Paul Keating ridicules 'nutter' Tony Abbott
PAUL Keating today dismissed Tony Abbott as an "intellectual nobody" who he had regarded as the Coalition's "resident nutter".
Arguing that the Rudd government deserved to be re-elected for avoiding a recession, the former prime minister savaged the Opposition's economic credentials, saying “you wouldn't trust this mob with a jam jar full of five cent bits”.
Actually they managed the economy so well, that Rudd was cashed up finance his anti-GFC tactics. Better than you ever did PKMr Keating described Mr Abbott as having no policy ambition and argued he had failed to present a thought-out conservative position for the Coalition.
The one-term Prime Minister with no agenda at all“A conservative party can have a thought-out position,” he told ABC radio.
“(Malcolm) Turnbull had an articulated intelligent moderate thought-out conservative position. The fact is that Abbott does not have this.”
Mr Keating's assessment of the Opposition leader comes within days of John Howard accusing Kevin Rudd of having done little since becoming prime minister.
While Mr Howard said the economic stimulus was too big, Mr Keating said the Rudd government “did a miraculous job in saving the Australian economy from the deepest recession that has come along since the depression”.
“The Rudd government should be re-elected on that basis alone,” he said.
“If Tony Abbott ends up the prime minister of Australia you've gotta say `God help us. God help us'.
“Truly an intellectual nobody. And no policy ambition. You know, I mean, is that all there is?
Keating thinks he owns the intelligent side of conversation whereas his thought and comments are all based on an unstable memory of his own actions/importance in this world"He turned up in the last couple of years when I was prime minister. I used to regard him as a sort of resident nutter on their side.”
Mr Keating's comments this morning came as he argued that the super guarantee charge should be lifted from nine per cent to at least 12 per cent, and said he knew Wayne Swan and Chris Bowen were interested in it.
“It's their job I think to convince the Prime Minister that there's a good economic case and all good economic reasons for taking the nine per cent to 12,” he said.
However, he criticised the Rudd government for reducing concessions that encouraged people to put money towards their super.
He said the decision to limit concessional contributions to $25,000 for those younger than 50 was a “dreadful decision”.
“They should reverse it, quickly. You know, shocking decision in my opinion. Short-sighted. Bad,” he said.
Always the sign of an intellectual - the "you know" in the middle of a sentence
Coupled with the increase in the aged pension, Mr Keating argued the Rudd government was sending the wrong message.
“So if you're a punter out there you say look, the government's given me the message. Don't bother saving any more. We'll just rely on the pension.”
Because thats what everyone thought when you were in charge. Tax it on the way in, tax it whilst it was in there, and tax it on the way out. You were the only winner