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The ScoMo Government

Labor don't need Murdoch, they get enough flag waving and chorus Line singing from the Age and SMH, any more proactive Labor chanting, would be nauseous. Lol

Next time you're lunching with Rupert and Jerry can you have a quiet word with him please. Just let him know he's already looking like Mussolini as it is
 
Next time you're lunching with Rupert and Jerry can you have a quiet word with him please. Just let him know he's already looking like Mussolini as it is
Didn't you Mum and Dad tell you, if you don't have something nice to say about a person, say nothing, or maybe you know Murdoch personally.lol
 
Didn't you Mum and Dad tell you, if you don't have something nice to say about a person, say nothing, or maybe you know Murdoch personally.lol

I just assumed he woulda taken that as a compliment
 
Not a good look for the Sco Mo gov.
Indigenous affairs minister Nigel Scullion to quit politics at next election
Move follows last week’s shock resignation of Kelly O’Dwyer and Friday’s announcement by Michael Keenan

Calla Wahlquist

@callapilla
Sat 26 Jan 2019 10.28 AEDT Last modified on Sat 26 Jan 2019 10.59 AEDT

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Nigel Scullion has been a cabinet minister and the minister for Indigenous affairs since 2013. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
The Indigenous affairs minister, Nigel Scullion, has announced that he will not recontest the next election, joining frontbenchers Michael Keenan and Kelly O’Dwyer in the list of high profile resignations from the Morrison government.

Scullion announced his decision on Australia Day, while the prime minister, Scott Morrison, was addressing the national citizenship ceremony in Canberra.
https://www.theguardian.com/austral...el-scullion-to-quit-politics-at-next-election
 
I wonder if there is a benefit in resigning, before you get voted out?
 
Rats and sinking ships spring to mind
Possibly, but why not wait untill after the election? It could be to save money, from not having to have a by election, but saving money has ever been a high priority for politicians in the past.
It doesn't really matter, I was just wondering if there was an advantage.
 
Big news is the announcement of a small l Liberal running as independent candidate against Tony Abbott. Promises some real fireworks.

Zali Steggall to challenge Tony Abbott for Warringah seat
Olympics ski champion turned barrister has support of several grassroots groups in her bid to oust the ex-prime minister
https://www.theguardian.com/austral...l-to-challenge-tony-abbott-warringah-nsw-seat

Underestimate Tony Abbott at your peril - the man knows how to win
https://www.canberratimes.com.au/po...the-man-knows-how-to-win-20190126-p50tt7.html


 
Good on her, at least she isn't joining a Party to get a leg up, I'd vote for her.
 
Another big challenge to the current Liberal party. Former Liberal party big wig Oliver Yates is standing in Kooyong against Josh Frydenburg as an Independent Liberal. (This was the area that went Labour in the last State election.)
Absolutely hammered them in this announcement.

The Liberal party has lost the plot – that’s why I’m running as an independent
Oliver Yates
The environment in Canberra within the Liberal party is toxic. We have to change the way politics is done in Australia

• Oliver Yates: It’s time to ‘take out’ environment ministers who fail on climate


@_Oliver_Yates

Wed 30 Jan 2019 04.00 AEDT Last modified on Wed 30 Jan 2019 10.15 AEDT

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‘If this is the Liberal party, then it has no place for me. I can’t quite explain what has happened but the Liberal party’s culture is sick.’ Photograph: Thomas S Dalhoff
“Why?” is the question I’ve had from friends and family when I’ve told them I’m running for the seat of Kooyong in the next federal election.

It’s a good question but perhaps not the right one. Politics in Australia, as it currently operates, isn’t something immediately appealing to anyone in their right mind. I’ve had a successful business career; my kids are all but grown-up.

But the time has come when I’m compelled to act as the situation we face is so dire, and the quality of the actors so poor, and the unwillingness of the Liberal party to reform is so evident that the right question is “how can you just sit there and not stand?”


It's time to 'take out' environment ministers who fail on climate, says Oliver Yates
Read more
We have to change the way politics is done in Australia so we can address climate change, restore political integrity and ensure business operates within society’s expectations and not as an entity unto itself.

Unfortunately, the current Liberal party has lost the plot. Its failure to deal with these issues threatens to sell out the future of all Australians. Without environmental and public assets and public confidence in our politics we’re unable to deal with a warming climate, a growing and ageing population and an unequal economy.

Growing up, I learned what it takes to be elected to parliament, door-knocking Doveton to Kooweerup for my father, the Liberal member for Holt, the late Bill Yates.

But despite being a member for most of my life, I am done with this form of the Liberal party. Seeing the now prime minister, Scott Morrison, wave around a lump of coal in parliament, and witnessing a follow-up act with brown coal at a Victorian fundraiser made me angry. Environmentally it’s like waving asbestos.

Scott Morrison brings a chunk of coal into parliament
If this is the Liberal party, then it has no place for me. I can’t quite explain what has happened but the Liberal party’s culture is sick. Ten years of negative policy actions have created a black hole around the leadership, surrounding them in impenetrable darkness. They’ve ignored or denied claims of bullying, which is evident to all. Now there’s a flood of cabinet ministers rushing for the backdoor. Family reasons aside, the environment in Canberra within the Liberal party is toxic.

We need real people with real experience to sit in Canberra

Faced with this, and when it is made clear that the “broad church” in Kooyong won’t extend to other Liberals with environmental concerns, the time comes to offer an alternative way so that the people of Kooyong can have a voice and be represented in Canberra.

