Australia’s Political Brawl Has Another Winner: A Popcorn Seller in Texas
Peter Dutton — not the Australian politician — selling his wares at a farmers’ market in Austin, Tex. “It’s been nothing but love,” he said of his sudden Twitter fame in Australia.CreditAudreana Dutton By Daniel Victor Aug. 24, 2018
Peter Dutton, an Australian politician, was defeated in his efforts to become prime minister this week.
But Peter Dutton, a popcorn seller in Austin, Tex., turned a fleeting moment of mistaken identity into fame on the other side of the world, plans for a new vacation and a potentially lucrative business opportunity.
The latter Mr. Dutton, 30, experienced a now-common social media phenomenon: Sharing the name of a person in the news, he (@PeterDutton5) received a barrage of messages intended for his namesake (@PeterDutton_MP). This being Twitter, most of the messages were less than pleasant.
It has happened many times before, and will happen many times again. Ask George Papadopoulos, Jonathan Martin or Gerry Sandusky.
But Mr. Dutton was able to capitalize on it. Charmed by his responses on Twitter, hundreds, if not thousands, of Australians have clamored for him to visit, and some donated to a crowdfunding page to buy him a plane ticket. They’ve offered him places to stay and, in classic Australian fashion, bottomless beer.
“There’s been a love felt through the internet that I’ll never forget,” Mr. Dutton, who now calls himself the “People’s Prime Minister of Australia,” said by telephone from Austin — soon after the other Peter Dutton learned that he would not be getting the real job.
Mr. Dutton, the politician, who had hoped to replace Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, is one of Australia’s most conservative public figures, known as a particularly staunch supporter of its zero-tolerance policy toward migrants who try to arrive by boat.
He is roundly loathed by many Australians on the left side of the country’s political divide — which may account for the enthusiastic reception for the other Peter Dutton, once the confusion was cleared away.
Peter Dutton @PeterDutton5 I wish the people of Australia would look at my profile and realize I’m a 30 yr old black man before sending me tweets and DMs.
CNN ? @CNN Former Australian Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton announced he will again challenge the country's Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull as party leader, the second such move in three days https://cnn.it/2PtnmNk
View image on Twitter 9:17 PM - Aug 22, 2018 36.4K 8,884 people are talking about this Twitter Ads info and privacy After his first tweet about the mix-up, Mr. Dutton set his phone down, not thinking much of it. But within minutes, more than 1,000 people had “liked” it. His wife, trying to fall asleep, asked why he was still awake.
“Twitter” is rarely a satisfying answer to that question, but he explained what was happening.
“She’s like, ‘What have you gotten yourself into?’” he recalled. “I said, ‘I don’t know, but the people of Australia have spoken.’”
Typically, when someone becomes an instant viral sensation, they quickly learn that anonymous people like to say awful things. But no such thing happened here: “It’s been nothing but love,” he said.
Many Australians seemed to appreciate the break from this week’s political intrigue, which ended on Friday with Mr. Dutton’s rival Scott Morrison becoming prime minister after days of infighting. People praised the Texas Dutton’s sense of humor and offered good wishes for his soon-to-come daughter. And maybe he wouldn’t mind running for prime minister?
Peter Dutton @PeterDutton5 · Aug 23, 2018 Replying to @PeterDutton5 This has been a lot of fun. I have to get some sleep now, wife is 20 weeks and we get to see our baby girl at our appt today.????
Pay Pray EveryDay To Expect Results using PayPal.Me Go to paypal.me/peterdutton5 and type in the amount. Since it’s PayPal, it's easy and secure. Don’t have a PayPal account? No worries.
paypal.me
Rusty ???? @Rusty1808 Thank you for making this dismal day a lot of fun. You’re alright mate! See you Down Under ????
