Australian Democracy at a Crossroads: Can This Election Be Different?

By Steve Davies

Dear Voters, Advocates, Public Servants, Politicians, Journalists, and Concerned Citizens,

With just 12 days until the Australian election, many are asking the same old questions:

  • Will politicians ever really change?
  • Will “the system” ever truly listen?
  • Why does accountability vanish after election day?
  • Why does spin so often replace substance?

The result? Declining trust, growing disillusionment, and a sense of powerlessness.

The Trust Crisis in Numbers

  • Only 30% of Australians trust government officials (Australian Election Study).
  • 72% see wealth and power as major dividing forces.
  • 49% view government leaders as a source of division.

Yet, despite this, Australians still believe in democracy – free elections, the rule of law, and representation (2024 World Values Survey). The problem isn’t democracy itself, but the growing gap between its ideals and reality.

Australian democracy is not dead, but needs help to ensure its survival

Why Independents Are Seen as a Circuit Breaker

Many voters now view Independents as a safeguard against decline – a sign of desperation in a system that feels unresponsive. But the deeper question remains:

Why do even well-intentioned leaders and institutions struggle to do the right thing?

Band-aid fixes and spin won’t solve this. We need a new approach.

A Mirror to Hold Power Accountable – 24/7

Elections every three years aren’t enough. Satisfaction surveys don’t cut it. Australians need real tools to scrutinise power continuously.

For the past two years, I’ve been developing AI-driven tools – based on the groundbreaking work of Albert Bandura and Shoshana Zuboff – to do exactly that. These tools allow anyone to:

Analyse policies, speeches, and government actions for hidden biases and moral disengagement.

Hold politicians and institutions accountable in real time.

Share findings transparently with others.

The Response So Far? Silence Speaks Volumes

When I approached the Australian Public Service Commission with this idea – even offering a confidentiality agreement – I was met with silence. That silence is telling.

Yet, the irony? These tools aren’t just for voters – they’re for politicians and public servants too. They can help leaders self-reflect, improve, and rebuild trust.

Try It Yourself

Explore the tools and see how they work:

🔍 AI’s New Frontier: Moral Futures

📊 Start Analysing Now: Expose Hidden Patterns

🎤 Analysis of the ABC News Leaders Debate

AI Future Witness: Empowering Youth Voices

Coming Soon: Legal analysis of Australian laws using this framework.

The Choice Is Ours

This election doesn’t have to be “the same old story”. With the right tools, we can demand – and build – better.

 

Also by Steve Davies: The Morrison Government: A textbook case of rampant, moral disengagement

 

Steve Davies is a retired public servant. His expertise is in the areas of organisational research and people development. He’s always been attracted to forward looking work. He’s a vocal critic of destructive, cruel and backwards looking behaviours and practices.

Over the years he’s spoken in depth with whistleblowers and advocated the use of technology (including social media tech) to empower people to do great things together.

His thinking and work have been heavily influenced by such great thinkers and researchers as Shoshana Zuboff, Albert Bandura and Peter Senge for decades.

 

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3 Comments

  1. I have been telling Australians about the majors and their failure to tell us about UN AGENDA 2030 and give us a voice. I have come to the conclusion that the wall of silence by politicians, the silence of the media, the silence of Think Tanks in Aistralia, the ignorance of universities indicates a very powerful forces or forces are at play. How is it possible for there to be such silence on such an important issue for 15 years !

  2. Bev, the parasite classes (pollies, media, etc) are counting on most Aussies either too busy working or chasing distractions to have the spare time to investigate. For some with spare time, it seems to be a case of wilful ignorance, it’s more convenient to cling to the teddy bear of half truth ‘they would never do that’. They miss the obvious, the truth is ‘You would never do that, but they (the parasites) most certainly are doing that’.
    The switch to a digital system, the Great Reset, should make it crystal clear. At that point, it’s going to be x10 times harder to reverse the damages done.

  3. re. Carman’s comment on ‘chasing distractions,’ a 2,000 km round trip over the recent holiday break amply demonstrated that observation; hundreds if not thousands of caravans, RVs, campers and off-road setups, all invariably being towed by humungous SUVs and 4WDs, along with a sizeable slew of boats of varying sizes and jet skis; overall, impressive evidence of the longstanding Aussie commitment to leisure activities. Work comes first, then play time, little left over for contemplation of one’s place in the society and whether one can meaningfully contribute to its improvement.

    [and] re. Steve Davies’s comment that his AI tools ‘can help leaders self-reflect, improve, and rebuild trust,’ an admirable position and effort, but really?… I sincerely doubt that those elements are anywhere close to being comprehended or at a stage of willing introspection by the so-called political leaders of this country. Knee-jerkism, poll reactivity, not like them-ism, along with the perks of access to the trough of goodies that comes with the job would all serve to bury the gods of better nature.

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