Australian Politics -- from 2022 Federal Election

So I looked at the letter that the Tories are sending to everyone around the country.

As discussed in the earlier thread, some people have wisely used this for a worthwhile purpose, like to scrape up cat poo. Anyway, they sent a form asking people to provide a complete list of personal identifiers INCLUDING answers to five commonly used secret questions needed to retrieve passwords etc.

I haven’t applied for a postal vote before, so I don’t know if this is something the AEC requires. But if not, what a huge scam the Tories are running: anyone dumb enough to provide this info can get any of their accounts hacked. Opens up a whole new revenue stream for the party of grifters

I’m yet to receive anything in the mail from any party. I’ve removed the posters from near my house though and I fully expect to see some propaganda arrive in the post soon which will make its way into the recycling bin. The Union blokes at work are getting texts asking to volunteer but haven’t received anything since that Kelly loser spammed me
I rarely vote on the day and will head to the early voting stations as per usual

AEC can’t control the information sent out and requested by parties, but they are obliged to send any completed applications for a postal vote to the AEC, or you can send it direct to AEC yourself, free postage.
Applications for a postal vote can be made direct to AEC.
Parties have been known to haunt Aged Care places.

I’ve just received the application papers for postal voting. They were sent out by my local member, Lisa Chesters, ALP MHR for Bendigo. Albert is right about the five commonly used secret questions. Anyway, I won’t miss my democracy sausage.

BTW, I see that Cash has refused to debate with Dreyfus. She must have realised he’d wipe the floor with her.

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There can’t be a single voter in the country that identifies with Cash, surely?

Even people like her don’t like her.

Because she is objectively a massive ■■■■.

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This is worth reading and is an insight to how many Liberal voters feel. Seems to be not so different from others further Left.

This article is from the April 23 issue of The Age

IN THE NEWS

ROB BAILLIEU

Fifteen months ago, Josh Frydenberg asked if we could get coffee. Today, I’m the volunteer manager for Monique Ryan – leading her 1500 volunteers in an attempt to unseat him. How did this happen?

In 2016, I was encouraged to work for a ‘‘ moderate’ ’ Liberal Party MP, who I am choosing not to name. The notional interview was one of the most homophobic experiences of my life. The climate scepticism, sexism, and disregard for basic scientific principles didn’t help. If these are the moderates, who on earth are the conservatives?

The truth is there is little difference between a moderate and a conservative if you vote the same way, protect the same selfish culture, and promote the same lines. Some people claim that the moderates are nice people, but it’s not enough to be a nice person. You have to be a good person.

Good people would take action on climate change, they protect the rights of LGBT people, and support an anticorruption commission. Good people don’t attack their own state as it struggles to control a pandemic, or use charities and public institutions to advance their own political causes.

The legacy of Scott Morrison and Frydenberg is a forecast trillion dollars of debt, a stagnant energy sector, the decline of Australia on Transparency International’s corruption index, and fostering what I believe is the worst political culture we’ve ever known. These are not the achievements of decent people.

Their lack of substantive leadership has caused the Liberal Party to lose its way. The commitment to small-l liberal values has collapsed under the weight of party greed and infighting .

As the son of a Liberal premier, I could be in the mix, I could be running a Liberal MP’s campaign. But I can’t . I’m sorry, I don’t want to be rich, nor powerful, at the expense of others. That’s not my business. I don’t claim to be a good person. But I’m trying to be, and that’s more than I can say for many modern Liberal Party MPs.

I’ve slowly distanced myself from the party – in this generation of leadership, I saw little to admire. If we want better leadership we have to foster it in the community ourselves.

Josh never followed up on that coffee. That’s OK. Three months after that call, I joined 20 other people in founding Voices of Kooyong. Seven months later, I met Monique Ryan, a paediatric neurologist, and head of the Department of Neurology at the Royal Children’s Hospital. In Dr Ryan I found a selfless , hard-working , intelligent leader. Someone with a demonstrated lifelong commitment to her community. Someone ready to champion action on climate change and integrity in politics. Someone prepared to do politics differently.

In five months, Ryan has built the largest community movement in Kooyong’s history. She has raised millions from thousands of donors throughout the community and the country. She has put up more corflutes on houses than any candidate in Australia – in sharp contrast to the paid billboards of her opponent.

Remarkably, 80 per cent of her volunteers have never campaigned, volunteered, or been a part of a party. Many ex-Liberal voters. They are the middle ground of Kooyong – tired of the major parties and the self-serving political culture of the last decade.

This is a testament to Ryan’s leadership. If she can do all this in five months, imagine what she can do in parliament.

