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The good times are here as Shorten threat dies (Read 3689 times)
Its time
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #15 - Dec 18th, 2017 at 11:14pm
 
Ok , you have no idea  Grin
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juliar
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #16 - Dec 18th, 2017 at 11:18pm
 
Now LW you should have a quiet lie down until you recover some of your equanimity.
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Its time
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #17 - Dec 18th, 2017 at 11:32pm
 
JuLiar what is a budget deficit ?
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Its time
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #18 - Dec 18th, 2017 at 11:34pm
 
No predictions ( we already know how good yours are  Grin)  facts , what is a budget deficit ?
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juliar
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #19 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 6:51am
 
But LW as a Lefty you would already be well acquainted with Labor's shocking debt.

When the result was so blindingly obvious I did not think it was necessary to state the obvious.

Now how about predicting the results of the upcoming Labor citizenship shonkies by elections ?

And parachuting Eddie Obeid's girl into Mr Has Been's Senate seat has caught on a tree branch as Mr Has Been has not actually resigned and some union joker has challenged.

Is Bull S. getting nervious about Mr Has Been and/or Eddie Obeid's girl challenging him for the Labor top job ?

The revitalized Libs are now a dead cert to win the big one.
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Bam
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #20 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:04am
 
juliar wrote on Dec 18th, 2017 at 11:18pm:
Now LW you should have a quiet lie down until you recover some of your equanimity.

You should delete your account.
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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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Its time
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #21 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:05am
 
Always good to start the day with some fantasy from the resident loon  Cheesy
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Bam
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #22 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:06am
 
Its time wrote on Dec 18th, 2017 at 2:15pm:
Good times  Undecided

Has good government finally started ?

Good government is coming in 2019 when Shorten becomes PM.
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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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Its time
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #23 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:15am
 
Bam wrote on Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:06am:
Its time wrote on Dec 18th, 2017 at 2:15pm:
Good times  Undecided

Has good government finally started ?

Good government is coming in 2019 when Shorten becomes PM.


Smiley sure is Bam
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philperth2010
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #24 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:25am
 
We should be thanking China not Morrison....If China stop buying our rocks we are stuffed!!!

Angry Angry Angry
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If knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we can solve them.
Isaac Asimov (1920 - 1992)
 
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juliar
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #25 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:31am
 
LW admit it you are enjoying every minute of all this attention you are getting.

What do you think Bull S.'s next stuff up will be ?

Will he refuse to send his citizenship shonkies to the Hi Court and the Poodle will have to do it for him ?

Will his plan to put Eddie Obeid's girl into Mr Has Been's MT Senate seat founder ?

Will FANG the NZ Tooth Fairy trick him into RESTARTING the BOATS ?

Isn't it exciting times especially when you know Oz is safe from Bull S's Socialist insanity ?


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Its time
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #26 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:37am
 
Yes juLiar you seem to follow me all over the forum cutting and posting articles you don't even read that are usually detrimental to your argument  Grin
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cods
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #27 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:39am
 
philperth2010 wrote on Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:25am:
We should be thanking China not Morrison....If China stop buying our rocks we are stuffed!!!

Angry Angry Angry



that is what the right was saying   during the krudd/gillard years

instead the left kept telling us how bad everything was in oz....and how if we didnt have the stimuli we would have sunk on the spot...instead of 6 years later..... Roll Eyes

the left have never given China the credit... in fact  they have gone overboard to stop all mining...

without putting a replacement into action ..... first..
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cods
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #28 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:43am
 
Its time wrote on Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:37am:
Yes juLiar you seem to follow me all over the forum cutting and posting articles you don't even read that are usually detrimental to your argument  Grin

Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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juliar
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Re: The good times are here as Shorten threat dies
Reply #29 - Dec 19th, 2017 at 7:50am
 
Even Labor is admitting Bull S. appearing as a toxic pariah in Bennelong lost Bennelong.



Labor facing as many as 4 byelections in 2018 after Bennelong win restores Turnbull majority
By James Massola17 December 2017 - 02:40pm

Labor may have to fight as many as 4 more byelections in early 2018, after John Alexander's victory in the crucial Bennelong byelection restored Malcolm Turnbull's one-seat majority.

