南澳大利亚州2022年7月至12月

IF 0.6 4区 社会学 Q1 HISTORY
Rob Manwaring, Josh Sunman
{"title":"南澳大利亚州2022年7月至12月","authors":"Rob Manwaring,&nbsp;Josh Sunman","doi":"10.1111/ajph.12919","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>After the March state election, a Labor government was installed after convincingly ousting Steven Marshall's one-term Liberal government, continuing a tradition of short-lived Liberal governments in South Australia. In the second half of 2022, Peter Malinauskas' new government was seeking to bed down its agenda, and was favoured by political circumstances. Generally, there is a common political cycle between elections. In the first stage, a new government will often spend the first six to twelve months conducting reviews, taking stock, and generally blaming its predecessor for policy failures. The second stage, usually in years 2 to 3, focuses on securing policy wins and ‘delivering’. In the final stage, the attention then turns to the imminent election. For Malinauskas, the key was to hit the ground running, while for the new Liberal opposition leader David Speirs, it was a period of review and reflection upon the election loss.</p><p>The most pressing concern for the Malinauskas government was the intersection of two key issues: the latest wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the electoral goal of ‘ending the ramping crisis’. In July, the Omicron strain was “biting harder in South Australia than at any time since COVID-19 reached [SA] shores” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 29 July 2022). At this time, Chief Health Officer Nicola Spurrier was encouraging South Australians to work from home where possible; but this sat in conflict with the Premier's desire for economic activity to resume, particularly in Adelaide's CBD. The total number of cumulative cases of COVID-19 in July 2022 was over 700,000, and at the peak of July, the number of reported daily cases was at 5,000 per day. After July, there was some respite and a steady decline in reported cases (<i>covid19data.com.au</i>). Data also confirmed that hospitalisations peaked in SA in July (374 cases, 25 July), declined steadily until October (reaching a low of about 30 cases), and then steadily rose again with 255 hospitalisations by the end of the year (<i>covid19data.com.au</i>). Compared with the other states these are relatively small numbers but proportionate to South Australia's population, this was a highly challenging situation.</p><p>COVID-19 then placed key strains on already stretched hospital and health resources. Health Minister Chris Picton faced a range of challenges in addressing the issue of ramping – the focal point of the March election. Labor made some headway into reducing the overall ramping levels (ambulances parked or ‘ramped’ outside hospitals), but health systems more generally were under strain. Labor suffered a blow when the Women and Children's Hospital Paediatric Intensive Care Unit lost its accreditation as a training unit (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 2 December 2022) and pressure continued when SA Health's patient records technology went into a “meltdown” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 29 December 2022). A key stakeholder, the Salaried Medical Officers Association, called for an immediate inspection at the Royal Adelaide Hospital (RAH) reflecting its concerns about working conditions. This followed the resignation of Dr Megan Brooks, the RAH's Head of Emergency, whose resignation letter exposed much of the stress facing staff (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 29 December 2022).</p><p>The Labor government sees reform of the health system as a long-term project. After the state election, it sacked the then-CEO of Health, Chris McGowan, and in August announced that Dr Robyn Wright (a health executive from WA) would take on this critical role (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 2 August 2022). Facing a myriad of pressures in the health system, Premier Malinauskas acknowledged that it would take “the full four years” to tackle ramping, and argued that the government's plan “includes the biggest boost to resources in the health system that we've ever seen in the history of the state” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 29 December 2022). Health is likely to remain a central test for his government, not least because it was the centrepiece of their successful electoral strategy.</p><p>Child protection remains a fiendishly difficult and ‘wicked’ policy problem, and many governments have struggled to find adequate institutional and systemic responses in light of high-profile cases such as that of Chloe Valentine in 2012. Former SA Police Commissioner Mal Hyde was tasked with investigating the deaths of two children, 6-year-old Charlie Nowland, and 7-year-old Makai Wanganeen earlier in the year. As part of his investigation, Hyde presented a review to the Premier which found that 500 children were potentially at “high risk” (<i>InDaily</i>, 9 November 2022). The Premier charged the Police Commissioner Grant Stevens to initiate contacts with all these affected children, involving numerous relevant agencies. In December, it was reported that 290 of these children had still not been contacted (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 December 2022). The Premier was forced to defend this progress arguing that it may take until March 2023, as checks had to be “done methodically” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 December 2022). <i>The Advertiser</i> responded by launching a ‘Save our Kids’ campaign. The opposition was keen to draw attention to the response time, with Shadow Child Protection Minister Josh Teague arguing the government's response was “in the slow lane” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 December 2022). This action raises ongoing public concerns about the state's institutional response to child protection, with Cathy Taylor, who has been CEO of Child Protection for six years, receiving negative media coverage. This remains an ongoing challenge for state governments, and at times has proved challenging for both major parties.</p><p>At the end of 2022, the Malinauskas government tackled a different kind of crisis; namely, the extraordinary flooding of the Murray River. Earlier in the year, a ‘rain-bomb’ affected Queensland, and throughout the early parts of 2022, significant levels of rainfall hit NSW, Victoria and the ACT (<i>The Guardian</i>, 25 December 2022). The intense rainfall caused significant flooding. At its peak, up to 220 gigalitres (approximately 88,000 Olympic swimming pools) were heading into SA per day. The floods caused severe damage through river-fronted towns in the Riverland and Murraylands. The slow-moving nature of the crisis enabled the government, towns and communities to respond. Up to 4,000 SA homes (and 200 businesses) were affected by the floods, falling just short of the infamous 1956 floods. During the floods, levees were breached, towns isolated, and in some places evacuations were ordered. The Premier led the response, along with Emergency Services Minister Joe Szakacs. Police Commissioner Grant Stevens was also granted additional powers as a flood emergency was declared (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 22 November 2022). The peak waters arrived over the Christmas period causing much distress and difficulty for affected communities. Multiple compensation packages were devised by the state government, including $51.6 m in compensation along with an initial $4.8 m for immediate flood defences and sandbagging (<i>ABC News</i>, 22 November 2022). Defence forces and Commonwealth support were also at hand, with Defence sending in equipment and personnel in Loxton and Berri in early December (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 16 December 2022). There were, however, concerns that the compensation and support were not getting through to all communities (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 22 November 2022). The clean-up and repair will continue through much of 2023, and the economic cost will cause headaches for Treasurer Stephen Mullighan. Further, the impact of climate change is likely to mean such ‘extraordinary’ natural disasters may well afflict many parts of the nation into the future on a far more frequent basis. The South Australian government may need to find new investment to protect these communities from future flooding events.