freediver wrote on Oct 22
nd, 2007 at 6:51pm:
Poor people are more prepared to vote conservative and wealthy people are more prepared to vote for the left.
Do you have any stats to back this up?
Another reason for this transfer is the increased concentration of wealth amongst educated people.
Are you tallking comparitivey, or do you mean we are all wealthier and more educated? If you are talking comparitively, I think the trend is in the opposite direction.
The only real trend I see is the 'intellectuals' turning away from the coalition, because of the coalition's stifling of CSIRO scientists on climate change, their clampdown on FOI laws, use of the term 'latte sipping', general negative attitude towards academics etc. The last two are more from supporters of the coalition, but it still hurt them just as much.
Here's an example. Since when did all Uni students, or all aboriginies, have the same opinion? He is trying to divide the community.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Aborigines-dont-want-apology-Brough/2007/10/22/1192940978971.html
University students may want the government to formally apologise to indigenous people but Aborigines do not, Indigenous Affairs Minister Mal Brough says.
These are only my suspicions based on observations that I have made. Think about it. Who do the parties increasingly target? the Liberals try to pander to the working class with their tax cuts and dog-whistle politics while Labor attempts to appeal to the wealthy by ditching the Union movement and by becoming service providers rather than a political party.
Also look at the seats. Dobell, Hughes, Cook and Lindsay in NSW, La Trobe, Casey, Corangamite and McEwan in Vic., Blair, Moreton, Petrie, Bonner and Bowman in Qld. and Cowan, Swan, Hasluck and Canning in WA amongst others. All these seats are working class seats, all seats that would traditionally be Labor, yet they are either safe or marginal Liberal.
Check out the link for info on North Sydney, the achetypal kind of seat I think will go Labor sooner or later.
http://psephos.adam-carr.net/countries/a/australia/commentary2.shtml