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As the Telstra crisis unfolded, the Coalition fell victim to another communications failure

‘There is a growing frustration among some in the Coalition that, under Angus Taylor (centre) the opposition is spending too much time cleaning up its own errors.’ Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAPView image in fullscreen‘There is a growing frustration among some in the Coalition that, under Angus Taylor (centre) the opposition is spending too much time cleaning up its own errors.’ Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAPAnalysisAs the Telstra crisis unfolded, the Coalition fell victim to another communications failure Josh ButlerHe should be upping pressure on the government over the second major telco breakdown in 12 months, but Angus Taylor can’t stop scoring own goals

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As the government was being questioned over the regulation of telcos and the latest massive Telstra outage, the opposition leader, Angus Taylor, was being asked about communications failures of a different kind: his own, and those of his ministerial team.

Millions of phone connections around the country went out for hours on Wednesday. Trains ground to a halt, Eftpos transactions went blank, hundreds of triple zero calls failed and welfare checks were being urgently carried out. The bulk of the fault lies with Telstra. But there are important questions to answer about whether the critical telecommunications sector is being appropriately regulated, and whether the government has learned from last year’s devastating Optus outage and made the necessary changes.

Read moreAll points on which the opposition could pursue the government. But at his press conference on Thursday, Taylor was instead forced to defend a growing list of gaffes made by his team: Sarah Henderson’s decision to “test” calling triple zero; and his own invocation, with zero evidence, of the possibility of Chinese interference.

Experts have, as of Thursday afternoon, no evidence of any such malicious activity by any foreign power. That maychange. But it does politicians no favours to air such serious allegations in a crisis while the facts are, at best, in dispute.

While the communications minister, Anika Wells, rushed back from leave, and government figures from prime minister Anthony Albanese down gave regular updates through the media, Taylor and his team were struggling to stop tripping over their own feet. It has been a two-day play on why the Coalition – despite relentless media criticism of Labor for handing down an unpopular budget, and One Nation plateauing in the polls after its meteoric rise – is not just failing to make ground but is somehow still losing support.

The first contribution from Taylor on the Telstra outage on Wednesday morning was to criticise the government for not “fronting up”, and to invoke the prospect of Chinese interference – a theory which had only been publicly aired by Barnaby Joyce.

Never mind that, at the very same time as Taylor’s press conference, Albanese – freshly returned from a Pacific diplomatic tour – was giving an update on Telstra. Or that the acting communications minister, Kristy McBain, had already issued a statement. A second public statement in Wells’s name was then issued around lunchtime, delayed only due to critical facts constantly changing.

Wells rushed back from leave to hold a press conference at 1.45pm.

Taylor, unsympathetic to an unplanned outage happening during planned leave, trumpeted that Wells had “for seven hours said nothing”.

Read moreHenderson’s contribution was to announce she’d called triple zero and been unable to connect, an admission soon seized on by the government after it was pointed out it’s an offence to unnecessarily ring the emergency line. The shadow communications minister is meant to be leading the opposition’s interrogation of the issue, but instead had to spend a torturous 12-minute interview defending her own conduct to the ABC’s Patricia Karvelas.

Henderson denied criminal wrongdoing, protesting she was “doing my job” but adding “I accept the criticism”. McBain scolded her for “prank calling triple zero”.

Meanwhile, Kerrynne Liddle claimed that a person in South Australia died after being unable to reach emergency services– which local police have flatly rejected.The shadow assistant minister for health claimed in an online post late Wednesday that her office “received a report of a tragic death following an apparent failure to connect to triple zero”.

This was news to SA police, who took the extraordinary step of replying to the senator’s Facebook post to say they “are not aware of any death” related to the Telstra outage. Later, the SA police minister, Michael Brown, said: “if people are going to make claims publicly, they need to be able to back them up”.

Liddle said she was “disappointed” Brown “chose to front the media and question my integrity in this process”.

Liddle’s office went to ground, her staff not responding to media until Thursday afternoon, when she issued a statement standing by her claim that she’d been contacted by a grieving family, and saying she’d referred them to SA Police.

Taylor, trying again on Thursday to put the focus elsewhere, chided the government for not being more forthcoming. Instead, he spent the press conference having to defend himself and his colleagues.

There is a growing frustration among some in the Coalition that, under Taylor, the opposition is spending too much time cleaning up its own errors; conceding avoidable own goals when it should be booting the ball into the open net of Labor’s mistakes.

They point to a day last month when the government confirmed it was going to ram through its contentious tax changes after a deal with the Greens – a move the Coalition described as a “broken promise” – but Taylor instead garnered headlines by tripping himself up over whether he backed multiculturalism in Australia.

There’s a line often misattributed to Winston Churchill: “never waste a crisis”. Taylor’s mantra increasingly seems to be “never fail to waste a crisis”.

The opposition has some fertile ground to heap pressure on this government. But Taylor and his colleagues are not doing themselves any favours with their own communications failures.

Read original at The Guardian

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