</p><p>The first electoral test faced by the Malinauskas government was the Bragg by-election held on Saturday, 2 July 2022. Bragg comprises Adelaide's leafy eastern suburbs, taking in locales such as Burnside, Glenunga and Wattle Park. It was the Liberal seat with the highest remaining margin (8.2 per cent) in the Adelaide Metropolitan Area following the party's convincing defeat in the March state election (ECSA 2022). The by-election was necessitated by the resignation of embattled former Deputy Premier Vickie Chapman, pending an Ombudsman's report into potential conflicts of interest regarding her handling of a proposal for a deep-sea port off the coast of Kangaroo Island (<i>InDaily</i>, 20 April 2022).</p><p>Chapman leaves a reformist legacy, having been the state's first female Deputy Premier and Attorney-General, and having steered through contentious social reforms in the areas of abortion and voluntary euthanasia – which had been left untouched by more socially conservative Labor predecessors in John Rau and Michael Atkinson (<i>ABC News</i>, 19 April 2022). Chapman's other ‘legacy’ is the factional woes which for the last several decades have distracted the Liberal Party from the task of forming government in South Australia. As noted in the previous Chronicle, newly minted Liberal leader David Speirs “declared himself ready to lead a ‘great reset’, aiming to transcend the old ‘factional fights between the Evanses and the Chapmans and the Olsens and the Browns’” (<i>Australian</i>, 27 June 2022). The same day he ascended to the leadership, Chapman, the remaining veteran from this era of factional warfare, overshadowed Speirs' reset by announcing her resignation.</p><p>With a sense of repeating history, the vacancy left by Chapman tore open factional wounds around the issue of gender representation within the Liberal caucus. With only two Liberal women serving in the House of Representatives, and having barely fended off campaigns from strong female independents in the safe rural seats of Finniss and Flinders in the March state election, the party faced intense pressure to select a female candidate to replace Chapman. The pressure was exemplified by the touted independent candidacy of former Liberal staffer and intense critic of the party's approach to gender issues, Chelsey Potter, who threatened to contest on a similar platform to successful federal ‘teal’ candidates. Despite this pressure, and Speirs' open support for a female candidate, Chapman's moderate faction threw its support behind lawyer and former consular official, Jack Batty. This drew staunch and open criticism from the conservative wing of the party, which touted its comparatively stronger record on female representation (<i>The Advertis</i>er, 6 June 2022). Seeking to capitalise on divisions, the Labor Party pre-selected lawyer Alice Rolls over its candidate in March, Rick Sarre (<i>InDaily</i>, 8 June 2022).\n </p><p>The election had a strong turnout for a by-election of 83.8 per cent and saw a swing against the Liberals of 2.5 per cent. Premier Malinauskas was quick to claim this as a triumph for his fledgling government, noting the difficulties governments usually face in by-elections (<i>ABC News</i>, 4 July 2022). Despite political point-scoring, this result coupled with Labor victories in traditionally blue-ribbon territory in metropolitan Adelaide in March, and the teal insurgency federally, suggests that the Liberal Party has issues to address in its heartland. Whether Speirs is up to the task might prove a crucial test of his leadership.</p><p>Voting closed for elections across all 68 South Australian regional and metropolitan councils on 10 November 2022. Local government elections in South Australia are marked by lower participation rates than those conducted in eastern states due to voluntary voting. Voting is conducted via postal ballot with 34.54 per cent of voters returning ballot packs, continuing an upward trend in participation begun in 2018 (ECSA 2022). The race for Adelaide Lord Mayor drew five candidates including incumbent Sandy Verschoor, former Senator Rex Patrick and former Lord Mayor and Rann government minister, Jane Lomax-Smith (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 September 2022). Key issues included the functioning of council, and perennial concerns about balancing heritage and development. Lomax-Smith ultimately prevailed in a tight three-way race marred by allegations of ballot tampering (<i>InDaily</i>, 8 November 2022). How Lomax-Smith manages her relationship with the new state government will have important implications for Malinauskas' push to revitalise the city centre, along with traditional debates regarding heritage and development which have proved thorny for many state governments.</p><p>At this point in the political cycle, the Malinauskas government is seeking to solidify its political agenda and establish key achievements over the course of the term. One of the most significant policy announcements in the run-up to the March election was the proposal to consider merging two of South Australia's public universities – the University of Adelaide and the University of South Australia (UoA, UNISA). In December, the Premier announced an agreement between these two universities to formalise a merger process. The new institution, if it proceeds, will be called Adelaide University, and would start operating from January 2026. The overall aim is to ultimately create Australia's largest university, and propel the institution into the world's top 50 “within a decade” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 December 2022). In this public statement there was agreement on no net job losses, and a planned intermediary ‘co-leadership’ model. Both the Premier and Treasurer were keen to emphasise the potential economic and financial benefits and the Liberals' education spokesman, John Gardner, was broadly supportive but pushed the government for more transparency around potential costings. A previous attempt to merge these two universities broke down in 2012. The National Tertiary Education Union is ambivalent about the proposal and there are varied views about its desirability, with concerns that “bigger” is not always best (<i>InDaily</i>, 3 June 2022). The state government has invested significant political capital in this project, and the Premier will be keen to see it launched during his first term of office.</p><p>Both policies speak volumes about the pitch Malinauskas made to the South Australian public, bold ideas implemented using strong powers of the state, although with potentially high financial costs.</p><p>By the end of 2022, and less than a full year in office, Peter Malinauskas had already made a strong, mostly favourable, impression in South Australia.</p><p>A politically problematic issue for Malinauskas was Labor's ties with the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union. Controversial union leader John Setka took control over the SA branch but faced allegations of domestic violence and intimidation (<i>Australian Financial Review</i>, 8 September 2022). In the run-up to the state election campaign, the union had donated much needed funds – $125,000 – to the Labor Party. In an embarrassing U-turn, the Premier announced that the donation would be either repaid or donated to charity (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 8 August 2022), highlighting the touchy subject of union ties for former Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association boss turned premier, Malinauskas.</p><p>In a favourable review of one of the Premier's speeches – which made the case for government intervention – <i>The Advertiser</i>'s Paul Starick drew comparisons between the new Premier and one of the most dominant Liberal icons in the state's history, Thomas Playford (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 9 December 2022). Both seek to drive growth through an industrially-charged, state-driven political economy. For Liberal leader David Speirs, this may prove to be a politically hard act to challenge in the coming years. Overall, <i>The Advertiser</i>'s report card for the Premier and his team was generally very positive. It may have scored an ‘E' for its health performance, but in other areas (COVID-19 response, infrastructure) it scored strongly. Moreover, the personable Malinauskas was given an ‘A-’, with Speirs unable to make enough public cut-through with a ‘C' score. Economically, though, 2023 may prove even more challenging for the Malinauskas government (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 21 December 2022).