mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
I was predicting either a July or December election which would be why the forum loons jumped on the fact I said December and not December 2015 - as if there was an alternative interpretation.
December 2015 and December 2016 are both valid months in which the next election can be called.
mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
The difference between Victoria and the Federal sphere is that Shorten is arguably the worst labor leader of all time leading a very low quality front bench and hamstrung with guaranteed vote-losing policies such as a new Carbon Tax and their rather obvious wishy-washy Boat People policy.
That's a very biased assessment. Shorten was smashing Abbott in the polls and Turnbull has only managed to draw even. If Shorten was a bad leader his party would not have been able to do this.
mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
When the polls hit 49/51 some months ago there was a lot of excitement in Liberal circles (at least in Sydney and in my branch) because everyone knew that in an actual election we could bump our polls at least 2% very quickly in a campaign. Or more.
Liberal party circlejerking in action. What happened since then? The polls blew out and Abbott got knifed.
mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
Shorten is a horrid communicator and generally loathed by everyone including labor people
Yet he totally OWNED Abbott. Shorten must have something going for him if he was able to force the Liberals to knife their PM.
mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
This is not an Andrews Opposition. This is the weakest and most compromised labor opposition in many decades. It was privately assessed that evenAbbott could beat them from 48-52 down.
Weasel words ... you're just lying here. If this were true, why was Abbott sacked?
mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
Turnbull would eat Shorten alive from there, except he would be starting the other way - around 52-48.
There hasn't been a 52-48 poll yet with the Coalition in front.
mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
Yes, it is early days yet, but the honeymoon bounce is more than mere sugar-rush as some have stated.
Wishful thinking! Turnbull has already been a disappointment by not repudiating the Abbott government's more unpopular policies. If you think policies have no influence on the polls, you're deluding yourself.
mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
It has long been acknowledged (if not openly) that there were a lot of people just looking for a reason to dump Labor and Tony was an impediment to that decision.
More weasel words.
mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
Now he is gone, some have already jumped over and we believe privately that there are a great number more waiting to jump still. All Turnbull has to do is to do well and not stuff up and there are droves of labor voters ready to move.
Geez you can spew crap at times. Do you really think policies have no influence on voters?
Something that's actually grounded in reality: It's the honeymoon period after a change of leader when people are hopeful. As the new leader fails to meet everyone's expectations, their polling ALWAYS declines by a few points. I expect Turnbull's polling to follow a similar trajectory to the Victorian Liberals after they changed leader in 2013 - a honeymoon period of a few months, followed by a steady decline to an election-losing position. Labor will be back to 52-48 by Christmas.
Turnbull has recorded low net approval before, when he was Opposition leader in 2009. There's nothing to suggest he won't do so again.
mariacostel wrote on Sep 18
th, 2015 at 4:30pm:
51/49 is the best Labor will see this term.
A very bold assessment considering that there's already been a 50-50 poll in the honeymoon period.