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To sum up The Baillieu Government so far its clear to see that ~ All their promises disappeared from their website immediately after the election ~ this thread shows the reason as to why !
Hmmmmmm, remind you of anything??
KEVIN Rudd is yet to deliver on dozens of election commitments, leaving a trail of backflips and broken promises as he prepares to fight for a second term.
A Herald Sun analysis of Labor's 2007 election commitments reveal many have been quietly axed or are far from being met.
The Prime Minister apologised to the Stolen Generations and signed the Kyoto Protocol, but just one of 2650 promised trades training centres will accept students this semester.
Of 260 childcare centres he pledged would be built in schools and TAFES, only one has opened its doors.
And just two of Labor's 31 promised GP Super Clinics are fully operational.
Promised Healthy Kids Checks have failed to make an impact on preschooler health, with GPs seeing just 62,823 children so far.
Plans to attract retired nurses back into hospitals have also bombed, with just 752 accepting a $6000 return-to-work bonus. Labor hoped 7750 would take up the offer.
And 52 of a promised 2500 new aged care beds have been opened within two years.
Labor's election policies have been removed from the ALP website, but a copy of the website as it was on election day has been preserved by the National Library of Australia.
Promised A-E grading of childcare centres, listed on the site, has been dumped.
A replacement grading system will use terms such as "unsatisfactory", "operating level" and "national quality standard" to assess childcare standards.
The much-vaunted "education revolution" is taking its time putting computers on desks - only 28 per cent of promised computers have been delivered halfway into a four-year program.
The Government's biggest broken promise was largely outside its control as it pushed the Budget into deficit to fight-off recession.
Other big ticket promises such as Grocerywatch and Fuelwatch have fallen by the wayside, while the Government is yet to take Japan to court to save the whales