This saga covers the progress of Turnbull attempting to
strengthen his political position in Canberra. His antagonist, Shorten, jumps
to the challenge and they parry for eight long weeks. The middle of the story
was very boring and drawn out. I found the plot weak and the opposition unbelievable.
I wanted to throw it aside but I continued to follow because of my personal
involvement. At the close of the saga I had to make a choice. This is a ‘choose
our own ending’ story.
On the whole, the characters were grey, dull, and strangely alike.
Of average height and weight, living in average suburbs, they were both middle
aged males. One had more money than the other, one from Sydney and the
other Melbourne and although from different political persuasions, their greatest passion was proving someone else wrong. I
longed for a flash of brilliance, innovative thinking, sparkling dialogue about
an inspiring future. But I found no daring hero or heroine, just average
politicians dancing like puppets, trying to impress as many people as possible. Their
performance was aimed at a particular ‘reader target’. In other words, they were
boring at best, blatantly dishonest at worst.
At the extreme edges of the saga, both to the right and the
left, a few minor characters added colour. Aussie’s gravitated to the brightness
and did the unthinkable. They wrote their own ending to this boring saga. The
expected clear-cut, tidy ending was dumped. Pauline Hanson, complete with red
hair and loud opinions has been resurrected from the dead. Derryn Hinch, the belligerent
outspoken human headline, Bob Katter, a big-mouthed cowboy and many colourful others
will join Pauline on the cross benches of the Senate. They’ve lived life. They
know hard work, great difficulty, broken marriages, small business challenges,
financial success and failure. At least two of them have experienced the clang
of jail doors. These characters engender a response. Love them or hate them,
they are there and will add ongoing frustration and colour for an indeterminate
length of time.
When we compare this colour with blue/grey suited, gray
haired merchant banker or professional unionist, is it any wonder Aussies have
rebelled and tried to write a more interesting ending than the expected three
years of never ending blah? Now the unhappy lead characters struggle to make sense of this
new ending.

As I ponder the uncertainty of our political future in Australia,
I realise the election saga suffers a similar problem to many books, including
mine. The plot is either predictable or unbelievable. The characters are average or caricatures.
So there is a positive in this saga. I’m heading back
into the pages of my book to add colour, interest and the unexpected. After all I
want my reader to finish my book inspired and satisfied, not lying in bed at
night dreaming of a better ending.
Currently Jo Wanmer is enjoying the Queensland sunshine and wind in her hair. When she's not touring with Steve or minding wonderful grandchildren, she's communicating hope. She is a pastor at a small family church at Burpengary called Access and loves speaking anywhere people want to hear of the love of God.
Her book ‘Though the Bud be Bruised’ was published in 2012 and there are two more novels in the pipeline. Her passion is to bring the love,
healing and hope of Jesus to men and women who have walked through life’s
valleys. There is always light at the end of the tunnel.