7:10 AM - Aug 23, 2018 5 See Rusty ????'s other Tweets Twitter Ads info and privacy
Peter Dutton @PeterDutton5 · 20h And since we’re all family now and a few of you have asked.... here is our precious baby girl from this mornings visit. Looking like her mother already. She has her hand on her ear and doc says everything looks great! #BabyDutton pic.twitter.com/OQfxWznddQ
View image on Twitter
Marianne Cullen @MarianneCullen1 It has been so lovely to watch this positive social media interaction in amongst the bullying, bitterness and recrimination we've come to expect/accept. Congratulations and best wishes to you and your family. Thanks for sharing!
9:30 PM - Aug 23, 2018 9 See Marianne Cullen's other Tweets Twitter Ads info and privacy
Peter Dutton @PeterDutton5 · Aug 22, 2018 I wish the people of Australia would look at my profile and realize I’m a 30 yr old black man before sending me tweets and DMs.
Former Australian Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton announced he will again challenge the country's Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull as party leader, the second such move in three days https://t.co/C7Uiz6r64Rpic.twitter.com/O1luNX3iEG
Leah @sayandskotann We await your arrival! Get here fast, mate. We need your help. And bring the popcorn.
4:09 PM - Aug 23, 2018 2 See Leah's other Tweets Twitter Ads info and privacy He is already working with Amazon in Australia to bring his soul food-inspired snack, Soul Popped Popcorn, to the market, and he plans to visit with his pregnant wife before she is due in January. He was interviewed on an Australian morning show on Friday, and news stations are eager to put him on camera during his visit, he said.
Before this week, all he knew about Australian politics was that there was some guy there with the same name as him, Mr. Dutton said. He would occasionally field a tweet directed at the politician, which he would respond to by politely directing the mistaken Australian to the correct account.
Had Mr. Dutton, the politician, succeeded in his bid for prime minister, the popcorn-selling Mr. Dutton might have seen many more misfired tweets, and perhaps a longer stay in the consciousness of Australians. But the one from Texas said it was no loss for him.
“He lost, but I was never running the race,” Mr. Dutton said. “The people’s prime minister is the race I was running. I promised the people I would bring popcorn and myself.”
A Battle for the Soul of Conservatism Plays Out in Australia
"Scott Morrison, Australia’s Next Prime Minister, Pledges to ‘Heal Our Party’ [...] Jill Sheppard, a lecturer in politics at the Australian National University in Canberra, the capital, said Mr. Morrison was among the most conservative members of the Liberals’ moderate wing. “He has managed to straddle factions in the Liberal Party really nicely in the last couple of decades,” she said. P - Other analysts said the fact that Mr. Morrison was regarded as a moderate only showed how dramatically conservative politics have shifted to the right in Australia. P - “It’s just extraordinary that Scott Morrison is the moderate candidate,” said Susan Harris-Rimmer, a law professor at Griffith University. “He is an extremely conservative, law-and-order person.”"
"Asked "dollar for dollar, what do you think is a better way for the government to increase economic growth and employment?" 64.6 per cent of respondents opted for "funding health, education, and other public services" ahead of "cutting company tax", which attracted less than one in five voters or 15.3 per cent. P - Even among Coalition supporters, more than half, 52 per cent, favoured more spending on health, eduction or other areas." https://www.smh.com.au/money/tax/voters-doubtful-about-coalition-s-big-business-tax-cuts-poll-20180203-p4yzcl.html
Ruling-party rupture brings in a new prime minister and exposes long struggle over policy, personality
Australia’s Scott Morrison, chosen by the Liberal Party as its leader and the country’s new prime minister, said his priorities include dealing with a crippling drought, keeping the economy on track and protecting national security. Photo: sam mooy/epa-efe/rex/shutterstoc/EPA/Shutterstock
By David Winning and David Crawshaw
Aug. 24, 2018 12:40 p.m. ET
SYDNEY — A battle for control over Australia’s ruling coalition, fueled by policy disputes and personal vendettas, ended with the prime minister’s ouster but failed to close the rift that threatens the Liberal Party, the country’s dominant conservative force.
