On election night 2019, as Australia voted to return the Liberal-National Party government of Scott Morrison, one seat defied the trend – Warringah.
Tony Abbott, former prime minster, Howard-era minister, pugilist and would-be priest, to barrister and former Olympic skier Zali Steggall.
Running from North Sydney to Manly, up to Dee Why and then inland to Forestville, Warringah is a long-held conservative seat, never having been won by Labor or independents in its 97-year history.
Yet, Mr Abbott went into the election as something of an underdog.The key issues for Ms Steggall, climate change and refugees, were both issues that had agitated the electors of Wentworth seven months earlier, when independent Kerryn Phelps won the seat of former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull at the byelection caused by his resignation from parliament.
Tony Abbott concedes the seat of Warringah alongside wife Margie. Source: AAP
That resignation, brought on by Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton creating a leadership challenge that would eventually fall to Scott Morrison, had created bitter acrimony in Liberal ranks.
Mr Abbott was blamed for destabilising the party since losing the prime ministership himself in the lead up to the 2016 election.
Now the chickens were coming home to roost. Left-wing activist group GetUp! and independent campaigners helped promote Ms Steggall as a viable conservative-leaning independent candidate. GetUp! itself was accused of using Ms Steggall as a front for its activities.
A conservative campaign was also initiated, under the name Captain GetUp, trying to suggest that GetUp! was just a front for Labor, but this failed to spark anything more than derision among watchers of the Captain’s YouTube campaign.
While Mr Abbott also attempted to use YouTube, his fascination in one clip of a roadside library (free, covered book boxes, designed to pass on “good reads”), simply suggested he was out-of-touch with what was going on in his electorate, and built upon the picture of a politician out of step with his voters - as had previously been seen in the same-sex marriage plebiscite and on climate change.This sense of being out of touch, perhaps most strongly exhibited by Mr Abbott’s continued insistence that he would come back to lead the Liberal Party if he was asked to, even when Liberal voters were strongly opposed to this, propelled Ms Steggall’s attempt to wrest the seat from Abbott.
A stack of Tony Abbott placards loaded into a skip bin after independent Zali Steggall won his seat of Warringah. Source: Alex Newcomb
Mr Abbott’s own preselection, which might have been thought uncontroversial, was .
Although he won 68 per cent of the votes to endorse him, this also implies that even party members were losing patience with his activities within the party.
However, the campaign itself has been spiteful and angry, with accusations being levelled at both sides of abuse and personal nastiness. This has included defacing of posters, personal abuse at both candidates, opposing campaigners dogging other candidates as they meet and greet, and particularly of the Abbott campaign, the use of media surrogates to promote an anti-Steggall message.
The result in Warringah must be seen as a local phenomenon, especially when taken against the backdrop of the general election and the failure of some other high profile campaigns.
The GetUp! Campaign in Peter Dutton’s seat of Dickson would appear to have had limited effect, considering that Mr Dutton had a 2 per cent swing towards him.
Several high-profile candidates who it was thought would struggle to retain their seats (George Christensen in Dawson and Barnaby Joyce in New England) recorded double-digit swings towards them, suggesting their voters may or may not approve of their personal behaviour, but they do endorse the direction of their party.
This again emphasises the very localised nature of Mr Abbott’s defeat. Far from a repudiation of Liberal values, it has been the repudiation of one individual’s form of political action.
Mr Abbott has been a polarising figure, and has been accused of some low politics in the past, although he would not be the only politician who that accusation has been levelled against.
It might then be argued the Australian parliament has lost one of its more colourful characters, but he is also the last of the characters from that 11 year period of Australian political life that saw five prime ministers dispatched, not at an election but while still in office.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison can at least look forward to not having to watch out for his predecessors.Stewart Jackson is a lecturer in the Department of Government and International Relations at the University of Sydney.