badquinton304
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I couldn't care less who wins the state election. O'Farrell is hopeless so is Rees, I really don't think the liberals will do any better than labor.
badquinton304 said:I couldn't care less who wins the state election. O'Farrell is hopeless so is Rees, I really don't think the liberals will do any better than labor.
Lentern said:You see the temptation for me is that oppositions with it in the bag tend not to rock the boat, so having spent a whole campaign converting policy into platituds they change very little once in government, hence I can't imagine O'farrell doing anything exciting for NSW anyway. So it would be fun to be part of the team that won the unwinnable. Plus what is O'farrell actually going to do to improve NSW anyway? It is a state with neglected infrastructure and a debt, a coalition government might curtail the debt but aren't going to do anything for infrastructure.
Actually the longer a government has been in power particularly after 2 terms then the higher probability that the public will vote them out. With Rees being a fucking embarrasment, at this point in time it is most probable that the Liberals will win the next election and I do not really care who wins because no matter what they promise no one will have the funds to deliver.chicky_pie said:How could you predict that? Liberals haven't been in power for over 10 years, now go back to your cave and come out when it's 2011 and vote LIBERAL.
Are those numbers at the beginning the percentage increase on the Green's previous rates of support, or is that their current share of the popular vote?Trefoil said:Greens did stunningly this year. Massive support increases and some resonating Senate votes and positions (mostly at Rudd's expense - e.g. climate change and Internet filtering). Rough support levels based on state election results, polls, etc:
ACT: 20%+
Tas: 20%+
NSW: 14%
Vic: 14%
SA: 12%
WA: 12%
QLD: 8%
NT: N/A, between 10% and 20%.
Not bad considering they had single digit support in most states a year ago. They even increased in QLD.
House seats liable to fall to the Greens next election: Balmain, Coogee, Heffron, Marrickville in NSW. And I don't have much data on the other states, but the seats of Maya and Melbourne look very likely to go green.
They should gain 6 or more House seats next federal election, 4 minimum.
On the Senate side, the Greens look like they'll reach quota in a bunch of states next election, most on primary votes alone this time. Those states are: Tasmania, NSW, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia. They'll gain a seat in Queensland if they get preferences from Labour or Liberals. They won't gain any seats in ACT and NT because territories have few Senate seats.
So, with the 3 Senate seats from the 2007 election, that looks like 8 or 9 Senate seats for the Greens by 2011, and a definite 12 Senate seats by 2014.
Parliament should get very interesting next decade.
Sate liberals "manage the economy" roughly means maintain a budget surplus which they achieved by flogging government assetts to gain sums of money at the expense of long term sources of revenue and then wonder why Bob Carr cut funding for basic infrastructure, did no major tax reforming and yet managed to rack up a deficit.chicky_pie said:Liberals have a good reputation when it comes to managing the economy. And how could you say that Barry O'Farrell is not doing anything 'exciting'? If state Liberal party have a lot of money poured into the party, it will be for good use to spread their policies and much more to the mass public, but Labor has the upper hand - they're sucking the Liberal party dry - they have spin doctors, media advisers etc, Barry O'Farrell has little people around him to prep him up. This is why you don't see much media attention to the Liberals, because of Labor.
More so than you can imagine. My aunt is a memberof the greens and ran in a safe liberal seat at the last election, for a party that talks up "grass roots democracy" If Brown has an idea he's keen on then it pretty much becomes the unanimous position of the Greens. With that being said I have the greastest respect for Brown and I guess it's a bit of the ideal leader is a benevolent dictator theory.Lex152 said:I like the Greens party in principle, and would like to see them develop stronger policy and platforms. With the greens I put a lot of faith in Bob Brown, and when he goes I reckon the greens will have to prove themselves once again.
Yes but I think both labor and green party members would rather not dissapear into obscurity. There is not a policy of any Green party in Australia, state of federal that Bob Brown dissagrees with.Trefoil said:Not really. Bob Brown defines the Greens in the same way Rudd defines Labour.
There are people to replace them. Namely Ludlam and Gillard respectively.
And herein lies Mr Rees best chance. O'farrell ends up rivals with this Baird chap, it becomes clear O'farrell is not going to make it to the election himself but will be buggered if Baird gets it, throws his weight behind someone else who isn't really leadership material, and as unpopular as Rees may be when the opposition is stupid then the electorate decides it's better the devil you know. It's happened twice at federal level, once in 1993 and again in 2004, both times against hopelessly unpopular incumbents.Rafy said:Reshuffle of the NSW Coalition frontbench
Heir apparent promoted
NSW Liberals preparing for power under Barry O'Farrell
I'll increase debt to rebuild the state - Barry O'Farrell
BARRY O'FARRELL says he would be prepared to run a bigger budget deficit, build the dumped north-west and south-west rail links and go ahead with proposals to extend the M4 and M5 motorways if elected.
In an interview with the Herald before yesterday's announcement of his shadow cabinet reshuffle, the NSW Opposition Leader also revealed he would dump the proposal of the Premier, Nathan Rees, to apply differential tolling to Sydney's motorways under which motorists would be charged more in peak hours.
more:
I'll increase debt to rebuild the state - National - smh.com.au
I did say it was likely but not definite, my figure is around 74% likely to win the next election.chicky_pie said:From the whole reshuffle and reading recent articles, it is 100% LIKELY the Liberals will win 2011, no doubt. How many terms would they be in power? Lets just say between 2 - 10 terms