Australian Policies -- 2026, and we have no Shadow Cabinet

Continuing the discussion from Australian Policies -- from 2025 Federal election - #10083 by Humble_Minion.

Previous discussions:

I’m not captain!

Already lots of stuff connecting them. Gina is a fan, and I’d suggest a little more than that if you know what I mean and I think that you do.

Is it because she reminds her of her favourite fast food?

I dunno, but there can be few things more symbolic than Gina giving Hanson 9+ wagyu, and her cooking it on a Breville.

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I’m surprised she accepted it, given the name.

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Former Trump strategist Steve Bannon boasted that he urged Australian billionaire Clive Palmer to bankroll an advertising campaign worth tens of millions during the 2019 federal election as part of a wider plan to disrupt global democracy.

In a message sent to an account that appeared to belong to Jeffrey Epstein on May 20, 2019 – two days after Labor’s shock election loss – Bannon told the convicted paedophile: “I had Clive Palmer do the $60m anti China and anti climate change ads.”

The exchange forms part of a tranche of material emerging from a US investigation into Epstein’s communications before the disgraced financier’s death in custody in August 2019. The released documents, while giving little new insight into the ties between Epstein and US President Donald Trump, further illuminate his extensive network of high-profile associates, ranging from former US president Bill Clinton to billionaires Elon Musk and Bill Gates.

The exchange suggests Bannon privately claimed influence to Epstein over what became Australia’s most expensive political advertising campaign to date.

Epstein replied by arguing that traditional political campaigning had been overtaken by online mobilisation, citing Australia’s election and Trump’s win three years earlier as evidence that opinion polling had failed.

“Telephone polls not accurate,” he wrote, urging Bannon to pursue a broader populist project unconstrained by national borders.

“New, non geographically limited groupings… You can champion a true world bank of the people not the countries,” Epstein added.

“Yes that’s the objective,” Bannon replied. “Next stop Kazikstan [sic].”

The exchange places the 2019 election within a wider conversation among populist global political operatives focused on disrupting the mainstream parties, climate policy and international institutions, and suggests Bannon viewed the Australian campaign as part of a broader sequence of political interventions.

Bannon, who rose to prominence as the head of the right-wing website Breitbart News and later as a senior strategist on Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, was publicly expressing a keen interest in the Australian contest at the time.

Steve Bannon text exchange

In an interview with this masthead in May 2019, he described the election campaign as dull and consultant-driven, blaming political professionals for draining politics of meaning and intensity.

Records later revealed Palmer spent $83.6 million promoting the United Australia Party during the campaign, saturating television, radio, print and digital platforms with advertising attacking Labor leader Bill Shorten, opposing climate policies and repeatedly warning of China’s influence in Australian politics.

Several advertisements claimed “communist China” was attempting a clandestine takeover of Australia, including suggestions that a remote airport in Western Australia could be used for military invasion. Defence and strategic experts dismissed the claims as scaremongering and conspiratorial.

A United Australia Party newspaper advertisement from May 2019.

After the election, Palmer – having failed to win a single seat – claimed credit for the Morrison government’s victory, arguing the United Australia Party’s 3.5 per cent primary vote, coupled with its preference flows to the Liberals, had proved decisive, particularly in Queensland.

In its post-election review, Labor said the magnitude of Palmer’s expenditure crowded out Labor’s advertising in broadcast, print and digital media, and his entry as a high-wealth individual willing to outspend the entire ALP was a new and destabilising factor.

“In the final stages of the campaign,” the review said, “Palmer’s expenditure also directly backed in the Coalition’s anti-Labor messages, in an unprecedented act of collusion between supposed political rivals.”

The review also urged reforms to prevent high-wealth individuals effectively buying elections, warning that unchecked political spending represented a threat to democratic integrity.

Palmer, a life member of Queensland’s Liberal-National Party, won the seat of Fairfax in the House of Representatives in 2013 election, while his party also had three senators elected – Jacqui Lambie, Glen Lazarus and Dio ■■■■. He lost at the 2016 election but has remained a major presence since, through large and often outrageous advertising campaigns, borrowing from Trump’s tactics.

The newly released messages coincide with scrutiny of Bannon’s activities in Europe. The trove of messages shows the pair were frequent dining companions, with Epstein extending the use of his property portfolio –including residences in Paris and Palm Beach – and granting Bannon access to his private jet on multiple occasions.

The pair joked about French President Emmanuel Macron accusing Bannon and Russian-linked interests of working with nationalist parties to undermine the sovereignty of elections, warning voters not to be “naive” about foreign interference leading up to a European Parliament poll.

“U saw where Macron campaign manager coming after me personally,” Bannon texted Epstein.

He replied: “It is an attack on the sovereignty of the election… it makes you want to throw up,’ he fumed. Loved it.”

Bannon and Palmer have been contacted for comment.

https://archive.md/iYEJc

That’s a lot.
Can you dumb it down for me?

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An email chain between Steve Bannon and Jeffrey Epstein has come to light where Bannon boasted that he was behind urging Australian billionaire Clive Palmer to bankroll a $60M advertising campaign during the 2019 federal election as part of a wider plan to disrupt global democracy.

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this feels like its something we already knew

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Our country got hijacked and we ended up with Scomo as PM. Also Blitz is a lefty Labor circle jerk and there’s not enough people proud to show their support for the parties that are open to our country being hijacked and having the worst people possible lead it.

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Well none of that makes sense.

Why are none of these snowflake conservatives sticking up for Morrison? Or nuclear power? Or Sussan? Or Pauline?

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Except:

The indirect impacts could be argued infinitely, I guess. But you could equally argue either way on that one (i.e., whether they were important or not).

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Indirect was entirely the point. It worked on swingers.

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And it flooded the information field with ■■■■ (including Bill Shorten’s man boobs) - a play right out of Bannon’s book.

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If Bannon told me water was wet I’d want a signed deposition from an industrial chemist, an oceanographer, and Kieren Perkins before I believed him. Lying about his own significance is his entire business model. He literally brags about it.

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Oh, I kinda respect him for saying that if Trump loses we’re all going to jail.

Y’know…as much as you can for an absolute scumbag.

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With any luck, it’d only be for a very short time.

Until the walls for the firing squad was built.

Chap I know really well has bought an online peptide company. Legally sells all sorts of things including stuff that allegedly boys we know and love had injected in their body. Drugs that need a Dr prescription can be done immediately with an online consult.

Thought I knew all about this bloke who never seemed that shifty, so I googled him and found his election funding donation documents for his unsuccessful go at Melbourne City Council. He raised a lot of money but the donation of nearly $100,000 from the CFMEU stood out. Interesting for a rightwinger.