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What Coalition?

18 January

  • The Leader of the Liberals is asked whether his “position statements” are “policies.” Like everyone else, he’s confused and declines to comment.

  • The Leader of the Nationals says he prefers “position statements” because “we don’t want to lock ourselves in.”

19 January

  • The Leader of the Liberals writes to his colleagues: “These refined position statements are the commitments we take into the election. … [T]hey are the basis of our policy platform and are binding on coalition.”

23 January

  • The election is called.

  • The commitments the Leader of the Liberals says the Coalition will take into the election disappear from the Liberal website: “This page of the website will list policy documents as they are released during the election campaign.”

  • The Leader of the Nationals refuses to be bound by Coalition policy.

  • “Liberal-National Coalition Position Statements” remain on the Nationals website.

What the heck is going on? The Liberals want to be bound, but remove the policies from their website. The Nationals don’t want to be bound, but leave them up!

Good to see the Coalition is working as a harmonious team…

(Thanks, Frank.)

Disclaimer

Before we go any further, I’d like to remind you that although I’m an ALP member and supporter, the opinions expressed on this site are in no way officially sanctioned. This is my personal site, and it contains my personal views. Don’t blame anyone else for something I write. By the way, if you’re a single-issue reader, I’ve separated my WA Election posts for your convenience.

6:19 pm · comments off

WA poll is on 26 February

The WA Election has been called for 26 February:

“We go into the election as the underdog but now that we’re focussed on my government, versus the Barnett Liberals, I’m quietly confident we can win the election,” he said.

Dr Gallop says he believes a five-week campaign will be to his advantage.

“The public of Western Australia need time to scrutinise the Opposition, and of course the Barnett Liberals need time to tell the public how they’re going to pay for their election promises,” he said.

As we know, the Opposition is in a fair bit of trouble explaining its policies — or even deciding whether they’re policies or position statements.

The leader of the Nationals, Max Trenorden, said he didn’t like the word “policy” because “we wouldn’t want to lock ourselves in.” Colin Barnett tried to put his foot down and say all position statements were now binding policy, but nobody really takes him seriously (or likes him). Trenorden obviously thinks they’re still flexible position statements; he’s even gone so far as to reject one of them out of hand!

Confident of winning the state election as the junior Coalition partner, Mr Trenorden said he would never support reinstituting laws that discriminated against gays.

“Not while I’m deputy premier,” he said. “It won’t happen.”

Let’s look at that again:

Would-be Premier: “This is binding policy.”

Would-be Deputy: “Piss off, Colin.”

It’s going to be a fun campaign!

(By the way, at least Trenorden’s honest about the Coalition’s discriminatory plan for gay law reform. Colin Barnett went for the “I don’t support descrimination, except against filthy homos” line. The policy implies that a 16-year-old homosexual male is mentally retarded, and should be rejected.)

Blue line thinner

A detective senior constable was sacked, a sergeant was demoted, and five other officers were fined for their involvement in an attack on American exchange students last year.

Reading Westpoll

Gareth Parker’s keen to defend his West Australian from criticism, pointing to a list of articles critical of Colin Barnett. He’s right — occasionally they do gently prod the Opposition, and I’ve given Steve Pennells the credit he deserves for pointing out their reluctance to commit to firm and costed policies. But the articles he pointed out all ran mid-week and off the front page.

When the paper wants to make its feelings known, it runs headlines blaring “Gallop in strife” and predicting “Crushing defeat” on the front page of the Saturday edition. I scoured today’s paper for anything even remotely critical of the Opposition, and the only thing I could find was a light tickle from Paul Murray. The editorial yet again slammed the Government.

So what of the “Gallop in strife” headline? Well, it’s based on a Westpoll, which immediately suggests it’s a beat-up. A survey of 200 people in each of four marginal electorates — Joondalup, Bunbury, Riverton and Albany — found that the Liberal candidate would receive between 53% and 56% of the primary vote. Thinking about Joondalup (closest to home, and whose MP I know), that struck me as quite fanciful, for a number of reasons.

