- Joined
- 23 November 2004
- Posts
- 3,974
- Reactions
- 850
For the sake of Australia Julia, please go!
For the sake of Australia Julia, please go!
Is the inverse historical implication intentional?
Either way, very apt.![]()
It's also time to worry if Abbott is a decent replacement. He really is a hatchet man and not a leader that will steer the country in the direction that I think we need to take. Doing the same hatchet job on Gillard that he did on Pauline Hanson. Remember it was Abbott behind the scheme that turned Hanson into Australia's first political prisoner.![]()
It's also time to worry if Abbott is a decent replacement. He really is a hatchet man and not a leader that will steer the country in the direction that I think we need to take. Doing the same hatchet job on Gillard that he did on Pauline Hanson. Remember it was Abbott behind the scheme that turned Hanson into Australia's first political prisoner.![]()
I’m currently locked in a ‘neck-and-redneck’ battle with Pauline Hanson to win the final seat for the Greens in the NSW Legislative Council. At the moment I’m in front, but Hanson is catching up on below-the-line votes.
Labor are keen to distract the public from their incredible electoral demise and so they and sections of the media are trying to blame the Greens for Hanson’s near success.
Labor machine men Luke Foley and Anthony Albanese have been peddling the idea that the Greens decision not to recommend a preference to Labor in the Upper House has somehow helped Pauline Hanson. This is absolute garbage.
Labor performed so poorly that their candidate for the final seat, Andrew Ferguson, is now behind both Family First and the Fishing Party. Labor cannot beat Hanson, only the Greens can. Ironically, it is Labor’s preferences that will likely decide whether Pauline Hanson or the Greens win the final seat in the upper house.
And what direction would that be nioka?
The hatchet job was by Labor. The Green who won the seat says so.
http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/55402.html
I'm going back a little further than the last election. I'm going back to the original One Nation days. A leopard doesn't change its spots.
If someone in the ALP does not listen to the Australian public soon then the Greens will certainly replace them as the second major political party in the coming years/elections.
They are now in survival mode only and its up to them how decimated they allow themselves to become.
They will be better off biting the bullet now and slowly rebuilding than prolonging this farce.
If someone in the ALP does not listen to the Australian public soon then the Greens will certainly replace them as the second major political party in the coming years/elections.
They are now in survival mode only and its up to them how decimated they allow themselves to become.
They will be better off biting the bullet now and slowly rebuilding than prolonging this farce.
I would personally love this, but I am now convinced that People do not now want/deserve liberal/libertarian policy. This may change, but right now people have lost sight of what liberty means.i say we should invite ron paul to australia to start up a decent libertarian party!
bob katter can be his offsider!
see if a dose of austrian economics can turn this ship around!![]()
God help us if the Greens replace Labor, then we will be well and truly up **** creek without a paddle. At least at the moment we have paddles, but they do seem to be falling apart pretty quickly.
matty, I strongly believe the Greens have reached their peak and will be in decline after the next election.
I also believe many who voted for the Greens at the last election did so in protest. Now it has come back to bit them.
Both the Labor and Liberals parties will not give their preference to the Greens. Most of the Greens entered parliament on Labor and Liberal preferences.
Originally Posted by noco said:matty, I strongly believe the Greens have reached their peak and will be in decline after the next election.
Both the Labor and Liberals parties will not give their preference to the Greens. Most of the Greens entered parliament on Labor and Liberal preferences.
Agree about the protest vote going to the Greens. However, the fairly consistent polling for the Greens suggests not too many of these people intend to change their vote. That may change as the extreme nature of the Greens becomes more apparent.matty, I strongly believe the Greens have reached their peak and will be in decline after the next election.
I also believe many who voted for the Greens at the last election did so in protest. Now it has come back to bit them.
Both the Labor and Liberals parties will not give their preference to the Greens. Most of the Greens entered parliament on Labor and Liberal preferences.
Agree in principle, but let's remember that voters do not have to follow any direction from any party when voting.This is pure delusion, cloud cookoo stuff :homer: Labor and the greens will preference each other because there's simply no where else to go...the rise of the greens comes on the back of a decade of Howard nothingness, a decade of total isolation and green ignorance.
Hello and welcome to Aussie Stock Forums!
To gain full access you must register. Registration is free and takes only a few seconds to complete.
Already a member? Log in here.