</p>","PeriodicalId":45431,"journal":{"name":"Australian Journal of Politics and History","volume":"69 2","pages":"366-371"},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/ajph.12919","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"South Australia July to December 2022\",\"authors\":\"Rob Manwaring,&nbsp;Josh Sunman\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/ajph.12919\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>After the March state election, a Labor government was installed after convincingly ousting Steven Marshall's one-term Liberal government, continuing a tradition of short-lived Liberal governments in South Australia. In the second half of 2022, Peter Malinauskas' new government was seeking to bed down its agenda, and was favoured by political circumstances. Generally, there is a common political cycle between elections. In the first stage, a new government will often spend the first six to twelve months conducting reviews, taking stock, and generally blaming its predecessor for policy failures. The second stage, usually in years 2 to 3, focuses on securing policy wins and ‘delivering’. In the final stage, the attention then turns to the imminent election. For Malinauskas, the key was to hit the ground running, while for the new Liberal opposition leader David Speirs, it was a period of review and reflection upon the election loss.</p><p>The most pressing concern for the Malinauskas government was the intersection of two key issues: the latest wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the electoral goal of ‘ending the ramping crisis’. In July, the Omicron strain was “biting harder in South Australia than at any time since COVID-19 reached [SA] shores” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 29 July 2022). At this time, Chief Health Officer Nicola Spurrier was encouraging South Australians to work from home where possible; but this sat in conflict with the Premier's desire for economic activity to resume, particularly in Adelaide's CBD. The total number of cumulative cases of COVID-19 in July 2022 was over 700,000, and at the peak of July, the number of reported daily cases was at 5,000 per day. After July, there was some respite and a steady decline in reported cases (<i>covid19data.com.au</i>). Data also confirmed that hospitalisations peaked in SA in July (374 cases, 25 July), declined steadily until October (reaching a low of about 30 cases), and then steadily rose again with 255 hospitalisations by the end of the year (<i>covid19data.com.au</i>). Compared with the other states these are relatively small numbers but proportionate to South Australia's population, this was a highly challenging situation.</p><p>COVID-19 then placed key strains on already stretched hospital and health resources. Health Minister Chris Picton faced a range of challenges in addressing the issue of ramping – the focal point of the March election. Labor made some headway into reducing the overall ramping levels (ambulances parked or ‘ramped’ outside hospitals), but health systems more generally were under strain. Labor suffered a blow when the Women and Children's Hospital Paediatric Intensive Care Unit lost its accreditation as a training unit (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 2 December 2022) and pressure continued when SA Health's patient records technology went into a “meltdown” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 29 December 2022). A key stakeholder, the Salaried Medical Officers Association, called for an immediate inspection at the Royal Adelaide Hospital (RAH) reflecting its concerns about working conditions. This followed the resignation of Dr Megan Brooks, the RAH's Head of Emergency, whose resignation letter exposed much of the stress facing staff (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 29 December 2022).</p><p>The Labor government sees reform of the health system as a long-term project. After the state election, it sacked the then-CEO of Health, Chris McGowan, and in August announced that Dr Robyn Wright (a health executive from WA) would take on this critical role (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 2 August 2022). Facing a myriad of pressures in the health system, Premier Malinauskas acknowledged that it would take “the full four years” to tackle ramping, and argued that the government's plan “includes the biggest boost to resources in the health system that we've ever seen in the history of the state” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 29 December 2022). Health is likely to remain a central test for his government, not least because it was the centrepiece of their successful electoral strategy.</p><p>Child protection remains a fiendishly difficult and ‘wicked’ policy problem, and many governments have struggled to find adequate institutional and systemic responses in light of high-profile cases such as that of Chloe Valentine in 2012. Former SA Police Commissioner Mal Hyde was tasked with investigating the deaths of two children, 6-year-old Charlie Nowland, and 7-year-old Makai Wanganeen earlier in the year. As part of his investigation, Hyde presented a review to the Premier which found that 500 children were potentially at “high risk” (<i>InDaily</i>, 9 November 2022). The Premier charged the Police Commissioner Grant Stevens to initiate contacts with all these affected children, involving numerous relevant agencies. In December, it was reported that 290 of these children had still not been contacted (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 December 2022). The Premier was forced to defend this progress arguing that it may take until March 2023, as checks had to be “done methodically” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 December 2022). <i>The Advertiser</i> responded by launching a ‘Save our Kids’ campaign. The opposition was keen to draw attention to the response time, with Shadow Child Protection Minister Josh Teague arguing the government's response was “in the slow lane” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 December 2022). This action raises ongoing public concerns about the state's institutional response to child protection, with Cathy Taylor, who has been CEO of Child Protection for six years, receiving negative media coverage. This remains an ongoing challenge for state governments, and at times has proved challenging for both major parties.</p><p>At the end of 2022, the Malinauskas government tackled a different kind of crisis; namely, the extraordinary flooding of the Murray River. Earlier in the year, a ‘rain-bomb’ affected Queensland, and throughout the early parts of 2022, significant levels of rainfall hit NSW, Victoria and the ACT (<i>The Guardian</i>, 25 December 2022). The intense rainfall caused significant flooding. At its peak, up to 220 gigalitres (approximately 88,000 Olympic swimming pools) were heading into SA per day. The floods caused severe damage through river-fronted towns in the Riverland and Murraylands. The slow-moving nature of the crisis enabled the government, towns and communities to respond. Up to 4,000 SA homes (and 200 businesses) were affected by the floods, falling just short of the infamous 1956 floods. During the floods, levees were breached, towns isolated, and in some places evacuations were ordered. The Premier led the response, along with Emergency Services Minister Joe Szakacs. Police Commissioner Grant Stevens was also granted additional powers as a flood emergency was declared (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 22 November 2022). The peak waters arrived over the Christmas period causing much distress and difficulty for affected communities. Multiple compensation packages were devised by the state government, including $51.6 m in compensation along with an initial $4.8 m for immediate flood defences and sandbagging (<i>ABC News</i>, 22 November 2022). Defence forces and Commonwealth support were also at hand, with Defence sending in equipment and personnel in Loxton and Berri in early December (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 16 December 2022). There were, however, concerns that the compensation and support were not getting through to all communities (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 22 November 2022). The clean-up and repair will continue through much of 2023, and the economic cost will cause headaches for Treasurer Stephen Mullighan. Further, the impact of climate change is likely to mean such ‘extraordinary’ natural disasters may well afflict many parts of the nation into the future on a far more frequent basis. The South Australian government may need to find new investment to protect these communities from future flooding events.</p><p>The first electoral test faced by the Malinauskas government was the Bragg by-election held on Saturday, 2 July 2022. Bragg comprises Adelaide's leafy eastern suburbs, taking in locales such as Burnside, Glenunga and Wattle Park. It was the Liberal seat with the highest remaining margin (8.2 per cent) in the Adelaide Metropolitan Area following the party's convincing defeat in the March state election (ECSA 2022). The by-election was necessitated by the resignation of embattled former Deputy Premier Vickie Chapman, pending an Ombudsman's report into potential conflicts of interest regarding her handling of a proposal for a deep-sea port off the coast of Kangaroo Island (<i>InDaily</i>, 20 April 2022).