This article is brought to you by the following
quote from Brendan O'Connor, as Labor continues to grapple with its unexpected 2019 federal election loss and continues trying to work out whether what it did wrong this year was hardly anything or almost everything (or something in between):
"Some of the critiques to date, especially from outside the party, remind me of those absurd footy match reviews where despite the margins being very close, extol only the excellence of the winners and denigrate the virtues of the vanquished, even when there was just a kick in it."
He's right, for the most part, of course. Analysis which praises everything the winner did (because they won) and pans everything the loser did (because they lost) is a massive problem in electoral commentary. I refer to it as "annotation by result", a chess term for the same thing.
But there are a couple of big caveats here. Firstly if you're up against Richmond
or GWS, you might think a loss by a few points was a decent effort and that with only a little fine-tuning, if you catch them on a bad day next time round, you'll beat them. But if you think you're a good team and you lose by a goal to the Gold Coast Suns, you might be sacking more than the captain. One of the hard things with elections is that you can say how much one side won by, but that doesn't tell you if both sides campaigned well or if they were both hopeless. Before the election the Morrison Government hardly looked like Grand Final material!