Kooyong could come down to 500 votes, and it could reset Australian political culture for the better. If Ryan unseats the federal treasurer it will send a shockwave through Canberra. No politician can take their electorates for granted anymore. They’ll have to commit to a higher standard of leadership, accountability and political integrity. For the first time in history, the votes of Kooyong electors will matter.

Some people say we are taking out the next generation of Liberal leaders. This is not true – they’ve taken themselves out with their own actions. If your vision of the future is a vision of the past, then you aren’t the leader we need.

The next generation of Liberals are now supporting independent candidates because we know they will be accountable to their electorates not their parties. We know they will champion pragmatism, not ideology. We know they will be a check on the greed and self-interest of some politicians. We know they will offer a vision for the future, not the past.

I’ll vote for that.

Rob Baillieu is the son of former Victorian premier Ted Baillieu and is volunteer manager for Monique Ryan, the independent candidate for Kooyong.

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It’s hard to argue with that, well worth a read.

It does annoy me though that they appear to be somewhat aligned to ALP or GREEN policies, but rather than go in that direction, they’ve aimed to go independent.

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Come on Dingus. Check out this article for the present and future of the Religious Right Grift and Wrecking Party formerly known as the LNP. Turns out Deves is a master stroke and traditional LNP base is coming with the big $ to fight this culture war with the “movie star” Deves in the vanguard. LNP voters have largely always been selfish bigoted ■■■■■. I said it.

Please tell me that’s not ALP official, please tell me that’s something a kid at primary school did and that her friends told her it was good but not to show it to many people.

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And here’s the party of pork, jobkeeper corporate charity, and defence budget farkery on those awful ‘immoral’ independents. They should be redirecting their election funding to good social causes apparently. You pick your jaw up only to drop it five seconds later

“The Liberal MP Jason Falinski, who is being challenged in his northern beaches seat of Mackellar by Climate 200-backed Sophie Scamps, said the amount being spent by independents was “immoral”.

It is expected that Scamps will spend more than $1m trying to win the seat, with a combination of traditional and digital advertising.

Falinski suggested that the independents could instead be directing their financial resources to charity, giving the example of much-needed emergency accommodation for women fleeing domestic violence as one worthy cause.

Pork-o-meter: tracking Australian election spending
](Pork-o-meter: tracking Australian election spending announcements | Australian election 2022 | The Guardian)

It seems the independents are causing a lot of angst for a number of L/NP people. It would be sad not to have Joshie and Timmy any longer in Parliament, wouldn’t it?

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I think we all agree that most of our MSM are partisan propaganda silos
BUT
the Reserve Bank?

Look at this:

  • Deputy of Reserve Bank unexpectedly quits his job. He was the second most powerful financial person in Australia with his whole career pointing him to the top job eventually…but then he quits?
  • The Chair of the Reserve Bank has not booked a public speaking appointment for many months
    -The Bond market is reflecting what should be happening with interest rates whilst the RBA sits on its hands
  • The international interest rates situation is deteriorating rapidly - the US are going to hike interest rates substantially higher as they recently posted the highest inflation figures for 40 years - this has major implications for the Aust market but the RBA is just not acting to counter these forces…they should operate independently of the government… something is wrong here

I agree they(RBA) along with most central banks should have hiked months ago.

When I first read the term transitory inflation and how it was being said with such conviction by finance types I still thought bullshit!

It’s hardly transitory. Prices will stay elevated

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There’s another world out there.
Scott Bucholz, MP for Wright in Queensland is having a $5k a head fundraiser of fine dining and shooting at a shooting gallery in Brisbane run by an arms supplier, complete with a dummy of a man to aim at.

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Dummy of a man you say?

Scummo making an appearance. Probably too frightened after being alpha curb stomped by Albo.

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This sort of sht should play so badly with the vast majority of the electorate that even if this ##$_head gets elected in his electorate, the absolute stench should mean that there’s hardly a LNP person left

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Brisbane version of a corporate box at the MCG?

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Some meth head looking idiot had a crack at Barnaby. AFP Officer did a pretty bloody good job at keeping his cool.

Lol, and this quote from the article is almost word for word a Cosmic Psychos track lyric “C’mon on c’mon on ya ct. You ■■■■ weak ct,”

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Simon Birmingham says some startling revelations about Marles being soft on China. Journos asks him to disclose the alleged revelations. He says, oh just what he’s been saying over the years. Then he shoots through.
Birmingham earlier said ALP fiscally irresponsible in not previously getting some costings done by Parliamentary Budget Office. No-one asks about those damning ANAO reports.

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