The majority of them want action on climate, fair treatment
for asylum seekers, businesses to consider people and the environment, and politicians to act with integrity. Currently they feel let down.

The Liberal government’s blindness to the dangers of climate change is sickening. It’s about 28 years since the first international report called on governments to act to reduce carbon emission as a known threat to the environment. Since then, global emissions have risen more than 60%. The current government is delaying action, and encouraging global inaction.

We can’t afford that. How can Liberals not see this?

The Liberal party put the interests of the coal and fossil fuel industry ahead of just about every other industry, and source of employment, in Australia.

Our beautiful reefs, right through to our southern wilderness, are being destroyed as you read this. Our rivers and everything that relies on them are dying. Communities are facing crippling droughts and fires. Meanwhile, the government continue to peddle dangerous nonsense that we need new coal-fired power stations, or talking up Adani.

Having run the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, and as an investor in renewable projects, I understand the jobs, economic benefits and new industries that can emerge while we reduce pollution. I can’t understand why the Liberal party, which prides itself on its economic credentials, fails to see the economic opportunities.

The treasurer Josh Frydenberg’s recent speech to the Sydney Institute should mark another point of intense disappointment. It highlights how seriously the Liberal party has lost its way. Now its leadership can’t even make moral sense of its own values and belief.

Frydenberg said: “Fairness is achieved through equality of opportunity, not equality of outcomes”, and “intergenerational equity requires fiscal discipline as the next generation should not have to pick up the tab for the last”
If he seriously believes current Liberal policies reflect these two values, then he is totally deluded.

The government’s policies are preventing individuals having “equality of opportunity”. Inequality of wealth is growing. Wealth has a direct relationship with the opportunities an individual has from birth. The outcome will not be fair if government policies fail to address the massive financial inequality individuals face.

Policies that constantly increase the benefits of those who can afford to pay versus those less well off layer this government’s thinking. Poor suburbs have poor schools, hospitals and services in contrast to wealthy suburbs. I don’t want an American-style split society. Menzies did not suggest it, and it grinds against the identity I thought we shared as Australians, which had pride in egalitarianism and mateship.

Secondly, intergenerational equity applies to the climate and our natural resources not just the budget. Those retiring today are leaving oceans filled with plastic, mines that have not been rehabilitated, soil depleted, ecosystems destroyed and our climate in ruins. The tab is being left to the next generation without care or regard. How a Liberal government cannot see the scale of this is breathtaking.

We must return integrity to politics. We need real people with real experience to sit in Canberra. We can’t afford another generation of party hacks who believe politics is a game of numbers, slogans and spin.

The public have lost trust in their political leaders. We need an integrity commission, proper political donations reforms and a bill of rights that enshrines what it means to be Australian. And we need to stop ignoring the concerns of Australia’s first people before we can become a mature country.


We need a strong business sector that works with society. Currently there are deep cultural problems. Corporations and CEOs are there to act in the collective interests of people. They cannot continue to claim that their only job is to maximise profits. They need to understand that they must act in the same way we expect an individual to act as part of a heathy society that protects and cares for each other.

Government and business love free trade. But it doesn’t always benefit the people. My first public run-in with the Howard government was over the US-Australian free-trade agreement. The PM’s office called my employer to suggest it was not in my employers’ best interest that I continue to point out the deficiencies of the agreement.

It triggered my disbelief in our politicians, and highlighted our lack of individual rights to speak and debate views, as all citizens must do, if they care about their country. Our trade agreements need to be carefully considered to ensure the benefit for our economy and society. We shouldn’t be signing up to deals that could harm Australia’s economic interests or impose major social costs. I will fight to bring greater transparency to the negotiation of international trade deals and to ensure that the economic and social merits of all future deals are independently assessed by the Productivity Commission before the parliament is asked to vote on them.

Having said all that, winning this seat will not be easy. But then again, you never know – moderate Liberal, Greens and Labor electors might welcome the chance to have a member in Canberra that reports to them rather than someone who represents a party most of us cannot understand.
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...e-plot-thats-why-im-running-as-an-independent
 
As happened at the end of the last Labor tenure, a lot of people see the opportunity, in riding the wave of discontentment. IMO
 
Perhaps the Laberal Party in in its death throes. It deserves to die for selling its soul to the virtue signallers, panic merchants and panderers.

Die!!!!!!

Perhaps here is the accidental conception of a new, moderate, center right party.

Oz conservatives and PHON will never capture the middle ground where most Ozzies are, and the Liberals are irretrievably polluted by PC BS and unjustified moral panic, combined with tiny cajones.

Labor only exist via a vacuum, bereft of courage on the center/near right.
 
Labor only exist via a vacuum, bereft of courage on the center/near right.
I wouldn't go as far as to say that, but I think Labor has managed to capture the 'cosmopolitan, yuppie, feel good group.
The reality is they are all centered around the two major Cities, which happens to be where the two major media outlets are centered also, therefore by association the 'word' is spread and shared.

IMO it has been a very clever operation, base everything on ideology and high brow theory, then let the intellectuals run with it, the only thing that ends up breaking the chain is when reality hits.

As it always does, in my experience.
 
I heard a very apt phrase today:
The opinion polls are bouncing between, the coalitions entrenched unpopularity, and Bill Shortens unlikeability.
I thought, that sums things up pretty well.
 
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