on 02-03-2013 02:12 PM
Another politically disastrous misstep from Miss Gillard. Another condescending girly giggling head patting stunt.
The Rooty Hill sleepover should have been rejected immediately.
Voters know the Prime Minister doesn't need to stay locally. It is cringeworthy to see such a blatant attempt at ingratiation. It is patronising, a waste of government money, and puts the lie to Gillard's own claim to be governing rather than campaigning.
Abbott gets away with a stunt a day because it is what we expect of opposition leaders, who are desperate to capture attention. He carries it off with characteristic blokeyness, but the price he pays is always looking like, well, an opposition leader.
One of the few advantages Gillard still has is the authority that comes with office - the opportunity to immerse herself in national tasks more important than media stunts, to demand attention, and the ability to summon the media to the prime ministerial courtyard or Kirribilli House.
The Rooty Hill sleepover sacrifices this advantage. "Here I am," it says, "I am one of you." But, of course, she can't be. Gillard has to get back into the big white car and return to her rarefied atmosphere. For a while at least.
After Real Julia, knitting Julia, full-forward Julia, and anti-misogynist Julia, Rooty Hill Julia won't rub. The trouble with authenticity is, it is difficult to fake.
CHRIS KENNY From:The Australian March 02, 201312:00AM
on 07-03-2013 06:37 PM
Looks like Ms Gillard is taking off early. So she spent 3 nights & 3 &1/2 days in the West & didn't do one shopping centre. Doesn't sound like a week to me, doesn't sound like she even met any people that weren't already lined up & vetted.
I wonder if anybody in the west has changed their mind about getting rid of Labor ? I do know that she has offended nearly everybody who is a Westie, singling them out for the poor factor & also lying about gun crime or did not know her facts, one or the other.
She can scamper off back to Kirribilli now, she's safe from the madding crowds, doesn't have to be afraid anymore of the nasty Westies.
I heard she was mobbed by fans, poor thing 😄
on 07-03-2013 06:43 PM
Yes she was, all those people pushing and shoving to shake her hand woohoo.
on 08-03-2013 01:58 AM
on 08-03-2013 09:17 AM
'ere's one of abbott on a walkabout
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0pFJPrU5gc
watamoron
I agree with you (finally) that the wacko in the white van is in your words "watamoron"
I am glad that you see that
on 08-03-2013 11:25 AM
one can almost 'ear abbott mutterin'
"ah, well hit happens"
on 08-03-2013 03:11 PM
[/quote]donnashuggy
I heard she was mobbed by fans, poor thing 😄
[/quote].
It was another "SET PIECE" a government funded jobs expo, So yes they are going to be grateful for the money & time spent (not by the attendees) but it still wasn't a walk through of any Mall or club. She & her minders went to extreme lengths to avoid the "real people" of the West.
If she's scared to walk among the real people of Australia how can she know what the real people of this country want or deserve in an election year.
Gunna be a long 6 months for her.
The distortion of reality to satisfy the short term political leanings of some on here is ludicrous.
on 10-03-2013 05:08 PM
mmmm i wonder what abbots views on gay marriage are???
I wonder what his official policy on gay marriage is?
I am not asking weather he supports gay popele (clearly he had to eat his own words re his sister, BUT 'apparently' the monk does not support gay marriage
How many in the community will this have an impact on, gay, friends of gay, family of gay people
on 10-03-2013 10:09 PM
reckons he's done a u-turn (flipped), and changed his views on things he's said previously .
like this, mebbe
"The only thing I wouldn't do is sell my arse - but I'd have to give serious thought to it"
B-)
on 11-03-2013 08:06 AM
Voters fail Prime Minister Julia Gillard's western Sydney sleepover
JULIA Gillard's western Sydney experiment has been declared a political disaster by voters with the Prime Minister failing to convince them she would govern in their interests.
In the first poll of Ms Gillard's five-day sleepover at Rooty Hill last week, 41 per cent of people now believe Tony Abbott would do more to help residents of Sydney's west compared to just 32 per cent for Ms Gillard.
The results confirm Labor strategists' fears, that the mini-campaign may have done more harm than good despite a host of policy announcements, as sources revealed that Ms Gillard was bracing for a potential move on her leadership this week.
Talk of a move against Ms Gillard escalated last night in the wake of the disastrous Western Australia election result, with key backers of Kevin Rudd now arguing that she needed to be replaced to rescue the ALP nationally.
Sources close to Ms Gillard confirmed she had been trying to fortify her leadership over the weekend, with MPs returning to Canberra tomorrow for two weeks.
Her office was yesterday forced to pull Defence Minister Stephen Smith into line after he blamed the unpopularity of the Gillard government for much of the 7 per cent swing against Labor in the WA election on Saturday.
His comments were seized upon by caucus members as a signal that even her most senior loyalists were softening on Ms Gillard's leadership.
"She is definitely preparing for the potential for something to happen this week," said one senior Gillard supporter.
"We have our helmets on."
The failure of the western Sydney stunt to lift support in vital marginal seats was confirmed in the Galaxy poll and cited by several MPs as a "final straw" for the Prime Minister.
When asked who would do more to help people in western Sydney, 41 per cent of 1010 people polled nationally nominated Mr Abbott, while only 32 per cent said Ms Gillard. But 27 per cent were undecided.
The exclusive Galaxy poll also confirmed a 3 per cent drop in Labor's primary vote from 35 per cent to 32 per cent.
But it also revealed that 59 per cent of voters now believed Mr Abbott was ready to govern.
"Julia Gillard's tour of Sydney's western suburbs has done little to bolster support for the party," Galaxy CEO David Briggs said.
Ms Gillard's intervention in western Sydney, considered now to be the key election battleground with up to six seats at risk of being lost for Labor, was viewed by many MPs as an attempt to shore up support among NSW MPs, the majority of whom now have shifted behind a return to Mr Rudd.
"I think western Sydney was more of an issue (than WA)," one local MP said.
"It is a bit like calling the election - it never made sense in the first place. The longer it has gone on, the worse it looks."
Mr Rudd, however, has privately repeated his warnings that he had no intention of challenging Ms Gillard, leaving them with no other alternative than to convince a delegation of senior ministers to ask her to stand down.
Senior factional powerbrokers rubbished reports that they had been canvassing options to tap Ms Gillard on the shoulder.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/voters-fail-prime-minister-julia-gillards-western-sydney-sleepover/story-e6freuy9-1226594302836
on 11-03-2013 08:41 AM
I hope she stays so she is shown up for the failure she is, the failure of Labor & the failure of Labor policies.
Anyone watch Agenda on Sunday? Two failed Labor has beens going at each other. It was unedifying to watch, so if this is what they are doing in public, on TV you can only imagine what's going on behind closed doors.
The failure of the Rooty Hill sleepover, the failure of Labor to even lift their vote in WA, & the disastrous poll from Galaxy seeing them drop back to 32% & the next News Poll coming out Tuesday.
The failure of the Greens vote, the people now see them for what they are, is another factor in the Sept election. The preferences that propped Labor up at the last election won't be there this time, there will be preferences but not the numbers to shore up Labor that they will need this time.
The independants will be gone so Labor won't be able to snach victory from the defeat they sufferred last time.
The stars are aligning, the mood has shifted, the voters are angry & impatient, the Ides of March is here.