly Morrison did that was so terrible, Bulldozed will fill in a lot of details for you, some of which will make you shudder at the sheer audacity, cruelty and mendacity of our former PM.
If, however, you’re hoping for some over-arching view of what Morrison’s reign means for the Coalition’s future prospects, conservative Australian politics in general and Australia’s standing on the world stage, you probably won’t get it from this book.
I would have liked some more big picture stuff from someone of Savva’s journalistic standing, or even the people she talked to, but that would seem to be a different book. show less
Perhaps I should start by saying I wasn’t aware this is the third book in a trilogy about the Liberal National Government of Australia from 2013-2022 (although probably not planned as a trilogy). The Road to Ruin (2017) tracked the machinations of then PM Tony Abbott and his chief of staff, Peta Credlin, while Plots and Prayers (2019) was the story of the coup against Malcolm Turnbull and the ascension of Scott Morrison.
Bulldozed continues into the rule of Morrison, how he trashed political conventions and failed to deal with climate change, economic pressures, China, the teal candidates and a resurgent Labor Party to become generally show more recognised as the worst Australian PM in 50 years. Whatever he did right regarding the pandemic, for example, is overshadowed by the wrong things he did, and the things he did wrong.
The new book wastes no time with scene-setting, perhaps assuming I will have read the first two books (I haven’t). I’m OK with that, since I’m pretty up to date with Australian politics.
It also quickly makes clear that Savva does not like or respect Morrison. It’s not long before she moves from others’ views – “They knew he was secretive and that he lied” – to her own – “He was petty and vindictive”, which is, at least, interesting for a former advisor to conservative politics and a Nine Fairfax columnist.
Since this is billed as the “inside story”, written by “Australia’s renowned political commentator, author, and columnist” (there’s only one?) with extensive contacts in the Coalition due to her background as a senior media adviser to former Liberal treasurer Peter Costello, I was hoping for some insights beyond the existing media coverage.
My hopes were not well-founded. Savva does do a terrific job of summarising what Morrison did, relaying what his colleagues and opponents thought of him, and occasionally theorising on the role of his faith or how he came to even be elected.
What I didn’t get, though, was any new information. I felt like I was mostly re-reading what I already knew from all kinds of media coverage over the last few years. What few revelations are in the book are not exactly world-changing. For example, Josh Frydenberg has been mostly quiet about Morrison’s political tactics, including making himself a party to the office of Treasurer without telling his closest colleague. However, Savva extracted from the former member for Kooyong that he thought Morrison’s actions were “a considerable over-reach.” Whoa! That’s giving him both barrels!
There really wasn’t anything in Bulldozed I didn’t already know, although every time I thought about quitting the book, the quality of the research and writing kept me hanging on – just. Savva is an engaging writer and maintains a newspaper column style in tone and phrasing, rather than going all book-ish and authorial. And she does get a few quotes from some interesting and interested observers.
On that basis, if you haven’t followed AusPol very closely and are wondering what exactly Morrison did that was so terrible, Bulldozed will fill in a lot of details for you, some of which will make you shudder at the sheer audacity, cruelty and mendacity of our former PM.
If, however, you’re hoping for some over-arching view of what Morrison’s reign means for the Coalition’s future prospects, conservative Australian politics in general and Australia’s standing on the world stage, you probably won’t get it from this book.
I would have liked some more big picture stuff from someone of Savva’s journalistic standing, or even the people she talked to, but that would seem to be a different book. show less
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Niki Savva was born in Cypress but raised in Melbourne. She was twice political correspondent on The Australian, and headed up the Canberra bureaus of both The Herald Sun and The Age. In the world of politics, she became Peter Costello's press secretary for six years and was then on John Howard's staff for three. She is now a regular columnist for show more The Australian, and often appears on ABC TV's Insiders as well as on political panels on Sky. She is also an author. Her books include So Greek: Confessions of a Conservative Leftie and The Road to Ruin: How Tony Abbott and Peta Credlin destroyed Their Own Government. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
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- Bulldozed: Scott Morrison's Fall and Anthony Albanese's Rise
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- Scott Morrison
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