Labor's plans to water down the US Alliance - and Bill Shorten's mention in leaked US diplomatic cables
Saturday, 18 July 2015
Yesterday The Australian's very well connected Dennis Shanahan and Stefanie Balogh reported on Labor's plans to water down the way we view about our alliance with the USA in this article:
US embrace toned down as Labor looks to China

President Barack Obama greets prime minister Julia Gillard at a G20 summit hosted by France in November 2011. Source: AP
Labor has watered down its language on the US-Australia alliance, abandoning references to the ANZUS Treaty as “one of Australia’s great national assets’’ and “the bedrock of regional stability’’ as part of its policy blueprint for government.
The significant foreign policy shift, which could hand a future Labor government more room to balance the relationship between the US and China in the Asia-Pacific, was drafted by foreign affairs spokeswoman and deputy leader Tanya Plibersek, in consultation with members of the party’s shadow cabinet national security committee.
Labor’s draft national platform drops a reference to Japan being “Australia’s closest partner in Asia’’, and strengthens the party’s position on China’s re-emergence, describing it as “one of the most significant developments of the 21st century.
ENDS
I'd have thought the US alliance would retain its pre-eminent status for Australia long into the future - the fact it's being watered down tells us something about Labor's new friends in the Greens and its Muslim electorates in Western Sydney.
I wonder what the latest Diplomatic Cable from the US Embassy will say about Shorten. Here's a 2009 cable released by Wikileaks - what an upstart is Shorten!
https://wikileaks.org/cable/2009/06/09MELBOURNE69.html
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 MELBOURNE 000069 NOFORN SIPDIS STATE FOR INR E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/12/2019 TAGS: PINR PREL PGOV AS SUBJECT: BIOGRAPHY - BILL SHORTEN MP REF: A. CANBERRA 542 ¶B. MELBOURNE 52 Classified By: Justin L. Kolbeck for reasons 1.4(b)(d) Summary ------- ¶1. (C/NF) Consul General met with Melbourne-based Member of Parliament Bill Shorten, Australia's Parliamentary Secretary for Disabilities and Victorian Bushfire Reconstruction. Widely touted as a future Prime Minister, we provide bio notes on this young, ambitious Parliamentarian. End summary. Bio Notes - Bill Shorten ------------------------ ¶2. (C/NF) Born on May 12, 1967, Shorten makes no bones about his ambitions in federal politics. During a June 11 meeting, Shorten told Consul General that "he did not take this job to stand still." He explained that he had been overlooked for promotion in Prime Minister Rudd's June 6 cabinet reshuffle (Ref. A) in order to keep the geographical balance in the cabinet between Victoria and New South Wales. (Comment: Despite words to the contrary, Shorten appeared disappointed while he was discussing this topic. End comment.) According to Shorten, 10 of the 30 cabinet positions are held by Victorians and the two recent vacancies came from New South Wales, which required the Prime Minister to promote New South Welshmen Chris Bowen and Jason Clare. ¶3. (SBU) Shorten said that he is deeply influenced by Martin Luther King Jr. and quoted from several of his speeches in our meeting with him. While National Secretary of the powerful Australian Workers' Union, he spent time in the United States collaborating with the United Steel Workers' union; his successor Paul Howes has since carried this relationship forward. Along with Senator Stephen Conroy, he leads the Victorian wing of the Australian Labor Party's (ALP) right-leaning faction formally known as Labor Unity (Ref. B for additional details). He is widely known for his pro-U.S. stance. ¶4. (SBU) Bill Shorten is part of a new generation of articulate, young labor union leaders which includes South Australian MP Mark Butler and Victorian MP Richard Marles who were both promoted to Parliamentary Secretaries in the June 6 reshuffle. Shorten was highly critical, however, of current Australian union leadership, saying that there have been insufficient efforts spent on grooming the next generation of leaders. He has an MBA from Melbourne University, was close to the late packaging mogul Richard Pratt, and said that in comparison to other union leaders, he is willing to listen to business concerns. ¶5. (SBU) A longtime member of the ALP, William "Bill" Richard Shorten was elected to Australia's House of Representatives during the November 24, 2007 federal election. His rapid rise through the labor union movement to become National Secretary of the Australian Workers' Union in 2001 led many political observers to tout him as a possible ALP star and to predict a front-bench ministry for him in the Rudd government. The Prime Minister, however, made public comments highlighting the importance of parliamentary experience and awarded Shorten the "mini-ministry" of Parliamentary Secretary for Disabilities and Children's services. Following the devastating Victorian bushfires of February 2009, Rudd promoted Shorten by giving him the additional responsibility for Bushfire Reconstruction. Anti-Federalist Approach to Bushfire Reconstruction --------------------------------------------- ------ ¶6. (C/NF) Although he is the senior federal politician responsible for Australia's bushfire reconstruction efforts, Shorten said he preferred to leave firefighting and much of the reconstruction effort to the states. The federal government already has "plenty of duties," he said, and he did not want to see additional powers delegated to the federal level as a result of the Royal Commission into the February 2009 fires. (Note: The findings from the Royal Commission will be published in August and post will report septel on the conclusions. End note.) Shorten noted that there will likely be changes to Australia's national fire warning service and that the "leave early or stay and fight" policy will face continued scrutiny. Comment MELBOURNE 00000069 002 OF 002 ------- ¶7. (C/NF) Shorten, who is somewhat rumpled in appearance, prefers to get down to business quickly in meetings. He is a nimble conversationalist who understands nuance. In addition to being cautious, considered and thoughtful, he is able to skillfully steer away from topics he prefers to avoid. Recently separated from his former wife Debbie Beale, Shorten is reportedly in a relationship with Governor General Quentin Bryce's daughter, Chloe. He admitted that he is still getting his feet wet in Parliament and that things there are "more complicated than he thought." Despite his lukewarm relationship with Prime Minister Rudd (he sided with Kim Beazley in the 2006 ALP leadership ballot), Shorten struck us as highly ambitious but willing to wait -- at least for a while -- for his moment in the sun. THURSTON