</p><p>Chapman leaves a reformist legacy, having been the state's first female Deputy Premier and Attorney-General, and having steered through contentious social reforms in the areas of abortion and voluntary euthanasia – which had been left untouched by more socially conservative Labor predecessors in John Rau and Michael Atkinson (<i>ABC News</i>, 19 April 2022). Chapman's other ‘legacy’ is the factional woes which for the last several decades have distracted the Liberal Party from the task of forming government in South Australia. As noted in the previous Chronicle, newly minted Liberal leader David Speirs “declared himself ready to lead a ‘great reset’, aiming to transcend the old ‘factional fights between the Evanses and the Chapmans and the Olsens and the Browns’” (<i>Australian</i>, 27 June 2022). The same day he ascended to the leadership, Chapman, the remaining veteran from this era of factional warfare, overshadowed Speirs' reset by announcing her resignation.</p><p>With a sense of repeating history, the vacancy left by Chapman tore open factional wounds around the issue of gender representation within the Liberal caucus. With only two Liberal women serving in the House of Representatives, and having barely fended off campaigns from strong female independents in the safe rural seats of Finniss and Flinders in the March state election, the party faced intense pressure to select a female candidate to replace Chapman. The pressure was exemplified by the touted independent candidacy of former Liberal staffer and intense critic of the party's approach to gender issues, Chelsey Potter, who threatened to contest on a similar platform to successful federal ‘teal’ candidates. Despite this pressure, and Speirs' open support for a female candidate, Chapman's moderate faction threw its support behind lawyer and former consular official, Jack Batty. This drew staunch and open criticism from the conservative wing of the party, which touted its comparatively stronger record on female representation (<i>The Advertis</i>er, 6 June 2022). Seeking to capitalise on divisions, the Labor Party pre-selected lawyer Alice Rolls over its candidate in March, Rick Sarre (<i>InDaily</i>, 8 June 2022).\\n </p><p>The election had a strong turnout for a by-election of 83.8 per cent and saw a swing against the Liberals of 2.5 per cent. Premier Malinauskas was quick to claim this as a triumph for his fledgling government, noting the difficulties governments usually face in by-elections (<i>ABC News</i>, 4 July 2022). Despite political point-scoring, this result coupled with Labor victories in traditionally blue-ribbon territory in metropolitan Adelaide in March, and the teal insurgency federally, suggests that the Liberal Party has issues to address in its heartland. Whether Speirs is up to the task might prove a crucial test of his leadership.</p><p>Voting closed for elections across all 68 South Australian regional and metropolitan councils on 10 November 2022. Local government elections in South Australia are marked by lower participation rates than those conducted in eastern states due to voluntary voting. Voting is conducted via postal ballot with 34.54 per cent of voters returning ballot packs, continuing an upward trend in participation begun in 2018 (ECSA 2022). The race for Adelaide Lord Mayor drew five candidates including incumbent Sandy Verschoor, former Senator Rex Patrick and former Lord Mayor and Rann government minister, Jane Lomax-Smith (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 September 2022). Key issues included the functioning of council, and perennial concerns about balancing heritage and development. Lomax-Smith ultimately prevailed in a tight three-way race marred by allegations of ballot tampering (<i>InDaily</i>, 8 November 2022). How Lomax-Smith manages her relationship with the new state government will have important implications for Malinauskas' push to revitalise the city centre, along with traditional debates regarding heritage and development which have proved thorny for many state governments.</p><p>At this point in the political cycle, the Malinauskas government is seeking to solidify its political agenda and establish key achievements over the course of the term. One of the most significant policy announcements in the run-up to the March election was the proposal to consider merging two of South Australia's public universities – the University of Adelaide and the University of South Australia (UoA, UNISA). In December, the Premier announced an agreement between these two universities to formalise a merger process. The new institution, if it proceeds, will be called Adelaide University, and would start operating from January 2026. The overall aim is to ultimately create Australia's largest university, and propel the institution into the world's top 50 “within a decade” (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 7 December 2022). In this public statement there was agreement on no net job losses, and a planned intermediary ‘co-leadership’ model. Both the Premier and Treasurer were keen to emphasise the potential economic and financial benefits and the Liberals' education spokesman, John Gardner, was broadly supportive but pushed the government for more transparency around potential costings. A previous attempt to merge these two universities broke down in 2012. The National Tertiary Education Union is ambivalent about the proposal and there are varied views about its desirability, with concerns that “bigger” is not always best (<i>InDaily</i>, 3 June 2022). The state government has invested significant political capital in this project, and the Premier will be keen to see it launched during his first term of office.</p><p>Both policies speak volumes about the pitch Malinauskas made to the South Australian public, bold ideas implemented using strong powers of the state, although with potentially high financial costs.</p><p>By the end of 2022, and less than a full year in office, Peter Malinauskas had already made a strong, mostly favourable, impression in South Australia.</p><p>A politically problematic issue for Malinauskas was Labor's ties with the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union. Controversial union leader John Setka took control over the SA branch but faced allegations of domestic violence and intimidation (<i>Australian Financial Review</i>, 8 September 2022). In the run-up to the state election campaign, the union had donated much needed funds – $125,000 – to the Labor Party. In an embarrassing U-turn, the Premier announced that the donation would be either repaid or donated to charity (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 8 August 2022), highlighting the touchy subject of union ties for former Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association boss turned premier, Malinauskas.</p><p>In a favourable review of one of the Premier's speeches – which made the case for government intervention – <i>The Advertiser</i>'s Paul Starick drew comparisons between the new Premier and one of the most dominant Liberal icons in the state's history, Thomas Playford (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 9 December 2022). Both seek to drive growth through an industrially-charged, state-driven political economy. For Liberal leader David Speirs, this may prove to be a politically hard act to challenge in the coming years. Overall, <i>The Advertiser</i>'s report card for the Premier and his team was generally very positive. It may have scored an ‘E' for its health performance, but in other areas (COVID-19 response, infrastructure) it scored strongly. Moreover, the personable Malinauskas was given an ‘A-’, with Speirs unable to make enough public cut-through with a ‘C' score. Economically, though, 2023 may prove even more challenging for the Malinauskas government (<i>The Advertiser</i>, 21 December 2022).</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":45431,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Australian Journal of Politics and History\",\"volume\":\"69 2\",\"pages\":\"366-371\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.6000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-06-08\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/ajph.12919\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Australian Journal of Politics and History\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"98\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ajph.12919\",\"RegionNum\":4,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"HISTORY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Australian Journal of Politics and History","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ajph.12919","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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摘要

