Providence.
Banned
You all knew Kevin Rudd was going to rise to power as prime minister. The slogan "New leadership" is self-explanatory. Kevin Rudd's prime ministry is our dream, our desire, our destiny ! Kevin Rudd is Australia's destiny.
33. Do yr homework bitch.Exphate said:
I'm still processing provisional votes.Schroedinger said:Whoa, that's a lot of homework between then and now.
ReallY? I thought she was a fantastic dancer. Much superior to both Costello and Rudd.Exphate said:Just as long as she doens't keep dancing in the street like a 'tard its all good-ish.
But people like her for that. Personally I think she looked hawt when dancing on election night as she said congratulations to Prime Minister Rudd.Exphate said:Just as long as she doens't keep dancing in the street like a 'tard its all good-ish.
Parliament returns on 12 February 2008mohamed100 said:When is the next question time scheduled? I wouldn't want to miss that.
I caught part of Brian Loughnane’s address to the National Press Club on ABC wee-small-hours last night
...
In his introduction to Loughnane’s speech, NPC President Ken Randall said Loughnane would give an insider’s view of how the Liberal Party campaign had failed, based on recent Liberal Party post-election polling. What Loughnane delivered was roughly 50% spun analysis - that is, something that purported to be analysis but sounded more like the Liberal Party’s continuing attempts to push their “the voters were just bored with us” line, this time dressed up with a few cherry-picked figures about key demographics. The other 50% was just a re-affirmation of Liberal ideology mixed in with some pretty egregious claims about promises Labor had made to win the election, and the coalition’s obligation to hold Labor to those promises.
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Those specific promises that Loughnane identified were:
* To keep grocery prices down
* To keep petrol prices down
* To prevent interest rate rises
Maybe it’s because - like most other voters, as Loughnane admitted - I had my mind made up well before the campaign, I don’t recall any such promises being made. I do recall that during the leaders debate, when the question of interest rates inevitably came up, the only promise on interest rates was John Howard’s repetition of his vacuous promise that interest rates would always be lower under the Liberals than under Labor. Rudd’s counter, a very effective one, was to declare that he was going to be straight with the Australian people: making such a promise would be pointless because there’s no way you could keep it. Or words to that effect.
Whether it’s fair to Loughnane or not, I’m skeptical that the ALP made any such promises. What Loughnane was doing, in fact, was laying the groundwork for creating a public perception that such promises were made so that his colleagues in the Federal Parliament can then hammer Labor at every available opportunity when they find evidence that one or another of these fictitious promises has been broken.
...
Then, I think, he slipped in some alarmist stuff about the ACTU’s WorkChoices campaign and how that fostered unfounded anxiety about the long-term effects of WorkChoices. To Loughnane this represented the first ever entry of a third force in Australain Politics, willing to spend more than either of the major parties on a political campaign. I guess it slipped his mind that in the months leading up to the official campaign the Howard Government blew a lot of the Consolidated Revenue Fund on “public service announcements” promoting WorkChoices and other intiatives of the Howard Government.
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At no time did Loughnane seem to consider the possibility that ... there were any genuine concerns that the Liberal Party might have to address by taking a long hard look at themselves and their “values” - values that Loughnane declared the Liberal Party will be taking to the Australian people at the next election.