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Di NaMonkey predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs (Read 2866 times)
Dnarever
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Re: Di NaMonkey predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #15 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:25am
 
miketrees wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:11am:
Its not the Greens job to be left wing

its their job to protect the environment.

They have a much better chance working with the Libs


Don't see how working with the environments natural enemy can help anything.
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Re: Di Natale predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #16 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:32am
 
Dnarever wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:25am:
miketrees wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:11am:
Its not the Greens job to be left wing

its their job to protect the environment.

They have a much better chance working with the Libs


Don't see how working with the environments natural enemy can help anything.



Labor just reduced the RET and included burning old growth forests in the RET with the coalition ... bit rich for Labor supporters to point the finger.
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Bam
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Re: Di NaMonkey predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #17 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:18am
 
miketrees wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:04am:
Di Natali seems ok, A Lib Green coalition is probably more likely.

I disagree. On environmental policy - the Greens' core policy platform - the Greens and Liberals are poles apart. This is likely to dissuade the Greens from pursuing any future coalition agreement with the Liberals. It's not the ALP that sabotaged investment renewable energy in this country for more than a year over a manic desire to drag down renewable energy targets for specious reasons. It's not the ALP that has had a leader who has said "climate change is crap".

The Greens also won't consider sharing a coalition with the Nationals for similar reasons, unless the Nationals dump outdated policies like subsidies for fossil fuels and allowing unfettered land clearing.

The ALP have shown more willingness to negotiate on environmental policy with the Greens than the Liberals and this is why the Greens would be likely to consider the ALP before the Liberals in any future coalition agreement. It doesn't mean the Liberals won't be considered, it is simply that the Liberals are less likely to be an attractive coalition option for the Greens.
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Re: Di Natale predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #18 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:27am
 
____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:32am:
Dnarever wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:25am:
miketrees wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:11am:
Its not the Greens job to be left wing

its their job to protect the environment.

They have a much better chance working with the Libs


Don't see how working with the environments natural enemy can help anything.



Labor just reduced the RET and included burning old growth forests in the RET with the coalition ... bit rich for Labor supporters to point the finger.

Labor didn't reduce the RET willingly and it is misleading for you to imply this. The ALP negotiated on the RET for a year to keep it as high as possible. Remember, the ALP are not the current government, and it is the current government that sought to reduce the RET, not the ALP. Why do you not place the blame where it rightly belongs: the Coalition?

If there's a future Labor government they will be very willing to lift the RET again. Shorten has already stated far more ambitious policy goals for renewable energy and emissions reduction than the Coalition's very limp offering. If the Greens sided with the party with a 28% maximum emissions reduction target over the party with a 45% target, the Greens will die quickly like the Democrats did after they sold out over the GST.
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Re: Di Natale predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #19 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am
 
Labor voted with the coalition to reduce RET. No one was holding a gun to Labor's head.

Also Labor claims a number as a target just for headlines and has no idea how they will do it.

The Liberals are currently carrying conservative policies ... in time the progressives in the party will influence Liberal policy and so could out manoeuvre labor on the left.
Ruling something out is fool hardy.

That said, I personally would not like a Greens coalition with either old party.
Replace the bastards, not support the bastards.
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Re: Di NaMonkey predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #20 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 9:17am
 
DiNatale is simply demonstrating how naive his party is. After the last Labor/Greens 'agreement', Labor stated that it was a disaster - which it was. The Greens have no conception of what a coalition is. They want the rewards of power but are completely unwilling to compromise and vote in unity. They want their own way ALL THE TIME as well as the benefits of a coalition.  It will never happen until they learn to compromise.

The ETS fiasco and the entire Gillard government experience will tell labor MPs not to trust them.
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Re: Di Natale predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #21 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 9:18am
 
____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
Labor voted with the coalition to reduce RET. No one was holding a gun to Labor's head.

Incorrect. The Coalition were causing uncertainty in the renewable energy sector (perhaps intentionally) and the sector wanted to end the uncertainty by bringing on a vote. I notice that despite being offered a chance to do so, you have NOT criticised the Coalition's lowering of this target. Why is this? Why do you keep avoiding blaming the Coalition for imposing this target in the first place?

____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
Also Labor claims a number as a target just for headlines and has no idea how they will do it.

Labor has announced a policy that's more ambitious than the Coalition's. Again, you have not criticised the Coalition's policies here.

