Stephen Andrew’s speech on lost faith in democracy

(This is an edited version of the Private Members speech Stephen delivered in Parliament today. See the full transcript here.)
The Queensland Government is increasingly adopting policies and laws, that encroach further and further on the rights and liberties of Queenslanders. For nearly two years now, we have heard endless rationalisations from our leaders on the need to reduce transparency and accountability in favour of ‘speed and efficiency’. Meanwhile, Parliament is being bypassed, and all its power to provide oversight and scrutiny, is diminished or taken away.
Woven throughout the rhetoric, can be seen a growing “consensus” developing between all our political, civic, institutional and corporate elites – one that is contemptuous of the Australian liberal democratic system and the people it once served. How many times have I sat in on committees and listened as some bureaucratic “expert” or another, gave testimony infused with the understanding that ‘the public’ were simply something that had to be “managed”, somehow?
As one commented, when discussing a new law: “We don’t want to startle the horses or anything.” The prevailing idea being, of course, that ordinary people are incapable of making “correct judgements” when it comes to decision-making. They are, in short, ‘unworthy’ of participation in their own government. This attitude is now reaching dangerous levels in Australia.
Ordinary people don’t seem to matter anymore. Even worse, many elites within government and the media, are now trying to re-cast them as some kind of radical extremists, or even domestic terror ‘threat’. This is shameful.
I used to think that all members of parliament shared my belief in the superiority and strength of our liberal democratic system of government.
It is a system that enabled our country to build a strong foundation of trust and unity, from which we were then able to overcome every crisis and period of adversity we faced, together.
My real fear, with all these strange new laws and undemocratic changes, is that they may become permanent – in which case, we will have lost our democracy. If that were to happen, the ‘burden of responsibility’ for its loss would be on the shoulders of every member of parliament in the country – including myself.
Which is why I intend to do everything I can to ensure that never happens.

Stephen Andrew statement on coercive control hypocrisy

In March, the Queensland Government announced it was committing more than half a billion dollars, towards tackling the “insidious crime” of “coercive control”. Taking the moral high road, Palaszczuk tweeted out her outrage at those perpetrators of “coercive control”, calling it a form of “non-physical violence”, that “INCLUDES BEHAVIOURS SUCH AS CONTROLLING WHAT SOMEONE WEARS, LIMITING ACCESS TO MONEY, TRACKING SOMEONE’S LOCATION, CONTROLLING WHO THEY SEE AND PERSISTENT TEXTING, AND IT CAN LEAD TO PHYSICAL VIOLENCE”.
Attorney General Fentiman also voiced her outrage, describing “Coercive Control” as a “pattern of oppression” which includes ‘emotional and financial abuse’, along with other forms of manipulative behaviour aimed at ‘controlling’ and ‘oppressing’ a person. Political lobbyist group, White Ribbon Australia, praised the Queensland Government, saying coercive control is a “A PATTERN OF ASSAULT, THREATS, INTIMIDATION, HUMILIATION, AND OTHER ABUSES THAT ERODE A PERSON’S AUTONOMY AND ABILITY TO FLOURISH”.
Sound familiar?
Unfortunately, Labor is far from alone in the peddling of sham concern and hypocrisy on this issue. In 2020, the Morrison Government held an Inquiry into “Coercive Control”, and, without missing a beat, reported: “The Committee has heard evidence of an insidious form of violence known as coercive control – A PATTERN OF CONTROLLING AND MANIPULATIVE BEHAVIOUR DESIGNED TO INTIMIDATE, ISOLATE AND CONTROL A PERSON”.
How easily our elites find it to take the moral high road on a ‘safe’ issue like this one, or when it is in their interests to do so – all while turning a blind eye to their own appalling record of abuses against millions of vulnerable and powerless victims.
For two years, Australians have watched on in horror, as their state and federal overlords, began laying waste to their lives, businesses and communities – ‘controlling and manipulating them one day’, ‘isolating and controlling them the next’. All to enforce the total and abject OBEDIENCE of those they had sworn to serve and protect.
Utterly gobsmacking.