Downfall: How the Labor Party Ripped Itself Apart
By (Author) Aaron Patrick
ABC Books
ABC Books
11th June 2013
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Corruption in politics, government and society
324.29407
Paperback
336
Width 154mm, Height 235mm, Spine 25mm
464g
How Labor lost the race - how Bill Shorten could save the party - and why it matters. In the 2007 election, led by Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard they smashed the Howard government and made the country look fresh and optimistic again. But under the sunny exterior lurked unchecked tensions, corrupt members, factional warlords, leadership woes. Now, Labor's pains have become the Abbott-led Coalition's gain. For journalist and former Young Laborite, Aaron Patrick, Labor at its best is a force for good. But until it addresses the rot at its core, voters will continue to abandon it. In his gripping book, Downfall, Patrick shows how Labor came to be in the mess it's in - and what it needs to do to get out of it. Fast paced and intensely readable, Downfall is a troubling portrait of a once-great institution in decline.
Aaron Patrick is the Senior Correspondent at the Australian Financial Review, based in Sydney, and has written for the New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal. He is the author of three books on Australian politics: Downfall, Credlin and Co., and The Surprise Party. He is also an ex-Young Labor president and associate of Bill Shorten.