____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
The Liberals are currently carrying conservative policies ... in time the progressives in the party will influence Liberal policy and so could out manoeuvre labor on the left.

That is wishful thinking. The Liberals have steadily drifted farther to the right since Menzies retired and there's no way in hell the conservative old guard in the Liberal party will give up this hard-won ground without a fight.

You're clearly holding the Liberal party to far lower standards than the ALP, by being sympathetic to them based on what you think "could" happen, yet you dismiss a reasonable ALP policy because it is as yet just a statement of principle made a full year out from an election. Shouldn't you be holding both parties to the same standards?

____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
Ruling something out is fool hardy.

And yet you have done exactly that by dismissing the ALP's policies by claiming they have "no idea how they will do it". It's not an election year and the ALP are not in government. You are a political junkie, you should know the rules of the game by now. The ALP have announced a broad policy proposal a year out from an election to see how well it is received by the electorate. If the policy is well received, the ALP will probably then announce further details, if not, they will repudiate it. Both major parties do this - the Greens too, to a lesser extent - and it is a normal way of advancing debate on policy. For you to dismiss it because there's no detail is disingenuous.

____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
That said, I personally would not like a Greens coalition with either old party.
Replace the bastards, not support the bastards.

A noble goal, but it is unrealistic. A more realistic goal - as demonstrated with green parties around the world - is for the Greens to gain enough seats to form a coalition with the governing party and to influence policy. A party doesn't have to win the most seats to be in government.

Di Natale is being realistic about the Greens' likely fortunes in 15 years to state that a coalition with the ALP is likely. It is a masterstroke to make this statement. It is saying to voters who are choosing between the ALP and Greens that it doesn't matter which you vote for, you will be in government regardless. Such a statement could well increase the Greens' likelihood of winning lower house seats.
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You are not entitled to your opinion. You are only entitled to hold opinions that you can defend through sound, reasoned argument.
 
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Re: Di NaMonkey predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #22 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 9:32am
 
mariacostel wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 9:17am:
DiNatale is simply demonstrating how naive his party is. After the last Labor/Greens 'agreement', Labor stated that it was a disaster - which it was. The Greens have no conception of what a coalition is. They want the rewards of power but are completely unwilling to compromise and vote in unity. They want their own way ALL THE TIME as well as the benefits of a coalition.  It will never happen until they learn to compromise.

The ETS fiasco and the entire Gillard government experience will tell labor MPs not to trust them.

It is extremely naive on your part to dismiss the possibility of an ALP-Greens coalition out of hand based on imperfect early efforts. If this same principle had applied from experiences in the 1920s, the Country party would never have formed a bound coalition with the Liberals or the conservative party of the day. It took 30 years or more for the Country Party and the conservative party of the day to iron out their differences and form a settled coalition. Permanent coalitions take time to be established because trust must be built up between the parties.
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You are not entitled to your opinion. You are only entitled to hold opinions that you can defend through sound, reasoned argument.
 
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Re: Di NaMonkey predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #23 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 9:33am
 
The Greens and Labor already have a defacto coalition anyway.
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Re: Di NaMonkey predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #24 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 9:57am
 
Bam wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 9:18am:
Di Natale is being realistic about the Greens' likely fortunes in 15 years to state that a coalition with the ALP is likely. It is a masterstroke to make this statement. It is saying to voters who are choosing between the ALP and Greens that it doesn't matter which you vote for, you will be in government regardless. Such a statement could well increase the Greens' likelihood of winning lower house seats.


In reality, the electorate has already moved in this direction. The labor primary vote is chronically - and seemingly permanently in the mid-low 30% range, and for quite a while they have been hopelessly reliant on green preferences to maintain the number of seats they hold. So in the mind of the electorate, greens and labor are practically a coalition already.
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Re: Di Natale predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #25 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 10:02am
 
____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:32am:
Dnarever wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:25am:
miketrees wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 7:11am:
Its not the Greens job to be left wing

its their job to protect the environment.

They have a much better chance working with the Libs


Don't see how working with the environments natural enemy can help anything.



Labor just reduced the RET and included burning old growth forests in the RET with the coalition ... bit rich for Labor supporters to point the finger.


While we have a liberal government the RET is a meaningless term, may as well have them pretend to do something.
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Re: Di NaMonkey predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #26 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 10:16am
 
seems to me WALLY is predicting there will be

NO MORE GREENS... Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin..



