While Scott Morrison and most other politicians are trying to be their best selves during COVID-19, Malcolm Turnbull's book is crashing in, chockers with reminders of how the Liberals behaved during their bad old days.
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Details emerged on Thursday, including Turnbull's juicy claim that Morrison had "needed to be managed carefully and always counselled intensely about the need for confidentiality".
The book will entrench old enmities, and provide some character insights. But it won't leave scratches on Morrison, so far has politics, and the community, moved on.
This week showed Australia continuing to make strong progress in containing COVID-19, although the government refuses to embrace an "elimination" strategy.
The PM's attention is on the road out - that is, unwinding the irksome but necessary restrictions we're living under. In this he has a keen eye to the economic imperative.
This exit won't be quick, though probably sooner than thought only a couple of weeks ago. It's suggested we're looking at a month before there'll be a serious review.
As a precursor, we need greater testing and tracing capabilities (the latter with the help of a controversial new app) and enhanced ability to deal with local hotspot outbreaks.
Morrison is sensitive to the restrictions trying people's patience; equally, it would be folly to risk a second wave of infection by acting too early.
His own patience was tried this week by that new and much-praised political creature, the national cabinet. He desperately wants more children back at school, not least as an economic lever, enabling more parents to return to work.
But the states and territories are still going their various ways - while accommodating children who need to be on site - and there won't be the large-scale quick return Morrison would prefer.
One flag on the exit road is a planned parliamentary week in May, way ahead of the scheduled August date. This will be a normal sitting, unlike the single-day meetings devoted to passing relief packages.
Morrison says the October budget will have a plan to deal with debt and deficit. The big question will be how far they'll be kicked down the road.
Beyond easing the first lot of restrictions, though, will be other rounds in the "exit" debate, and how they run will be important for the next election, due early 2022.
While the higher welfare payments expire later this year, and free childcare also has a time limit, it's hard to see the pre-COVID-19 status quo restored in these areas without injustices and enormous political fights.
Then there's the longer-term question: how and when does the country pay for the huge government spending - more than $200 billion allocated so far - needed to get through this disaster?
This debate will be about economics and politics, and it will put up in lights the issue of intergenerational fairness.
In its impact, COVID-19 targets the elderly; most (though not all) younger people have a mild illness.
This fact has affected the debate about how the pandemic has been handled - some argue the health of the old shouldn't have received priority over the health of the economy. The age differential will also influence the discussion about the legacy debt Australia faces (on the upside, at a time when money has never been so cheap to borrow).
Bob Breunig, head of the Tax and Transfer Policy Institute at the Australian National University, points to multiple reasons why the young bear a heavy economic burden in this crisis.
Many are in casual jobs, and in sectors worst harmed, such as hospitality. Also, people beginning their careers during a downturn take longer to "catch up" financially with those who commenced in good times. And younger people will be the taxpayers of the future as the country deals with the debt.
Breunig advocates a sweeping agenda of tax reform, the bottom line of which would harmonise taxes on assets (and include the family home), and switch the tax mix towards indirect taxes, notably with a rise in the GST and the introduction of a broad-based land tax.
The present system "taxes active people heavily, it doesn't tax inactive people so heavily," he says. The former are younger; the latter older. He argues his changes would provide economic stimulus, as well as being fairer to the young.
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Breunig admits that when it comes to tax "I'm a dreamer", and won't be expecting decision-makers to warm to his radical agenda (although there is interest in tax reform by some states).
It can be put in terms of a social bargain. The lives of the present older generation are being protected - as they should be. The quid pro quo should be that that generation makes its contribution to dealing with the resulting deficit and debt.
But of course there would be vigorous pushback from some of those who'd be paying, and they have electoral clout.
The government is looking to growth as an elixir. Morrison says: "On the other side of this virus and leading on the way out we are going to have to have economic policy measures that are ... very pro-growth".
Easier said that done. Didn't Morrison go to the last election promoting growth? Yet growth, pre-virus, was disappointingly low.
Politically, the government will be in risky territory as it moves towards the 2022 election, hemming in its capacity for tough policy choices.
Assuming Morrison continues to navigate COVID-19 skilfully, will he face a grateful electorate? Not on Labor's experience post-GFC.
The economy will still be struggling. A lot of people, and notably young people, will be battling in an extremely difficult job market. Many will have had their education disrupted. There will be complaints about benefits that have been withdrawn or reduced.
Morrison says the October budget will have a plan to deal with debt and deficit. The big question will be how far they'll be kicked down the road.
- Michelle Grattan is a press gallery journalist and former editor of The Canberra Times. She is a professorial fellow at the University of Canberra and writes for The Conversation.