-- VIDEO - Scott Morrison has become prime minister, succeeding Malcolm Turnbull, who lost power in a Liberal Party leadership coup. Photo: Getty Images --
The Liberal Party—Australia’s main center-right bloc—has been grappling with how far to steer to the right in response to the increasing pop ularity of populist fringe groups, a challenge also faced by mainstream political parties in the U.S. and Europe.
The party has long considered itself a “broad church,” accommodating classically liberal as well as more-conservative views. In a changing political landscape, long-simmering disagreements between those two schools of thought erupted this week.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who led the party from 2015 until this week, had geared his coalition toward the center of Australian politics. He pursued pro-business changes such as company tax cuts alongside a socially liberal agenda. He enacted same-sex marriage after voters endorsed the change in a referendum and pushed to mandate emissions-reductions targets under the Paris agreement.
[Catalyst, or not, (with Tony Abbott Australian PM Tony Abbott ousted by Malcolm Turnbull https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=116974731 festering on the backbench the challenge was going to happen whenever) Turnbull said simply was too left for the party. Particularly on issues of great interest to religious people, as gay marriage. And too left on environmental issues.]
In doing so, the thinking went, they might shore up support from conservative voters who had been drifting toward the far right.
- [SLIDESHOW] - From Stability to Volatility: Australia’s Rocky Leadership Road -
Challenging Mr. Turnbull was Mr. Dutton, a former policeman viewed as a hard-liner, known in part for his hawkish views on immigration and his boycott of a parliamentary apology to indigenous people for past injustices.
It didn’t work. Having unsuccessfully challenged Mr. Turnbull for the leadership earlier in the week, Mr. Dutton tried again on Friday, only to find himself running against Mr. Morrison, a more conventional conservative seen as a compromise candidate, after Mr. Turnbull stepped aside.
The public bout of political bloodletting gripped the country for days. Much of it was seen as driven by Tony Abbott, the hard-line former prime minister whom Mr. Turnbull ousted as Liberal leader in 2015. The two men have known each other for decades and have shared an enmity that has occasionally spilled into the open.
On Friday, Mr. Turnbull said that “disunity is death” in Australian politics and described Mr. Abbott as a wrecker who had undermined his administration.
Mr. Abbott said that having lost a prime minister, “we still have a government to save.” He didn’t congratulate Mr. Morrison on his elevation as leader in remarks to reporters.
In many ways, Australia is an unlikely staging post for political instability. The country is enjoying a 27-year economic growth streak, the longest without a recession in the developed world. Yet it has switched prime ministers six times in barely a decade, revealing wide dissatisfaction with its political leadership. No leader since 2007 has survived to contest a second national election.
Unlike the U.S.’s presidential system, Australians don’t directly choose their prime minister. They instead elect a party, whose lawmakers can pick their chief from their ranks and can replace a leader in office. The leader of the party with the most seats in Parliament is the prime minister.
The economic challenge is significant. Australia’s household debt has risen to 190% of income, ranking it among the highest in the developed world, according to the central bank. Diplomatic ties with China, which buys around a quarter of Australia’s exports, soured this year after Mr. Turnbull tightened counterespionage laws amid concerns that Beijing had interfered in the country’s politics.
Mr. Morrison faces a test next week when he forms his government and must decide whether to retain Mr. Dutton in the home-affairs portfolio. Mr. Morrison may also feel pressure to hand Mr. Abbott a senior role.
While Australian voters have typically punished leaders who seized power in party-room coups, they may be more forgiving of Mr. Morrison due to his loyalty: He only contested the top job once Mr. Turnbull had indicated he was stepping aside.
Somehow i sneaked past the paywall to snag that one. Later a second click didn't get by.
Dutton is in, but if Morrison doesn't leave Abbott on the backbench it will be a disappointment to people across the political spectrum. I'm guessing Abbott isn't extra popular even in the party room, and hoping Morrison exhibits enough mettle to leave him on the backbench.