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Re: Di Natale predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #27 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 10:24am
 
Bam wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 9:18am:
____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
Labor voted with the coalition to reduce RET. No one was holding a gun to Labor's head.

Incorrect. The Coalition were causing uncertainty in the renewable energy sector (perhaps intentionally) and the sector wanted to end the uncertainty by bringing on a vote. I notice that despite being offered a chance to do so, you have NOT criticised the Coalition's lowering of this target. Why is this? Why do you keep avoiding blaming the Coalition for imposing this target in the first place?

____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
Also Labor claims a number as a target just for headlines and has no idea how they will do it.

Labor has announced a policy that's more ambitious than the Coalition's. Again, you have not criticised the Coalition's policies here.

____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
The Liberals are currently carrying conservative policies ... in time the progressives in the party will influence Liberal policy and so could out manoeuvre labor on the left.

That is wishful thinking. The Liberals have steadily drifted farther to the right since Menzies retired and there's no way in hell the conservative old guard in the Liberal party will give up this hard-won ground without a fight.

You're clearly holding the Liberal party to far lower standards than the ALP, by being sympathetic to them based on what you think "could" happen, yet you dismiss a reasonable ALP policy because it is as yet just a statement of principle made a full year out from an election. Shouldn't you be holding both parties to the same standards?

____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
Ruling something out is fool hardy.

And yet you have done exactly that by dismissing the ALP's policies by claiming they have "no idea how they will do it". It's not an election year and the ALP are not in government. You are a political junkie, you should know the rules of the game by now. The ALP have announced a broad policy proposal a year out from an election to see how well it is received by the electorate. If the policy is well received, the ALP will probably then announce further details, if not, they will repudiate it. Both major parties do this - the Greens too, to a lesser extent - and it is a normal way of advancing debate on policy. For you to dismiss it because there's no detail is disingenuous.

____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 8:38am:
That said, I personally would not like a Greens coalition with either old party.
Replace the bastards, not support the bastards.

A noble goal, but it is unrealistic. A more realistic goal - as demonstrated with green parties around the world - is for the Greens to gain enough seats to form a coalition with the governing party and to influence policy. A party doesn't have to win the most seats to be in government.

Di Natale is being realistic about the Greens' likely fortunes in 15 years to state that a coalition with the ALP is likely. It is a masterstroke to make this statement. It is saying to voters who are choosing between the ALP and Greens that it doesn't matter which you vote for, you will be in government regardless. Such a statement could well increase the Greens' likelihood of winning lower house seats.



Labor pretends to be a friend of the renewable sector. The coalition are up front on their opposition due to fossil donations to the party.

Labor are being dishonest to try and trick voters.


_/_/_/


Stating a target without policies to attain. And just days before the climate conference.
Labor has no real aim on renewable energy. More trickery.

As bad as the coalition, they are constant in policy. Labor isn't.

/_/_/


The Liberal now being conservative is a political advantage to the Greens in the longer period, in giving Greens more scope.
Labor trying to be all to everyone is just an attempt to be relevant in a changing world.
Longterm the diametrically opposed Greens ~ Conservative is the main game.
Labor sooner or later has to either split, die out, or choose a side.

_/_/_/


The ideals labor will forward are reasonably obvious. Labor is reliant on coal electorates, coal exports, and will want to avoid a fossil fuel campaign against them. They are also trying to work nuclear into Australia's future. Labor will once again fence sit on an issue, rather than take a conservative or progressive side.


_/_/_/


I would rather see the demolition of the older parties and the rise of other parties out of their ashes, as well as new or smaller parties growing. And a shift to a more democratic model along the lines of a MMP or similar.

Coalition with either old party is just keeping the status quo and is against the Greens' revolutionary principles of renewal.



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14% - that low?!

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Re: Di NaMonkey predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #28 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 10:25am
 
cods wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 10:16am:
seems to me WALLY is predicting there will be

NO MORE GREENS... Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin..





Peter Garrett
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Bill 14% is not the alcohol content of that wine. It's your poll number
 
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Maqqa
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14% - that low?!

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Re: Di Natale predicts ALP/Greens coalition in 15yrs
Reply #29 - Dec 7th, 2015 at 10:27am
 
____ wrote on Dec 7th, 2015 at 10:24am:
Labor are being dishonest to try and trick voters.




This is why they are such a good fit for Labor
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Bill 14% is not the alcohol content of that wine. It's your poll number
 
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