Forum

 
  Back to OzPolitic.com   Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register
  Forum Home Album HelpSearch Recent Rules LoginRegister  
 

Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print
Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament? (Read 160 times)
whiteknight
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 8279
melbourne
Gender: male
Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Jan 10th, 2025 at 4:29pm
 
Greens: fired up and ready to go as election year kicks off   Smiley
2025-01-06
greens.org.au
The Australian Greens have said they are “ready to go” whenever the Prime Minister decides to call the election.

With the Prime Minister visiting marginal seats in several states this week, the Greens say the party will put environment and climate squarely on the election agenda.

To help alleviate the skyrocketing cost-of-living, the Greens will also push a minority Labor Government to add dental into Medicare so people across the country can afford to get basic and essential healthcare.

Quotes attributable to Acting Leader of the Australian Greens, Senator Sarah Hanson-Young:
“Whenever the Prime Minister decides to call the election, the Greens are fired up and ready to go.

“Poll after poll shows we are heading towards a power-sharing parliament after the next election.   Smiley

“The Greens have been clear that if this happens, we’ll push Labor to stop approving new coal and gas mines and end native forest logging.

“We also want to see dental put into Medicare. When the Greens were last in a power-sharing parliament we got dental into Medicare for kids – but we want to see free dental for everyone.

“We can’t keep voting for the same two parties and expecting a different result. With more Greens in parliament we can keep Dutton out and fight for people and the planet.”
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
whiteknight
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 8279
melbourne
Gender: male
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #1 - Jan 10th, 2025 at 4:34pm
 
Well if its labor or for that matter the coalition, we don't want a government with an automatic rubber stamp.   Sad
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
freediver
Gold Member
*****
Offline


www.ozpolitic.com

Posts: 49280
At my desk.
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #2 - Jan 10th, 2025 at 4:34pm
 
Last federal election the teals won 7 lower house seats and a senate seat. If there is a minority government I think it is more likely to involve them.
Back to top
 

People who can't distinguish between etymology and entomology bug me in ways I cannot put into words.
WWW  
IP Logged
 
whiteknight
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 8279
melbourne
Gender: male
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #3 - Jan 10th, 2025 at 4:37pm
 
Good lets hope the greens and the teals do well at the next election.   Smiley
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
freediver
Gold Member
*****
Offline


www.ozpolitic.com

Posts: 49280
At my desk.
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #4 - Jan 10th, 2025 at 4:39pm
 
I'd like to see the teal movement spread beyond Sydney.
Back to top
 

People who can't distinguish between etymology and entomology bug me in ways I cannot put into words.
WWW  
IP Logged
 
Grappler Deep State Feller
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 85043
Always was always will be HOME
Gender: male
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #5 - Jan 10th, 2025 at 4:48pm
 
freediver wrote on Jan 10th, 2025 at 4:39pm:
I'd like to see the teal movement spread beyond Sydney.


I'd ;like to see multiple proper Independents not totally women these days... they've proven they can't handle their own lives or the nation or the world.  They've still got a lot to learn about real life and they won't start to do that until all the props are removed so they can truly be equal and they find they aren't just being ushered into the best spots.

They've had forty years of coddling - now it's time to face the music for real and actually compete on a level playing field.
Back to top
 

“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
― John Adams
 
IP Logged
 
whiteknight
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 8279
melbourne
Gender: male
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #6 - Jan 10th, 2025 at 4:52pm
 
There are some very good independents, one that comes to mind is in the Senate.  David Pocock.   Smiley    
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Dnarever
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 58927
Here
Gender: male
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #7 - Jan 10th, 2025 at 5:13pm
 
Quote:
Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?


NO very unlikely.
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Daves2017
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 1178
Gender: male
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #8 - Jan 10th, 2025 at 5:22pm
 
I simply cannot find among any of them someone worthy of my vote.

Blank ballot from me.
Back to top
 

Don’t vote for any of them. They just want your money!
 
IP Logged
 
Daves2017
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 1178
Gender: male
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #9 - Jan 12th, 2025 at 6:18pm
 
Back to top
 

Don’t vote for any of them. They just want your money!
 
