on 08-02-2014 05:36 PM
on 08-02-2014 10:42 PM
Well, what is it, Donna?
Lets have something exciting to debate about.
Erica
on 08-02-2014 10:45 PM
08-02-2014 10:54 PM - edited 08-02-2014 10:55 PM
@lind9650 wrote:
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Here we go again. Donnas favourite subject, but as much as I like and look I still can not find a suitable candidate as Prime Minister of Australia from either party.
Erica
That's OK, because unless you live in that suitable candidates electorate you won't get to vote for the next PM anyway. Do you live in Bills electorate?
on 08-02-2014 11:02 PM
on 08-02-2014 11:04 PM
on 08-02-2014 11:17 PM
@spotweldersfriend wrote:
Only a fool would live in Queensland. I know because I live there:-(
Is that why I love Queensland? Can't wait for end of May and escape the miserable cold in Victoria.
Maybe I'll run into you one day, Spot.
Erica
on 08-02-2014 11:26 PM
on 08-02-2014 11:27 PM
on 08-02-2014 11:32 PM
on 09-02-2014 07:54 AM
"Labor is favourite to win in Griffith"
I guess not, lol
Shorten misses the boost he needed in Griffith before Parliament
LABOR may have held Griffith, but the byelection result is hardly a big win for Bill Shorten.
The Opposition Leader needed a convincing victory in Kevin Rudd's seat with Parliament kicking off for the year this Tuesday. He didn't get it.
Despite history telling us Australians like to kick the government of the day at byelections, Bill Glasson scored a swing to the Liberal National Party in both the primary and two-party preferred vote.
Glasson had a few things in his favour. Rudd took with him a strong personal vote that was matched by the local popularity of the LNP candidate after almost 14 months of campaigning before and after his first tilt at the seat in last year's general election.
Labor's candidate Terri Butler might have been comparatively unknown, but she had the benefit of a 6 per cent margin, a seemingly limitless campaign budget and the Abbott government, which was 5 per cent down in Newspoll at end of last year.
Labor framed the byelection as a referendum on Tony Abbott's government, and the looming budget cuts that will follow the Commission of Audit.
As far as referendums go, it didn't get up.
Cuts have been severe in Queensland under Campbell Newman, with 14,000 public servants axed last year. But the state economy is turning around and there is net job growth.
Shorten might put the swing towards the LNP as the ``Glasson factor'', and there might be some truth in that.
But equally, Labor should have done much better.
It needs big wins in a seat like Griffith - one of its safest in Queensland - if the opposition can ever hope to pick up the six or seven it needs north of the Tweed River to win government.
And on the counting so far, it isn't anywhere near that.
Still basing our campaign on the other's negatives instead of coming up with some positives of your own? You'd think they'd have learned by now tsk tsk tsk.
bbl