3月州选举后,工党政府在令人信服地推翻了史蒂文·马歇尔的一届自由党政府后成立,延续了南澳大利亚短命自由党政府的传统。2022年下半年,Peter Malinauskas的新政府正在寻求搁置其议程,并受到政治环境的支持。一般来说,选举之间有一个共同的政治周期。在第一阶段,新政府通常会在最初的六到十二个月里进行审查、评估,并通常将政策失败归咎于前任。第二阶段,通常在2至3年,重点是确保政策胜利和“交付”。在最后阶段,人们的注意力转向即将到来的选举。对马林瑙斯卡斯来说,关键是要脚踏实地,而对新任自由党反对党领袖大卫·斯皮尔斯来说,这是一个对选举失利进行回顾和反思的时期。马利瑙斯卡政府最紧迫的担忧是两个关键问题的交叉:最新一波新冠肺炎疫情和“结束危机加剧”的选举目标。7月,奥密克戎毒株“在南澳大利亚州比新冠肺炎抵达南澳大利亚海岸以来的任何时候都更猛烈”(《广告商》,2022年7月29日)。此时,首席卫生官Nicola Spurrier鼓励南澳大利亚州尽可能在家工作;但这与总理希望恢复经济活动的愿望相冲突,尤其是在阿德莱德的中央商务区。2022年7月,新冠肺炎累计病例总数超过70万例,7月高峰期,每日报告病例数为5000例。7月之后,报告病例有所缓解并稳步下降(covid19data.com.au)。数据还证实,SA的住院人数在7月达到峰值(374例,7月25日),直到10月才稳步下降(达到约30例的低点),然后又稳步上升,到今年年底有255人住院(covid19data.com.au)。与其他州相比,这些州的人数相对较少,但与南澳大利亚州的人口成比例,这是一个极具挑战性的情况。新冠肺炎给本已紧张的医院和卫生资源带来了关键压力。卫生部长克里斯·皮克顿(Chris Picton)在解决3月大选的焦点——疫苗接种问题方面面临着一系列挑战。劳工在降低总体上升水平(救护车停在医院外或“上升”)方面取得了一些进展,但卫生系统总体上处于紧张状态。当妇女儿童医院儿科重症监护室失去培训机构的资格时,工党受到了打击(《广告人》,2022年12月2日),当SA Health的患者记录技术陷入“崩溃”时,压力仍在继续(《广告者》,2022月29日)。一个关键的利益相关者,带薪医生协会,呼吁立即对皇家阿德莱德医院(RAH)进行检查,以反映其对工作条件的担忧。此前,RAH紧急事务主管梅根·布鲁克斯博士辞职,他的辞职信暴露了员工面临的大部分压力(《广告人》,2022年12月29日)。工党政府将卫生系统改革视为一个长期项目。州选举后,它解雇了当时的卫生首席执行官Chris McGowan,并于8月宣布Robyn Wright博士(华盛顿州的卫生主管)将担任这一关键角色(《广告商》,2022年8月2日)。面对卫生系统的巨大压力,总理马林瑙斯卡斯承认,需要“整整四年”的时间来解决增长问题,并认为政府的计划“包括我们在该州历史上见过的对卫生系统资源的最大增长”(《广告人》,2022年12月29日)。健康很可能仍然是对他的政府的一个核心考验,尤其是因为这是他们成功选举战略的核心。儿童保护仍然是一个极其困难和“邪恶”的政策问题,鉴于2012年克洛伊·瓦伦丁(Chloe Valentine)的案件等备受关注的案件,许多政府一直在努力寻找足够的制度和系统应对措施。南非前警察局长Mal Hyde负责调查今年早些时候两名儿童的死亡,他们分别是6岁的Charlie Nowland和7岁的Makai Wanganeen。作为调查的一部分,海德向总理提交了一份审查报告,发现500名儿童可能处于“高风险”中(InDaily,2022年11月9日)。总理要求警察局长格兰特·史蒂文斯与所有这些受影响的儿童建立联系,涉及许多相关机构。12月,据报道,其中290名儿童仍未联系上(《广告商》,2022年12月7日)。 由于只有两名自由党女性在众议院任职,而且在3月份的州选举中,在芬尼斯和弗林德斯的安全农村席位上,该党几乎没有击退强大的女性独立人士的竞选,因此该党面临着选择一名女性候选人来取代查普曼的巨大压力。这种压力体现在前自由党工作人员Chelsey Potter的独立候选人资格上,她强烈批评该党在性别问题上的做法,并威胁要在与成功的联邦“蓝绿色”候选人类似的平台上竞争。尽管有这种压力,而且斯皮尔斯公开支持一位女性候选人,查普曼的温和派还是支持律师兼前领事官员杰克·巴蒂。这引起了该党保守派的坚定和公开批评,他们吹嘘自己在女性代表性方面的记录相对更强(《广告商》,2022年6月6日)。为了利用分歧,工党在3月份预选了律师Alice Rolls,而不是其候选人Rick Sarre(InDaily,2022年6月8日)。补选投票率高达83.8%,与自由党的投票率为2.5%。总理马林瑙斯卡斯很快宣称这是他刚刚成立的政府的胜利,并指出了政府在补选中通常面临的困难(美国广播公司新闻,2022年7月4日)。尽管在政治上得分很高,但这一结果,加上工党3月份在阿德莱德大都会传统蓝丝带地区的胜利,以及联邦政府的蓝绿色叛乱,表明自由党在其核心地带有问题需要解决。斯皮尔斯能否胜任这项任务可能是对其领导力的一个关键考验。2022年11月10日,南澳大利亚州所有68个地区和大都市议会的选举投票结束。由于自愿投票,南澳大利亚州的地方政府选举的参与率低于东部各州。投票通过邮寄投票进行,34.54%的选民返回选票包,延续了2018年开始的参与率上升趋势(ECSA 2022)。阿德莱德市长竞选吸引了五名候选人,包括现任市长Sandy Verschoor、前参议员Rex Patrick和前市长兼兰政府部长Jane Lomax Smith(《广告人》,2022年9月7日)。关键问题包括理事会的运作,以及对平衡遗产和发展的长期关注。Lomax Smith最终在一场因选票篡改指控而受损的三方角逐中获胜(InDaily,2022年11月8日)。Lomax Smith如何管理她与新州政府的关系,将对Malinauskas振兴市中心的努力产生重要影响,同时也将对许多州政府棘手的遗产和发展问题进行传统辩论。在政治周期的这一点上,马林纳斯卡政府正在寻求巩固其政治议程,并在任期内取得关键成就。3月大选前最重要的政策公告之一是考虑合并南澳大利亚州的两所公立大学——阿德莱德大学和南澳大利亚大学(UoA,UNISA)。12月,总理宣布这两所大学达成协议,正式确定合并程序。如果新机构继续运营,将被称为阿德莱德大学,并将于2026年1月开始运营。总体目标是最终创建澳大利亚最大的大学,并在“十年内”将该机构推向世界前50名(The Advertiser,2022年12月7日)。在这份公开声明中,双方就无净失业和计划中的中介“共同领导”模式达成了一致。总理和财政部长都热衷于强调潜在的经济和财政利益,自由党的教育发言人约翰·加德纳广泛支持,但敦促政府提高潜在成本的透明度。之前合并这两所大学的尝试在2012年失败了。全国高等教育联盟对该提案持矛盾态度,对其可取性有不同的看法,担心“更大”并不总是最好的(InDaily,2022年6月3日)。州政府在这个项目上投入了大量政治资本,总理将热切希望看到它在他的第一个任期内启动。这两项政策都充分说明了马利瑙斯卡向南澳大利亚州公众所做的宣传,这些大胆的想法是利用国家强大的权力实施的,尽管可能会带来高昂的财政成本。到2022年底,在任职不到一整年的时间里,彼得·马利纳斯卡已经在南澳大利亚州留下了强烈的、基本上是有利的印象。马利纳斯卡面临的一个政治问题是工党与建筑、林业、海事、采矿和能源联盟的关系。 备受争议的工会领袖约翰·塞特卡控制了SA分支机构,但面临家庭暴力和恐吓的指控(《澳大利亚金融评论》,2022年9月8日)。在州竞选活动的准备阶段,工会向工党捐赠了急需的资金——12.5万美元。在一次尴尬的180度大转弯中,总理宣布这笔捐款将被偿还或捐赠给慈善机构(《广告人》,2022年8月8日),这突出了前商店、分销和联合雇员协会老板、后来成为总理的马林纳斯卡斯的工会关系这一敏感话题。《广告人》的保罗·斯塔里克(Paul Starick)对总理的一次演讲进行了有利的评价,这为政府干预提供了理由。他将新总理与该州历史上最具统治力的自由党偶像之一托马斯·普拉福德(Thomas Playford)进行了比较(《广告人报》,2022年12月9日)。两者都寻求通过一种由工业驱动、国家驱动的政治经济来推动经济增长。对于自由党领袖戴维·斯皮尔斯来说,这可能是未来几年难以挑战的政治行为。总的来说,《广告人》给总理和他的团队的成绩单总体上是非常积极的。它的健康表现可能得分为“E”,但在其他领域(新冠肺炎应对、基础设施)得分很高。此外,风度翩翩的马林瑙斯卡斯被评为“A-”,斯皮尔斯无法以“C”的成绩在公众面前取得足够的突破。然而,在经济上,2023年对马利瑙斯卡政府来说可能更具挑战性(《广告商》,2022年12月21日)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
South Australia July to December 2022

