What perplexes me is why Kevin Rudd was ever seen as ‘popular’.
Rudd was so unpopular with Australians that Labor was headed for a certain landslide defeat in the last election if they’d stuck with him.
He was so unpopular within Labor ranks that his own party turned against him and tossed him out.
He was and still is so unpopular within his own party that many of his colleagues have publicly subjected him to scathing criticism.
Despite his well documented unpopularity, it seems that many people took pity on Rudd over the backhanded way that his own party got rid of him last time.
This pity appears to have been mistaken for popularity. The current election campaign is showing us, however, that Rudd’s so called ‘popularity’ is very hollow indeed.
Only one week to go until the ‘popularity’ myth surrounding Kevin Rudd is put to rest once and for all.
Rudd was so unpopular with Australians that Labor was headed for a certain landslide defeat in the last election if they’d stuck with him.
He was so unpopular within Labor ranks that his own party turned against him and tossed him out.
He was and still is so unpopular within his own party that many of his colleagues have publicly subjected him to scathing criticism.
Despite his well documented unpopularity, it seems that many people took pity on Rudd over the backhanded way that his own party got rid of him last time.
This pity appears to have been mistaken for popularity. The current election campaign is showing us, however, that Rudd’s so called ‘popularity’ is very hollow indeed.
Only one week to go until the ‘popularity’ myth surrounding Kevin Rudd is put to rest once and for all.