IP Logged
 
Jasin
Gold Member
*****
Offline



Posts: 49132
Gender: male
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #10 - Jan 12th, 2025 at 6:30pm
 
More Indies win, the more we all win.
Back to top
 

AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
IP Logged
 
Frank
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 47261
Gender: male
Re: Are We Headed For A Power Sharing Parliament?
Reply #11 - Jan 13th, 2025 at 7:45am
 
whiteknight wrote on Jan 10th, 2025 at 4:29pm:
Greens: fired up and ready to go as election year kicks off   Smiley
2025-01-06
greens.org.au
The Australian Greens have said they are “ready to go” whenever the Prime Minister decides to call the election.

With the Prime Minister visiting marginal seats in several states this week, the Greens say the party will put environment and climate squarely on the election agenda.

To help alleviate the skyrocketing cost-of-living, the Greens will also push a minority Labor Government to add dental into Medicare so people across the country can afford to get basic and essential healthcare.

Quotes attributable to Acting Leader of the Australian Greens, Senator Sarah Hanson-Young:
“Whenever the Prime Minister decides to call the election, the Greens are fired up and ready to go.

“Poll after poll shows we are heading towards a power-sharing parliament after the next election.   Smiley

“The Greens have been clear that if this happens, we’ll push Labor to stop approving new coal and gas mines and end native forest logging.

“We also want to see dental put into Medicare. When the Greens were last in a power-sharing parliament we got dental into Medicare for kids – but we want to see free dental for everyone.

“We can’t keep voting for the same two parties and expecting a different result. With more Greens in parliament we can keep Dutton out and fight for people and the planet.”

A “greenlash” is coming, as ­voters throughout the developed world realise how duped they’ve been by years of unscientific, uneconomic nonsense spouted by much of the media and the so-called “experts”.

The marketing genius of referring to wind and solar power as “renewable”, when the associated infrastructure needs to be replaced more often than for nuclear or fossil fuel power stations, is wearing off.
...
Yes, new nuclear power stations will be expensive until the tempo of production increased and local industry climbed the learning curve. In any case, the cost argument is laughable given state and federal governments just sprayed around $400bn of borrowed money against the wall during Covid-19 for a cumulative excess deaths outcome that was scarcely different from Sweden’s, a country that spent barely anything by comparison.

As for safety, far more people tragically died at a South Korean electric battery manufacturing plant last week, at least 22, than have died from nuclear power related accidents since the poorly run and designed Chernobyl plant broke down in the 1980s.

Anyone who grew up near Sydney’s Lucas Heights reactor (as I did) knows nuclear power can be very safe. Whatever the case, transition to “net zero” by 2050 is a delusion. As eminent Canadian scientist Vaclav Smil pointed out in a recent essay, it hasn’t even started – despite all the trillions spent. “Since the world began to focus on the need to end the combustion of ­fossil fuels we have not made the slightest progress in the goal of ­absolute global decarbonisation,” he points out.

Since 1997, fossil fuel consumption in absolute terms has increased 55 per cent. Its share of the total has declined from 86 per cent to 82 per cent. “All we have managed to do halfway through the ­intended grand global energy transition is a small relative decline,” Smil writes.

For affluent nations to achieve the net-zero carbon goals outlined in the international treaties they have signed, they would have to commit to annual expenditure of at least 20 per cent of GDP, for decades. To put it in perspective this is even more than the Soviet Union spent for a few years in its existential struggle to defeat Germany in World War II.

More than 80 million kilometres of new transmission lines (equivalent of redoing the entire global grid) would need to be built by 2040, the International Energy Agency has noted.

None of this is obviously going to happen, and Australia’s policies won’t make a scintilla of difference given our tiny contribution to global carbon dioxide emission.

If the mainstream media focused more on retailing these important facts, rather than dwelling on hot days in summer, we’d have a better chance of avoiding massive economic costs for zero environmental benefit.

Adam Bandt’s Greens better hope Australia is still a few years behind the rest of the world. If Australia’s electoral dynamics come to resemble Europe’s even a little bit come the next federal election, they should be worried.
Back to top
 

Estragon: I can’t go on like this.
Vladimir: That’s what you think.
 
IP Logged
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print