After the March state election, a Labor government was installed after convincingly ousting Steven Marshall's one-term Liberal government, continuing a tradition of short-lived Liberal governments in South Australia. In the second half of 2022, Peter Malinauskas' new government was seeking to bed down its agenda, and was favoured by political circumstances. Generally, there is a common political cycle between elections. In the first stage, a new government will often spend the first six to twelve months conducting reviews, taking stock, and generally blaming its predecessor for policy failures. The second stage, usually in years 2 to 3, focuses on securing policy wins and ‘delivering’. In the final stage, the attention then turns to the imminent election. For Malinauskas, the key was to hit the ground running, while for the new Liberal opposition leader David Speirs, it was a period of review and reflection upon the election loss.

The most pressing concern for the Malinauskas government was the intersection of two key issues: the latest wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the electoral goal of ‘ending the ramping crisis’. In July, the Omicron strain was “biting harder in South Australia than at any time since COVID-19 reached [SA] shores” (The Advertiser, 29 July 2022). At this time, Chief Health Officer Nicola Spurrier was encouraging South Australians to work from home where possible; but this sat in conflict with the Premier's desire for economic activity to resume, particularly in Adelaide's CBD. The total number of cumulative cases of COVID-19 in July 2022 was over 700,000, and at the peak of July, the number of reported daily cases was at 5,000 per day. After July, there was some respite and a steady decline in reported cases (covid19data.com.au). Data also confirmed that hospitalisations peaked in SA in July (374 cases, 25 July), declined steadily until October (reaching a low of about 30 cases), and then steadily rose again with 255 hospitalisations by the end of the year (covid19data.com.au). Compared with the other states these are relatively small numbers but proportionate to South Australia's population, this was a highly challenging situation.

