| "A Mad Hatter's Party...frenzied and chaotic" : Leading 2020 Summiteer's assessment |
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| Written by Professor David Flint AM | |||||
| Wednesday, 11 June 2008 | |||||
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...the comedy that was the Summit... We had unfavorably compared the Summit with the smoothly run 1998 Constitutional Convention in this column,“ Comparing the republican way with the monarchist style,” 2 June 2008 “It was not even clear whether the details of the small groups' decisions had been accurately recorded.” The governance panel could not meet the lengthy and mainly political speeches were given at the opening ceremony. These all turned out anyway to be no more than “ambit claims,” says Professor Manne. Nothing, he says, had been achieved by lunch. This must have been sumptuous, as it was provided by the Five Star Hyatt Hotel. We assume that no "dodgy dagwood dog" was served there – after all the meals were part of the $2.6 million Summit bill ( See this column, “2020 Summit subjected to Senate scrutiny,” 2 June 2008.) Incidentally, republicans have a distinct preference for the Hyatt. At the 1998 Constitutional Convention the republicans stayed there, while the monarchists stayed at the humble Country Comfort Hotel at Narrabunda. ...meeting descends into chaos... After lunch, and as with these sort of managerial facilitated activities, the panel of one hundred broke up into groups of 25.
The “outcomes” (a favourite word among the nomenklatura) were then taken back to a full meeting of “the one hundred,” the almost heroic appellation which Professor Manne bestows on this historic assembly. Co-chaired by Maxine McKew and News Limited chairman John Hartigan, he says “the meeting was chaotic.” “It was not even clear whether the details of the small groups' decisions had been accurately recorded. “As weariness set in, the hundred was asked whether anyone thought we had uncovered one Big Idea. “Only one hand went up. That moment was used to characterise the summit on the ABC nightly news.” Was it that they thought, with Robert Hughes, that anyone who voted No in 1999 was stupid, that is 55% of Australians? Or was it because a constitutional monarchist had got through the filtering process which ensured there would be a 98% vote for some sort of republic?
When “the hundred” met on the Sunday morning Professor Manne found that most of his group’s proposals for making government accountable had “transmogrified overnight into meaningless motherhood statements. Some time was devoted to their resuscitation.” “The hundred” then went on to the next predictable stage of this sort of process “Ambitions, Priorities and Top Ideas.” If the prospect of this exercise did not turn Professor Manne off, he found it “ rather difficult to follow what was happening.” He was especially peeved that his nominated “Top Idea” was rejected because a minority did not like it. That of course was run properly - John Howard ensured that when he appointed Ian Sinclair and Barry Jones to chair it. But as time began to run out at the Summit, “the level of chaos increased.”
“Often the loudest voices prevailed,” he laments. “Sometimes it was not even clear what the vote was about.” Then at the very end of the meeting Fairfax and ABC commentator David Marr intervened “with a dramatic plea that the republic be included.” But he says, “ Marr's confusion was understandable. In our haste, no one could be certain what had been decided. I certainly was not.”
This was its decision to end ties with the UK. Even the residual ties the states had insisted on keeping went in 1986. When I read this on the Sunday, I found it hard to believe that this had been adopted without any of the 98 who approved it noticing, including the co-chairs as well as the expert on republicanism, Professor Glyn Davis, and the Prime Minister himself.Professor Manne excuses this by saying that the l report was “written at heroic speed” over the Sunday lunch break so “the wording of our stream's republic idea, by far the most popular at the summit, was botched.” In reproaching David Marr, Professor Manne says there was a “near-complete consensus about a two-stage program for the creation of the republic.”
...advice to Professor Manne... Our advice to Professor Manne is not to go to similar events in the future. In fact, instead of making baseless accusations of lying and fraud, as he recently did about constiutional monarchists (see “2020 Summit blunder: governance experts wrong,” 30 March 2008), he could spend the time reading up on the Head of State issue so that, on this, he is better informed.
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