Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
RyanairGuru wrote:It’s going to be interesting, that’s for sure. A hung parliament does seem the most likely outcome though.
The polling companies have changed their methodology since 2019, and called QLD, WA, SA state elections pretty accurately, but with so many independents running it is anyone’s guess at this point. The national 2PP polls are largely meaningless is the seats which could cause an upset.
A101 wrote:https://mobile.twitter.com/LaurenTomasi/status/1527825119502270465
I wonder if Albo going to get upset with that one, since he was not happy about the it’s not going to be easy with Albenese Ad
But the Barnaby looks look the pick of the crop, pulled pork roll yum yum
cpd wrote:Those too conveniently timed boats might have been a setup job:
https://www.news.com.au/national/federa ... 87b6b59ebb
The LNP propaganda machine was charged up to get those text messages out quick smart. Many people already voted, so it’s a bit of a waste of effort.
Also a breach of the normal LNP policy of no talking about “on water operations”.
I wouldn’t put it past the LNP to have set this up.
No food for me, my vote was done well before today. Just as well, it rained heavily today - which would be dangerous for me to be out and about. One slip or fall and I’d be back in hospital.
A101 wrote:Im just hoping that the ALP can form government in their own right and not be beholden to the greens
Kent350787 wrote:A101 wrote:Im just hoping that the ALP can form government in their own right and not be beholden to the greens
I too want a Labor majority but the e “beholden to the Greens” is just Lib bs scaremongering.
If negotiation is needed, it will be interesting to see whether the independents or Greens will guarantee the Albanese government.
A101 wrote:Im just hoping that the ALP can form government in their own right and not be beholden to the greens
sierrakilo44 wrote:A101 wrote:Im just hoping that the ALP can form government in their own right and not be beholden to the greens
What this election has shown, with a large swing to the ALP, Greens and Teals is that the Australian people want:
Action on climate change
Action on corruption in politics
Stopping the American style culture war nonsense
More representative politics (the amount of intelligent women replacing old boys club men is staggering)
ABC's Vote Compass has shown that Climate Change is the number one concern for voters. The Coalition still has multiple climate deniers and won't commit to a firm net zero target.
The other big factor is Pauline Hanson and Clive Palmer have had no gains and will have no influence on the final result. People don't want far right politics, and they think the Coalition have moved too far right.
cpd wrote:The LNP smacked themselves with their born to rule mentality. And a stupid idea of Katherine Deves. That didn’t have the effect it was supposed to, and they just lost a blue ribbon LNP seat.
Other comments that LNP had a right to those seats…
What happens now to the biggest LNP cheerleaders in the media and online, even in forums? All the attacks and barracking (and fontsize 200 posts) didn’t work. Do we go back to real journalism now?
And what about the LNP? Who now becomes the controlling block in that?
Surprised, Andrew Constance gets it…
RyanairGuru wrote:Moreover, they have won at least one seat (Tangney) that they didn’t even campaign in
sierrakilo44 wrote:It also seems a lot of seats with high levels of Chinese or Asian background voters have swung heavily against the Liberals.
A sign the new government needs to adopt a more diplomatic relationship with our neighbours.
RyanairGuru wrote:
The swing against the Liberals in the seats with the highest percentage of Chinese speakers is really pronounced.
That said, Fowler is a reminder that Labor cannot take the Asian Australian vote for granted. They overrode the local party members who would have preselected a popular local Vietnamese-Australian candidate, to parachute in a wealthy white person who lives on the Northern Beaches. They therefore lost a very safe Labor seat to a Liberal-aligned Vietnamese-Australian independent.
Arion640 wrote:What does Albanese/Labour stand for?
More left wing, or centrist?
sierrakilo44 wrote:What this election has shown, with a large swing to the ALP, Greens and Teals is that the Australian people want:
sierrakilo44 wrote:Action on climate change
Action on corruption in politics
Stopping the American style culture war nonsense
More representative politics (the amount of intelligent women replacing old boys club men is staggering)
ABC's Vote Compass has shown that Climate Change is the number one concern for voters. The Coalition still has multiple climate deniers and won't commit to a firm net zero target.
sierrakilo44 wrote:The other big factor is Pauline Hanson and Clive Palmer have had no gains and will have no influence on the final result. People don't want far right politics, and they think the Coalition have moved too far right.
SpaceshipDC10 wrote:The fact that Dutton & Morisson will no longer be in governent is for the better. Australia needs something better than their outdated mindsets.
A101 wrote:SpaceshipDC10 wrote:The fact that Dutton & Morisson will no longer be in governent is for the better. Australia needs something better than their outdated mindsets.
Dutton is most likely to be the next opposition leader, I hope not. As for Morrison I think he will retire from politics in the next few months
What is interesting and this is hopeful for the coalition in the future is the 2PP the coalition is ahead with 3,835,976(35.4%) and ALP with 3,554,410 (32.8%) normally on 2PP its generally 80%+ between them so its not all good news for the ALP Albanese has got a lot of work to do over the next 3 years
RyanairGuru wrote:A101 wrote:SpaceshipDC10 wrote:The fact that Dutton & Morisson will no longer be in governent is for the better. Australia needs something better than their outdated mindsets.
Dutton is most likely to be the next opposition leader, I hope not. As for Morrison I think he will retire from politics in the next few months
What is interesting and this is hopeful for the coalition in the future is the 2PP the coalition is ahead with 3,835,976(35.4%) and ALP with 3,554,410 (32.8%) normally on 2PP its generally 80%+ between them so its not all good news for the ALP Albanese has got a lot of work to do over the next 3 years
Those aren’t 2PP numbers, they’re first preferences. The 2PP is around 52% ALP, but the numbers are still bouncing around a bit.
