Thecornershop

joined 2 years ago
[–] Thecornershop@lemmy.world 6 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Wow, this should be celebrated, held up as one of the crowning achievements of Australian democracy and political life. It's a shame that I'm learning of this here on Lemmy.

[–] Thecornershop@lemmy.world 6 points 6 months ago

I've often wondered if there is more to it that is classified or whatever. Albo was not a fan of it, then got a briefing and very quickly signed onto it without any public or even party debate. That stood out to me at the time, and has everytime it comes up since.

[–] Thecornershop@lemmy.world 1 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I don't see many issues that the nationals and Labour align on the the greens or liberals don't, maybe threading the needle on land access issues that satisfy farmers, in that they don't hand land over to resources companies or lock it up in protected parks? But I don't see that as significant enough to justify the split.

It just feels like all tactics and no strategy, at the meta level they have to be in coalition to form government in the medium term. I could see a liberal party moderate resurgence over a longer horizon by going it alone, but I just don't think tjat their significant funders actually care or would tolerate that, they just want to maintain the current lasse faire regulatory system that allow them to rip cash out of the ground and pockets of Australian consumers in the short term.

[–] Thecornershop@lemmy.world 2 points 7 months ago (3 children)

Surely they will reunite, it's political death for both parties if they don't. It gets significantly more difficult once the shadow ministries are handed out. They have to do it now or face aninternal riot.

[–] Thecornershop@lemmy.world 4 points 8 months ago (1 children)

I'd like to see a comparison between labor and coalition governments, if 66% is the average across government and this one achieved 70% and the Gillard/Rudd one "similar levels" then I assume the Coalition ones statistically break more promises.

It would be good to see the actual results though, as it might show that both parties are in fact not the same after all.

[–] Thecornershop@lemmy.world 4 points 8 months ago (1 children)

I had a huge house party back in the late 90s when at uni. Filled the bathtub with ice, bought 4 cases of the cheapest beer I could get to make sure people didn't go without even though it was byo. Party was huge. Band in backyard, cops coming, fence pailing going in the fire huge. About 3am we ran out of beer and so it wound down and everyone crashed out or went home.

Got up in the morning and there was at least two cases worth of this beer still in the tub. Went out back to pick up all the empties and almost every opened can of this beer was still almost full but had been abandoned.

This beer was so utterly bad that a bunch of rowdy drunk brike uni students wouldn't even drink it!

That beer was Tasman Bitter.

[–] Thecornershop@lemmy.world 6 points 9 months ago

The coalition literally does this every election. "Trust us, we're better economic managers" is all they say. No specifics, then when they win they gut services used by people they don't like, aka health, education and welfare services.

Never forget the 2014 liberal budget.