COVID-19 then placed key strains on already stretched hospital and health resources. Health Minister Chris Picton faced a range of challenges in addressing the issue of ramping – the focal point of the March election. Labor made some headway into reducing the overall ramping levels (ambulances parked or ‘ramped’ outside hospitals), but health systems more generally were under strain. Labor suffered a blow when the Women and Children's Hospital Paediatric Intensive Care Unit lost its accreditation as a training unit (The Advertiser, 2 December 2022) and pressure continued when SA Health's patient records technology went into a “meltdown” (The Advertiser, 29 December 2022). A key stakeholder, the Salaried Medical Officers Association, called for an immediate inspection at the Royal Adelaide Hospital (RAH) reflecting its concerns about working conditions. This followed the resignation of Dr Megan Brooks, the RAH's Head of Emergency, whose resignation letter exposed much of the stress facing staff (The Advertiser, 29 December 2022).

The Labor government sees reform of the health system as a long-term project. After the state election, it sacked the then-CEO of Health, Chris McGowan, and in August announced that Dr Robyn Wright (a health executive from WA) would take on this critical role (The Advertiser, 2 August 2022). Facing a myriad of pressures in the health system, Premier Malinauskas acknowledged that it would take “the full four years” to tackle ramping, and argued that the government's plan “includes the biggest boost to resources in the health system that we've ever seen in the history of the state” (The Advertiser, 29 December 2022). Health is likely to remain a central test for his government, not least because it was the centrepiece of their successful electoral strategy.

Child protection remains a fiendishly difficult and ‘wicked’ policy problem, and many governments have struggled to find adequate institutional and systemic responses in light of high-profile cases such as that of Chloe Valentine in 2012. Former SA Police Commissioner Mal Hyde was tasked with investigating the deaths of two children, 6-year-old Charlie Nowland, and 7-year-old Makai Wanganeen earlier in the year. As part of his investigation, Hyde presented a review to the Premier which found that 500 children were potentially at “high risk” (InDaily, 9 November 2022). The Premier charged the Police Commissioner Grant Stevens to initiate contacts with all these affected children, involving numerous relevant agencies. In December, it was reported that 290 of these children had still not been contacted (The Advertiser, 7 December 2022). The Premier was forced to defend this progress arguing that it may take until March 2023, as checks had to be “done methodically” (The Advertiser, 7 December 2022). The Advertiser responded by launching a ‘Save our Kids’ campaign. The opposition was keen to draw attention to the response time, with Shadow Child Protection Minister Josh Teague arguing the government's response was “in the slow lane” (The Advertiser, 7 December 2022). This action raises ongoing public concerns about the state's institutional response to child protection, with Cathy Taylor, who has been CEO of Child Protection for six years, receiving negative media coverage. This remains an ongoing challenge for state governments, and at times has proved challenging for both major parties.

At the end of 2022, the Malinauskas government tackled a different kind of crisis; namely, the extraordinary flooding of the Murray River. Earlier in the year, a ‘rain-bomb’ affected Queensland, and throughout the early parts of 2022, significant levels of rainfall hit NSW, Victoria and the ACT (The Guardian, 25 December 2022). The intense rainfall caused significant flooding. At its peak, up to 220 gigalitres (approximately 88,000 Olympic swimming pools) were heading into SA per day. The floods caused severe damage through river-fronted towns in the Riverland and Murraylands. The slow-moving nature of the crisis enabled the government, towns and communities to respond. Up to 4,000 SA homes (and 200 businesses) were affected by the floods, falling just short of the infamous 1956 floods. During the floods, levees were breached, towns isolated, and in some places evacuations were ordered. The Premier led the response, along with Emergency Services Minister Joe Szakacs. Police Commissioner Grant Stevens was also granted additional powers as a flood emergency was declared (The Advertiser, 22 November 2022). The peak waters arrived over the Christmas period causing much distress and difficulty for affected communities. Multiple compensation packages were devised by the state government, including $51.6 m in compensation along with an initial $4.8 m for immediate flood defences and sandbagging (ABC News, 22 November 2022). Defence forces and Commonwealth support were also at hand, with Defence sending in equipment and personnel in Loxton and Berri in early December (The Advertiser, 16 December 2022). There were, however, concerns that the compensation and support were not getting through to all communities (The Advertiser, 22 November 2022). The clean-up and repair will continue through much of 2023, and the economic cost will cause headaches for Treasurer Stephen Mullighan. Further, the impact of climate change is likely to mean such ‘extraordinary’ natural disasters may well afflict many parts of the nation into the future on a far more frequent basis. The South Australian government may need to find new investment to protect these communities from future flooding events.

The first electoral test faced by the Malinauskas government was the Bragg by-election held on Saturday, 2 July 2022. Bragg comprises Adelaide's leafy eastern suburbs, taking in locales such as Burnside, Glenunga and Wattle Park. It was the Liberal seat with the highest remaining margin (8.2 per cent) in the Adelaide Metropolitan Area following the party's convincing defeat in the March state election (ECSA 2022). The by-election was necessitated by the resignation of embattled former Deputy Premier Vickie Chapman, pending an Ombudsman's report into potential conflicts of interest regarding her handling of a proposal for a deep-sea port off the coast of Kangaroo Island (InDaily, 20 April 2022).

