Thursday 2nd of May 2024

scaredy cats

scaredy cats

Too many Coalition frontbenchers are invisible - or worse.

by Amanda Vanstone

NEITHER our Prime Minister nor our Opposition Leader is popular. That shouldn't worry us at all. Governing a country and taking it to a better place is not a popularity contest.

Trying to judge the health or otherwise of our democracy on the sole criterion of the popularity of our leaders is a folly. The ingredients for a strong and vibrant democracy go way beyond the characteristics of our leaders. Leaders are, of course, important. But is their popularity important?

Take John Howard as an example. Plenty of people voted for him who might have answered the question ''Do you like him?'' with an embarrassed air of ambivalence if not negativity.

Respect is far more important than popularity. Howard had been told so many times that he was unelectable. So when he reminded his party room that no one is unelectable, it was a personal and potent message. Perhaps the clarity of that message is why his biography is called Lazarus Rising.

In popularity stakes, whoever is prime minister has nearly all the advantages over the opposition leader. The keys of office bring with them a mantle of superiority. Power, status and endless announcements about government spending are theirs without asking. International meetings enable them to rub shoulders with world leaders and bask in some sort of reflected glory.
These opportunities are considered important by them.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/abbotts-big-problem-is-not-his-unpopularity-but-his-team-20120902-2588g.html#ixzz25LpPzRRU

Then Amanda goes on about blah blah blah about Labor, etc... and how the munsters of an (god forbid — thank god I am an atheist) Abbott led government would be hunted like the scaredy cats they are... My point here is why are they scaredy cats? Every time they open their traps, they fall in it... So they keep their mouth shut because they don't have a leg to stand on, not even when trying to rehash some old mash about Peter Slipper and Thomson... THAT'S ALL FOLKS... It seems there is a blank space between their ears... More of the Liberal (conservatives) shadow munsters gallery to come in this debate... See unlike themselves, I have decided to promote them up front...

 

scaredy cats 2

scaredy cats 2

advisors to the scaredy cats...

ginaplamer

scaredy cats 3

bronwyn

scaredy cats 4

flint

scaredy cats 5

jonespell

scaredy cats 6

robb

they don't know what they're doing...

''Some people are freelancing...They do not speak for the Coalition. They don't even speak for the National Party or the Liberal Party,'' a frustrated Mr Hockey said this week, pointedly adding that frontbenchers had a ''responsibility'' to be part of the team.
But Mr Abbott today said Mr Joyce was ''a local'' who lived very near to Cubbie Station.
''I can understand why Barnaby and local people feel strongly about this,'' Mr Abbott said.
One senior Liberal said there was a lot of frustration about the special rules for Mr Joyce.

''Everyone is talking about it..no one can understand how he gets away with it. But he always does.''
''Tony seems to treat Barnaby with kid gloves,'' said another.

One senior Liberal insisted Mr Abbott had ''repeatedly'' spoken to Mr Joyce, ''but he just ignores him.''
Asked if Mr Abbott had tried to pull Mr Joyce into line his spokesman said the Coalition leader ''talked to his colleagues all of the time''.
Normal rules of shadow cabinet solidarity rules still apply to other Coalition frontbenchers. Malcolm Turnbull, for instance, was condemned for even implicit criticism of the opposition's climate change policy. Several frontbenchers will be forced to vote against the gay marriage bills currently before the Parliament, and against their privately-held views, because Mr Abbott has refused a conscience vote.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/solidarity-rule-doesnt-apply-to-joyce-angry-coalition-mps-20120905-25dx7.html#ixzz25ZGbcoAA

malcolm is awakening...

 

Former Liberal leader Malcolm Turnbull has taken a swipe at his own party's tactics in Question Time, saying Australians have come to see the Federal Parliament as "nothing more than a forum for abuse, catcalling and spin".

Mr Turnbull made the comments in a wide-ranging speech on "Republican virtues" at the University of Western Australia last night.

He said the Opposition's questions for the past two years have been almost entirely focused on people smuggling and the carbon tax, and questioned whether they were the only important issues facing Australia.

"If you love your country, have an interest in politics or policy, and care deeply about our nation’s future, there is nothing more certain to arouse your fury and invite your contempt than listening to an entire House of Representatives Question Time," he said.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-09-06/turnbull-takes-a-swipe-at-coalition-tactics/4245598?WT.svl=news0

About time... Kick Abbott in the budgies, Malcolm... see toon from top down... And don't forget that Abbott is a committed Royalist — a catholic swearing allegiance to the anglican queen... Go figure...

 

treating the symptom, rather than the problem ....

Hi Gus.

Whilst the majority of Australians would doubtless share Malcolm Turnbull’s view that there is a ‘deficit of trust’ in Australian public life, his call for the modification of our political system to mirror that of the UK is hardly the solution.

Only this week, the Independent published a report from the organisation, YouGov, on the rise in disillusionment of the British electorate & the corresponding collapse in public trust, occasioned by the chronic propensity of politicians to lie, deceive, cheat, obfuscate & double-deal.

What Malcolm & his ilk on all sides of politics can’t accept is that the problem is not the design of ‘the system’ but rather the attitudes & behaviour of its operators.

As long as we let our leaders believe that being clever is better than being good & that the only real concern that anyone should have about committing a crime is to ensure that they don’t get caught, we will all be accomplices to, as well as victims of, their crimes.

Cheers,

John.

yes john...

Yes John...

I blame the Merde-och press and Tony Abbott for everything that rots...

It's too late for me to enter politics and between you, me and an Obeid lamppost, I've made too many mistakes while being too human at times... Or was I being silly, idiotic or sociopathic? I know that all sides of politics have rotters and clowns in them but I prefer to point the finger at the really really rotten clowns... Meanwhile I hope that pigs can fly the day politicians become "good" and be accepted as such by a rotten media... The art of politics is not very scientific and relies on various amount of bullshit in order to achieve something... Back to where I started:

I blame the Merde-och press and Tony Abbott for everything that rots...

 

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I misunderstood Malcolm, poor baby:

In his lecture delivered last night, Malcolm Turnbull does not single out Tony Abbott for criticism. Indeed, at one stage he praised Abbott's determination to "make very few promises before the next election and only to make ones he knows he can keep", and contrasts this with Julia Gillard's broken promise on the carbon tax.

As somebody who attends every question time, anecdotally, it is safe to say that at least 80 per cent, even more, of opposition questions over the past 18 months would have been on the carbon tax 

He used Gillard as an example of why politics was suffering a deficit of trust.
Turnbull raised another example on his blog this morning:
"I made no criticism of Tony Abbott – indeed, defended him as having been a victim of 'gotcha' politics, where a remark is taken out of context and represented as saying something not intended – the example where a perfectly innocuous statement about school funding was seized on by the government as evidence of an intention to slash funding to public schools."
Having said that, there is no avoiding the suggestion that much of Turnbull's speech was directed as much at his own side as the government, given he was unloading on the state of political discourse generally, the decline of honesty, and the preponderance of spin, exaggeration and lies.

In politics, it takes two to tango.



Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/a-plague-on-both-sides-of-the-house-20120906-25fqs.html#ixzz25eQ8A2PT

 

I still blame the Merde-och press and Tony Abbott for everything that rots...