I got about half way through the first book about Mark Latham – the one by Bernard Lagan titled Loner: Inside a Labor Tragedy – before somehow misplacing my copy. It must be under a pile of papers somewhere in this house.
Anyway, I decided to buy The Latham Diaries while in Sydney last week. The decision was probably influenced by ravings from a friend in the Victorian timber industry who was finding the read insightful.
I have start the book by working from the names in the back index – Barry Chipman (Tasmanian Coordinator of Timber Communities Australia) and Bob Brown both feature.
I was fascinated to read that Latham holds Brown in the highest regard. He writes:
I also like Bob Brown: other than economic policy, our beliefs are quite similar. I prefer this political values to the likes of Adams [federal Labor colleague] and Michael O’Connor [union boss], with their close links to the timber and woodchip bosses. It’s a shame that people like Bob Brown have been lost to the Party. Gough tells me he was a member of Western Sydney in the 1970s.
Later in the book Latham complains that Adams,O’Connor and Tasmanian Premier Paul Lennon did not cooperate with him during the federal election campaign putting the interests of the local timber industry before the needs of the federal Labor party.
rog says
Ipso facto Jennifer, Latham’s and Federal ALP’s interests were not that of the local timber industry. This is where the ALP continue to fall down, they do not represent the “workers” they only present an ideology.
The majority of workers vote for Liberal, they are not stupid.
Steve says
Perhaps the ALP under Latham were attempting to represent the interests of the whole country, rather than the interests of local timber workers. Representing the latter is the more idealogical position.
rog says
Clever tactic! – guaranteed to win second place everytime.
Steve says
No argument there. You have to scratch the right backs to get into government, no point in being altruistic.