EBOOK
Year
2005
Language
English

About

It is often said within the Labor Party that the phone-calls bringing the worst news are the ones which start Maaaate.... Given Labor's recent history it can be assumed that this type of call is quite frequent.

In 1993 Paul Keating won the "unwinnable" federal election. Since then, however, the change in the Australian Labor Party's fortunes has been diabolical. From Beazley to Crean to Latham and back again, the ALP changes its leaders faster than Howard changes his policies.

Annabel Crabb is a journalist who has spent years in the Canberra press gallery watching the attempts of the Labor Party to scrabble its way back into power. While the light on the hill may still burn for those once described as true believers, Annabel Crabb reveals a party that has lost its way, abandoned many of its ideals and values, and foregone the trust of much of Australia in its embrace of power and privilege for its leaders.

This is an intimate and at times hilarious account of the vertiginous highs and bone-crushing lows of a party which, three federal leaders after Keating, is still Losing It. Annabel Crabb decamped from a legal career in 1997 to train as a journalist at Adelaide's The Advertiser, where she covered politics first at a state level, and subsequently from Canberra. In 2000 she moved to The Age, where she served as Canberra political correspondent and writer of the House on the Hill political gossip column, and appeared regularly on the ABC's Sunday morning political programme, Insiders. She is now based in London, where she writes for the Sunday Age and the Sun Herald.

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