- Apr 23, 2016
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you are shifting the goalposts
OP has clearly framed the discussion as success = major reforms, i.e. big banner policy that generates a note in the historical record and fundamentally changes the way the government does business in a particular area. Look at the examples cited - gun reform, GST, etc.
my response was simply that in a developed country with mature and stable government and systems, this kind of groundbreaking reinvent-the-wheel type innovation is a very small part of governing. The vast majority of $, decisions and personnel across Australian government agencies are dedicated to keeping things that mostly work well, continuing to mostly work well.
does this mean I think all government should be frozen in time? of course not - but the iterative change you cite, in terms of adapting to evolving circumstances (e.g. building a new freeway to service population growth) is hardly innovative policy - and far more about what I would regard as current system maintenance than the historic leaps that are quite clearly the focus of this thread
I wasn't the OP, therefore they were never my goalposts, so pretty hard to shift them.
But now you're arguing about degree of reform?
I'd have thought a consistent policy of appropriately funding healthcare for example would be something a conservative party could hang their hats on. But they haven't, so they can't. (Nor can the Labor party mind you).