Labor have an issue with their primary vote, and have done for years, but in a preferential voting system it isn’t too important as they receive the overwhelming proportion of Greens preferences.
A101 wrote:
According to the guardian link they are total votes, obviously that will jump around a fair bit when the final tally is announced
Dutton is most likely to be the next opposition leader, I hope not.
sierrakilo44 wrote:We’ve just had an election where divisive incompetent right wing politics that turns women off has been rejected, and the Liberal’s solution is to install another divisive right wing conservative who turns women off?!
Problem is there’s no one else in the Liberals who can/wants to lead. They could face two or more terms in the wilderness
cpd wrote:They live in their own parallel universe along with Sky News and they just don't get it. If they have two or more terms in the wilderness it might be good for them to figure out why they were tossed out. Then they can slowly rebuild with new people.
Among the races called on Sunday were the Sydney seat of Bennelong, where Labor’s Jerome Laxale is the likely winner over the Liberals’ Simon Kennedy, and the Victorian seat of Deakin where Michael Sukkar has been unseated by Matt Gregg.
Only four seats remain in doubt – Lyons, TAS (ALP), Menzies, VIC (LIB), Moore, WA (LIB) and Sturt, SA (LIB).
cpd wrote:
There is talk of Angus Taylor potentially leading the LNP:
https://amp.9news.com.au/article/46fbb3 ... 1376fb5290
This says they have learned nothing at all.
A look into media ownership would be a good thing too, the media landscape is so one sided it isn’t funny.
Palmer didn’t do well this time:
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-n ... al-success
Spending a huge amount of money and failing to get anything from it.
A101 wrote:SpaceshipDC10 wrote:The fact that Dutton & Morisson will no longer be in governent is for the better. Australia needs something better than their outdated mindsets.
Dutton is most likely to be the next opposition leader, I hope not. As for Morrison I think he will retire from politics in the next few months
SpaceshipDC10 wrote:A101 wrote:SpaceshipDC10 wrote:The fact that Dutton & Morisson will no longer be in governent is for the better. Australia needs something better than their outdated mindsets.
Dutton is most likely to be the next opposition leader, I hope not. As for Morrison I think he will retire from politics in the next few months
Probably although I hope not too, however being in the oppositition is at least not the same as governing.
sierrakilo44 wrote:What this election has shown, with a large swing to the ALP, Greens and Teals is that the Australian people want:
Action on climate change
Action on corruption in politics
Stopping the American style culture war nonsense
More representative politics (the amount of intelligent women replacing old boys club men is staggering.
cpd wrote:What we really need is a very strong 3rd party that is firmly in the centre, further to the centre of politics than LNP and Labor. Various people in the LNP were complaining about a possible end to the two party system, but this is probably the best thing we can have occur.
It will keep the traditional major parties on their toes.
A101 wrote:Cancelling the French boats with only a 5billion expenditure is pretty cheap in my book when you consider we would have less capability at 90Billion and counting with the French
cpd wrote:My voting is all done and has been received by the AEC.
Good to get it out of the way but just a shame the circumstances that brought about that. Wrecked my year completely.
zkojq wrote:A101 wrote:Cancelling the French boats with only a 5billion expenditure is pretty cheap in my book when you consider we would have less capability at 90Billion and counting with the French
The new subs will arrive ten years later than the French subs and cost more - an absolute masterstroke from Scomo! The Collins Class subs are old and need replacing now, not in 2040.
This isn't like planes where a gap caused by cancelling your delayed 787s and ordering some A350s (with later delivery dates) to replace them can be bridged with a call to AerCap of AirLease....
Outsiders hosts Rowan Dean, James Morrow and Rita Panahi were all in agreement.
Dean calling Birmingham a “pompous git” and Morrow went as far as calling Ms Deves’ outcome a victory.
cpd wrote:What we really need is a very strong 3rd party that is firmly in the centre, further to the centre of politics than LNP and Labor. Various people in the LNP were complaining about a possible end to the two party system, but this is probably the best thing we can have occur.
It will keep the traditional major parties on their toes.
I also like the idea from Monique Ryan of a strong independent federal ICAC.sierrakilo44 wrote:We’ve just had an election where divisive incompetent right wing politics that turns women off has been rejected, and the Liberal’s solution is to install another divisive right wing conservative who turns women off?!
Problem is there’s no one else in the Liberals who can/wants to lead. They could face two or more terms in the wilderness
They live in their own parallel universe along with Sky News and they just don't get it. If they have two or more terms in the wilderness it might be good for them to figure out why they were tossed out. Then they can slowly rebuild with new people.
bluecrew wrote:zkojq wrote:A101 wrote:Cancelling the French boats with only a 5billion expenditure is pretty cheap in my book when you consider we would have less capability at 90Billion and counting with the French
The new subs will arrive ten years later than the French subs and cost more - an absolute masterstroke from Scomo! The Collins Class subs are old and need replacing now, not in 2040.
This isn't like planes where a gap caused by cancelling your delayed 787s and ordering some A350s (with later delivery dates) to replace them can be bridged with a call to AerCap of AirLease....
Arguably more capable platform, as it's a nuke boat that was, on paper, upgraded with a potentially better, quieter, cheaper diesel system... but it's never existed in the wild yet. The only issue is the only existing Barracuda has taken 15 years since the keel was laid down, and it's still not in service. How do you know France can actually deliver on the export contract in time? Significant engineering hurdles ahead, chasing the export contracts, but even for the domestic market is has taken forever.
Would have potentially been a better deal if the US had also offered to transfer some older Los Angeles class SSNs or provide export versions of the Virginia to Australia instead of hoping that the domestic shipbuilding industry can produce a reasonably capable first nuclear sub. Electric Boat knows how to make a sub.