The victory in Bennelong also makes it more likely Mr Turnbull will reshuffle his front bench later this week, though after the release of the mid-year budget update on Monday that will show the federal deficit will be $23 billion lower than forecast by 2021.

The Turnbull government has retained its one-seat majority after John Alexander won back the Sydney seat of Bennelong, despite a swing against him.

Lower house MP David Feeney was referred to the High Court over his possible dual UK-Australian citizenship earlier this month. Now that the government has its one-seat majority in Parliament again, it has the numbers to refer Labor MPs Justine Keay, Susan Lamb and Josh Wilson to the court.

NXT MP Rebekha Sharkie is in a similar situation, which would mean a total of five referrals could be made to the court. If the court finds the MPs were not eligible to be elected because of their dual citizenship, byelections would then be held.

Three Labor and NXT MPs had not received confirmation of their renunciation of their UK citizenship when nominations closed for the 2016 election, though the ALP has argued their members took all "reasonable steps" to renounce UK citizenship and therefore should be in the clear.

The victory in Bennelong, which follows a byelection win for deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce two weeks ago, the successful legalisation of same-sex marriage and the recent resignation of Labor senator Sam Dastyari, caps a strong end to what has been a mostly difficult year for Mr Turnbull.

Conversely, Opposition Leader Bill Shorten will start 2018 on the back foot if Labor has to fight to hold four of its seats; Mr Feeney's seat of Batman, in Melbourne, is at particular risk of going to the Greens, especially as the Coalition is unlikely to stand a candidate.

A senior Labor MP said the relatively small swing of about five per cent to Labor's Kristina Keneally was "a terrible result, we poured a lot of resources into it and it's an ordinary outcome".
"Bill was a big negative in Bennelong but he wouldn't stay away."

On Sunday, Mr Turnbull strongly hinted the citizenship saga, which has seen a swag of MPs and senators disqualified and which began in July, will drag on into the new year.
"The Labor Party at this stage, even though they have two people in the House of Representatives who are UK citizens now, neither of them have stepped down, and the risk of by-elections next year falls clearly on the Labor side."

The government's chief parliamentary tactician, Christopher Pyne, went further and confirmed the referrals were on the cards.
"Our first preference is for Bill Shorten to do the right thing and refer his own MPs. In the absence of that, we won't be complicit in a Shorten protection racket. If necessary, we will refer any MP with a serious case to answer," he told Fairfax Media.

"The MPs for Longman [Ms Lamb], Braddon [Ms Keay] and Fremantle [Mr Wilson] have all admitted they were British citizens when nominations closed for the 2016 election. They have a prima facie case to answer, as does the MP for Mayo [Ms Sharkie]."
In the wake of the Bennelong loss, Labor front bencher Tony Burke said there was "no doubt" the resignation of senator Sam Dastyari had hurt Labor in the Bennelong byelection.

In addition, Mr Burke said the lesson from the byelection was that "the next election will be hard" but that if the swing Labor won in the seat was repeated across the country, "we wouldn't have won Bennelong but we may well have won government".
However, he said, "there are enough people willing to change their votes that with the right work and the right policies, we can get there".
As counting in Bennelong continued on Sunday, with 79.5 per cent of the vote counted Mr Alexander had won 54.78 per cent of the two-party preferred vote, and Labor's star candidate Ms Keneally claimed 45.22 per cent.
That represents a swing of 4.94 per cent to Ms Keneally, a result that is broadly in line with swings that typically occur in byelections in government seats.

In the cabinet reshuffle, the Prime Minister needs to make room for newly-elected Nationals deputy leader Bridget McKenzie in his cabinet, former Special Minister of State Scott Ryan needs to be replaced, while there is a question mark over whether Industry Minister Arthur Sinodinos, who is battling cancer and currently on leave, will continue in his role.
In addition, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton's new department of Home Affairs is expected to begin operating this week, and some MPs expect George Brandis to step down and take up the post of High Commissioner in London - though the Attorney-General has indicated he wants to continue in his job.

https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/politics/federal/labor-facing-as-many-as-four-b...


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