POLICE and teachers are in open revolt against the State Government over wages.
Teachers are threatening to strike after Premier
Ted Baillieu reneged on his promise
to make them Australia's best-paid.
Police, who also threaten strike action, are running a television campaign that lampoons Mr Baillieu and his ministers as circus clowns.
In a series of Monty Pythonesque ads, Mr Baillieu, Deputy Premier Peter Ryan and Attorney-General Robert Clark are portrayed as
a do-nothing, untrustworthy government.
The ads go to air on Sunday night.
The Police Association has $1 million to bankroll its fight for better pay and conditions.
The Government's offer of a 2.5 per cent pay rise has been rejected out of hand by both police and teachers.
The Police Association says the government offer is the equivalent of 65c an hour and has jeopardised the Coalition's election pledge to hire 1700 police and 940 protective service officers in the next four years.
The association's executive has begun planning rolling industrial action by its 11,500 members in June.
The most recent Productivity Commission report shows the State Government's spending on police is the lowest in the country, and that the state has the fewest officers per head of population.
The Australian Education Union Council voted unanimously to reject the Government's pay offer.
It wants a 30 per cent rise over three years for Victoria's 45,000 primary and secondary teachers, which would cost about $1.3 billion.
The AEU said Mr Baillieu's decision to renege on his election promise was "inflammatory and
an extreme act of bad faith".
"Baillieu's previous commitment to immediately lift the pay of teachers didn't even last 100 days," AEU Victorian president Mary Bluett said.
The Government would need to give Victoria's teachers an 8 per cent pay rise to meet its election promise.