Climate denialism is bought and paid for by a rotten political system

The persistence of climate denialism in Australian politics reflects the wealth 
of mining and energy companies prepared to use a deeply flawed political system 
to wield power.

BERNARD KEANE NOV 18, 2019 (snip)
https://www.crikey.com.au/2019/11/18/climate-denialism-rotten-political-system/?


A persistent flaw in political coverage in Australia is the inability or 
refusal of most journalists to explore the systemic and structural motivations 
for much of what happens in the political class.

It’s so pervasive that readers probably don’t notice its absence, but it’s as 
if sports journalists stuck to reporting what happened on the field without 
bothering to explain the financial position of clubs, the economic health of 
the game, the role of sponsors, and social changes that affected participation.

Coverage of the recent dramatic escalation in debate about climate change was a 
classic example.

A number of journalists, including some of our best political observers, wrung 
their hands at the state of climate debate in Australia. Several engaged in a 
lame moral equivalising, putting climate denialists and angry Greens on the 
same level; others more openly acknowledged the role of the Coalition in acting 
to stymie climate action. None explained why; a visitor to Australia wondering 
why we were yelling at each other last week might have thought it was all the 
result of some peculiarity in our political psychology.

But the reason is that federal politics is corrupt.

Not corrupt in the brown paper bag, ICAC-style sense that we’re so familiar 
with from NSW Labor, or the persistent corruption of local government by 
property developers, but pervaded by a soft, entirely lawful corruption that 
comes from the dominance of political donations in public life, the lack of 
transparency around donations, and the way they facilitate the influencing of 
policy by vested interests.

So if you want to know why Australian politics has failed to address climate 
change for over 20 years, it’s not merely the psychological composition of the 
old and middle-aged white men who have wielded power for most of that time. 
It’s the way they were paid to stymie climate action.

Look at the political donations data of recent years. Fossil fuel and energy 
companies are some of the largest donors in the country; flush with profits 
from repeated commodity and investment booms, as a sector they rival the big 
banks (and, in recent years, the four big accounting firms) as the most 
dominant industry in political donations.

In this decade alone, since 2011, mining and energy companies have given $8.4 
million in donations to the Coalition’s state and federal branches, as well as 
$2.8 million to the ALP’s branches. In comparison, the financial industry gave 
around $12 million in total to both sides, split roughly $7m/$5m.

That donor list is dominated by major carbon emitters. It is headed by 
Woodside, one of the most powerful Australian companies, which has been 
assisted by successive Australian governments, including with the use of ASIS 
in illegal commercial espionage against Timor-Leste. It has handed over $1 
million in donations to the Coalition since 2011 and nearly $900,000 to Labor.

Caltex has handed over $330,000 to the Coalition and another $130,000-odd to 
Labor; its former parent company Chevron, the 12th-biggest carbon polluter in 
the world, has given $420,000 to the Coalition and $341,000 to Labor.

Santos — who can forget Abbott government ministers attacking divestment in the 
company, a few short months before as it lost three-quarters of its market 
value in 2015 — gave over $670,000 to the Coalition and $508,000 to Labor.

Origin Energy gave $370,000 to the Coalition and $290,000 to Labor. Gina 
Rinehart’s companies gave $200,000 to the Coalition and another $75,000 to 
Labor. Coal companies pumped money into the Coalition: the now shuttered Linc 
Energy gave $170,000, Whitehaven Coal $107,000, White Energy $80,000, Peabody 
(16th-biggest global polluter) $70,000.

Peak bodies, too: the Minerals Council has given nearly $140,000 to the 
Coalition and nearly $50,000 to Labor (all since 2016); the NSW Minerals 
Council gave $95,000 to the Coalition and $19,000 to Labor.

It was generous donations from the banks that encouraged the Liberals to 
protect them from regulation and investigation; it is generous donations, 
tilted even more heavily in favour of the conservatives, that encourage the 
Coalition to protect fossil fuel and energy companies from regulation and 
investigation, including climate action.

Climate denialism and the unwillingness of Australian politicians to devise 
effective climate action policies is no fluke, any more than the long-term 
willingness of the Liberal Party to defend the big banks and enable their 
misconduct was a fluke. It was the result of millions in donations, the 
influence of industry figures at both staffer and political levels, and the 
capacity of mining companies to offer politicians lucrative jobs after they 
leave public office.

That’s how power works in Australia, and it happens out of sight, courtesy of a 
near-complete lack of transparency about how influence is wielded — and the 
strange reluctance of the media to explain it.

Regards
Stephen


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