I'm voting for John Howard:
Environment:
- Nuclear Power needs to be one the table when looking at Australia's energy infrastructure plan for this century.
- While doing so we need to make sure we don't shoot ourselves in the foot as much as possible, i.e. protect jobs.
- Kyoto is imho nothing but a rhetorical tool for governments to get elected, we need real action on this issue and as the coalition either comes to realise they have to due to public sentiment or that the scientific consensus is there, I believe they're more likely to put in the practical measures needed.
- Recycled Water should be pursued over these silly, wasteful desalination plants the Labor party seems to have become obsessed with.
Economy:
- It can't be said that the Coalition have been 'bad' economic managers, this imo puts them ahead of an unknown group... even if all signs point to a more conservative policy shift by Labor towards the government's style of reform.
- The old Unfair Dismissal legislation was unfair on small businesses and based on anecdotal evidence I've received, with greater security in knowing they can fire someone they take on incase they become unsuitable, small business feels safer to employ someone for the long term.
- AWA's seem to be needed to allow for fair contracts in some specialised industries, i.e. Emergency Maintenance.
Health:
- The Coalition's recently unveiled plan on health (funding for more training places for student gp's etc) was the one favoured by the AMA and seems to be the better one to me.
Education:
- IMO, as a uni student... probably the Coalitions weakest link.
- For example, I feel Labor's plan to use highschools for technical education instead of the Coalitions 'Trade Schools' is a smarter approach.
------------------------
"There is no way a GST will ever be a part of our polic. Never, ever. It's dead, it was killed by the voters in the last election"
John Howard Media COnference, Tweed Hills Civic Centre, May 1995
He went to an election promising a GST and the people decided to elect him. He did change his mind and it probably was due to political expedience, but so what - Labor supports the GST.
"There was never a generation of stolen children"
Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs, John Herron, in a submission to the Governments response to the Stolen Generations.
Kay, IDK...
Context?
Who supported it?
Where can we see the effective change in policy?
IMO The Howard Government has it fairly right when it comes to dealing with Aboriginal Communities (of course more funding might be nice as may be some further appologies, though Howard has promised to put aboriginal recognition in the constitution to a referendum), especially with regard to this intervention... which Labor supports.
"The average Australian is now paying $400 a month less than what he or she was paying to service the typical housing loan when we were elected"
John Howard, 2 August 2003. In Melbourne young people saving to buy their first home have seen the bar rise from $801/month (1996) to$1822 (2003).
Are people from Melbourne average Australians? What about increases in inflation/average sallary... As a % of household income Australians are paying more on home repayments now, that is true and that's how I would have presented your argument.
"Who do you trust to keep interest rates low?"
Commercial, last election campaign.
While it has little effect, in general the tax cuts/extra support to middle/low income australians which is more common under the Labor party is more inflationary than tax cuts to the rich/business which are more common under Liberal/Coalition governments.