Chapman leaves a reformist legacy, having been the state's first female Deputy Premier and Attorney-General, and having steered through contentious social reforms in the areas of abortion and voluntary euthanasia – which had been left untouched by more socially conservative Labor predecessors in John Rau and Michael Atkinson (ABC News, 19 April 2022). Chapman's other ‘legacy’ is the factional woes which for the last several decades have distracted the Liberal Party from the task of forming government in South Australia. As noted in the previous Chronicle, newly minted Liberal leader David Speirs “declared himself ready to lead a ‘great reset’, aiming to transcend the old ‘factional fights between the Evanses and the Chapmans and the Olsens and the Browns’” (Australian, 27 June 2022). The same day he ascended to the leadership, Chapman, the remaining veteran from this era of factional warfare, overshadowed Speirs' reset by announcing her resignation.

With a sense of repeating history, the vacancy left by Chapman tore open factional wounds around the issue of gender representation within the Liberal caucus. With only two Liberal women serving in the House of Representatives, and having barely fended off campaigns from strong female independents in the safe rural seats of Finniss and Flinders in the March state election, the party faced intense pressure to select a female candidate to replace Chapman. The pressure was exemplified by the touted independent candidacy of former Liberal staffer and intense critic of the party's approach to gender issues, Chelsey Potter, who threatened to contest on a similar platform to successful federal ‘teal’ candidates. Despite this pressure, and Speirs' open support for a female candidate, Chapman's moderate faction threw its support behind lawyer and former consular official, Jack Batty. This drew staunch and open criticism from the conservative wing of the party, which touted its comparatively stronger record on female representation (The Advertiser, 6 June 2022). Seeking to capitalise on divisions, the Labor Party pre-selected lawyer Alice Rolls over its candidate in March, Rick Sarre (InDaily, 8 June 2022).

The election had a strong turnout for a by-election of 83.8 per cent and saw a swing against the Liberals of 2.5 per cent. Premier Malinauskas was quick to claim this as a triumph for his fledgling government, noting the difficulties governments usually face in by-elections (ABC News, 4 July 2022). Despite political point-scoring, this result coupled with Labor victories in traditionally blue-ribbon territory in metropolitan Adelaide in March, and the teal insurgency federally, suggests that the Liberal Party has issues to address in its heartland. Whether Speirs is up to the task might prove a crucial test of his leadership.

Voting closed for elections across all 68 South Australian regional and metropolitan councils on 10 November 2022. Local government elections in South Australia are marked by lower participation rates than those conducted in eastern states due to voluntary voting. Voting is conducted via postal ballot with 34.54 per cent of voters returning ballot packs, continuing an upward trend in participation begun in 2018 (ECSA 2022). The race for Adelaide Lord Mayor drew five candidates including incumbent Sandy Verschoor, former Senator Rex Patrick and former Lord Mayor and Rann government minister, Jane Lomax-Smith (The Advertiser, 7 September 2022). Key issues included the functioning of council, and perennial concerns about balancing heritage and development. Lomax-Smith ultimately prevailed in a tight three-way race marred by allegations of ballot tampering (InDaily, 8 November 2022). How Lomax-Smith manages her relationship with the new state government will have important implications for Malinauskas' push to revitalise the city centre, along with traditional debates regarding heritage and development which have proved thorny for many state governments.

At this point in the political cycle, the Malinauskas government is seeking to solidify its political agenda and establish key achievements over the course of the term. One of the most significant policy announcements in the run-up to the March election was the proposal to consider merging two of South Australia's public universities – the University of Adelaide and the University of South Australia (UoA, UNISA). In December, the Premier announced an agreement between these two universities to formalise a merger process. The new institution, if it proceeds, will be called Adelaide University, and would start operating from January 2026. The overall aim is to ultimately create Australia's largest university, and propel the institution into the world's top 50 “within a decade” (The Advertiser, 7 December 2022). In this public statement there was agreement on no net job losses, and a planned intermediary ‘co-leadership’ model. Both the Premier and Treasurer were keen to emphasise the potential economic and financial benefits and the Liberals' education spokesman, John Gardner, was broadly supportive but pushed the government for more transparency around potential costings. A previous attempt to merge these two universities broke down in 2012. The National Tertiary Education Union is ambivalent about the proposal and there are varied views about its desirability, with concerns that “bigger” is not always best (InDaily, 3 June 2022). The state government has invested significant political capital in this project, and the Premier will be keen to see it launched during his first term of office.

Both policies speak volumes about the pitch Malinauskas made to the South Australian public, bold ideas implemented using strong powers of the state, although with potentially high financial costs.

By the end of 2022, and less than a full year in office, Peter Malinauskas had already made a strong, mostly favourable, impression in South Australia.

A politically problematic issue for Malinauskas was Labor's ties with the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union. Controversial union leader John Setka took control over the SA branch but faced allegations of domestic violence and intimidation (Australian Financial Review, 8 September 2022). In the run-up to the state election campaign, the union had donated much needed funds – $125,000 – to the Labor Party. In an embarrassing U-turn, the Premier announced that the donation would be either repaid or donated to charity (The Advertiser, 8 August 2022), highlighting the touchy subject of union ties for former Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association boss turned premier, Malinauskas.

In a favourable review of one of the Premier's speeches – which made the case for government intervention – The Advertiser's Paul Starick drew comparisons between the new Premier and one of the most dominant Liberal icons in the state's history, Thomas Playford (The Advertiser, 9 December 2022). Both seek to drive growth through an industrially-charged, state-driven political economy. For Liberal leader David Speirs, this may prove to be a politically hard act to challenge in the coming years. Overall, The Advertiser's report card for the Premier and his team was generally very positive. It may have scored an ‘E' for its health performance, but in other areas (COVID-19 response, infrastructure) it scored strongly. Moreover, the personable Malinauskas was given an ‘A-’, with Speirs unable to make enough public cut-through with a ‘C' score. Economically, though, 2023 may prove even more challenging for the Malinauskas government (The Advertiser, 21 December 2022).

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
12.50%
发文量
59
期刊介绍: The Australian Journal of Politics and History presents papers addressing significant problems of general interest to those working in the fields of history, political studies and international affairs. Articles explore the politics and history of Australia and modern Europe, intellectual history, political history, and the history of political thought. The journal also publishes articles in the fields of international politics, Australian foreign policy, and Australia relations with the countries of the Asia-Pacific region.
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