First, Labor is still predicted to get 38% of the primary vote in Joondalup. This is disappointing, but not catastrophic — Labor won with a primary vote of 37.6% in 2001. So the figure for Labor is not by itself devastating news. No swing.

Second, the 53% Liberal vote just doesn’t sound accurate. Dean Solly’s got a decent profile and a massive budget, but is that enough? In 1996 Chris Baker was equally well known, ran an effective campaign, and won resoundingly, but he only managed 47%. A 14% swing just doesn’t seem plausible.

Third, the poll was conducted from 10 to 14 January, at the height of the controversy surrounding Mark Latham’s leadership, while the media were conducting a vigil on his doorstep. There’s no doubt in my mind that this would have influenced people’s decisions — see Labor in strife on the news, say you’ll vote Liberal when Patterson rings to ask. This will change when the focus is back on State issues over the next month or so. And 14 January is over a week ago! Why not run the poll midweek? For the same reason all criticism of the Liberals is confined to the midweek editions: smaller circulation. Scoring political points is apparently more important than timely news reporting.

Last, and crucially, the West never publishes the full results of its poll, because that would allow people to question the validity of the conclusions drawn. Today, we’re told, “Voting intention after the allocation of undecided votes.” What? I thought the convention was to exclude undecideds and refuseds, at least until the campaign is actually under way. At the very least, we should be given the raw figures, including the proportion of undecideds, so that we can evaluate how their votes were distributed. Frankly, I don’t trust the West to use an unbiased model, and the fact that they’re hiding the raw data and methodology does nothing to reassure me.

It’s going to be a tough campaign, especially in the marginal seats, and especially with the only daily newspaper supporting the Opposition, but I’m not overly concerned by this Westpoll beat-up.

Update: I forgot to mention one other thing that suggests the poll’s not as bad as the West would like us to believe:

Only 28 per cent of voters in the key marginals said they understood what Opposition Leader Colin Barnett stood for, compared with 42 per cent who believed they knew where Dr Gallop stood.

This suggests that support for Labor is firmer than support for the Libs. The alleged 50%+ support will be more easily eaten away during the campaign when people realise that they don’t know what Colin Barnett stands for because he doesn’t stand for anything.

New order

Okay, Beazley’s backing Macklin. That’s enough to bump him down my list: unity should not be another word for mediocrity. So now it’s 1. Tillops; 2. Gillard; 3. Rudd; 4. Beazley. Best almost-attainable option: Rudd/Gillard double act. Oh, and if NSW unites behind Beazley, I’m holding Liam Hogan personally responsible.

It’s time for Tillops

Tillops for the Labor Leadership:

But let me just say this, people often complain that Labor is drifting too far to the right of the political spectrum. To that I say, if you want to see a strong left-wing ALP that’s not afraid to engage in class warfare, support the disadvantaged, tax the rich, brutalise multinationals and stick it to the arselickers at each and every Question Time, then you too share the dream of a Tillops Labor government.

Now for guts. Now for glory. Now for courage. And a new dawn for Australia.

Don’t worry about the fact that he’s not a member of the FPLP — it’s all under control:

I am confident that the NSW Right will happily preselect a Victorian Left candidate for the Werriwa by-election and that any questions from the current caucus such as “who?” and “what the fuck?” will be quickly swept aside on my rise to greatness.

A bold vision. Sorry, Julia, but it’s time for Tillops.

iPod Ten

  1. The Strokes — Alone Together
  2. Guster — Red Oyster Cult
  3. Pearl Jam — Off He Goes
  4. The Fuzz — Monster
  5. Get Up Kids — Close to Me
  6. Ben Folds Five — Raindrops Keep Falling on my Head (live)
  7. Regurgitator — Black Bugs (live)
  8. Dropkick Murphys — Curse of a Fallen Soul (live)
  9. Blueline Medic — Over the Lawn
  10. Motor Ace — Carry On

Start pushing

The TNI has abandoned any pretence of a ceasefire with GAM. General Ryamizard Ryacudu declared, “If they will not surrender, we will crush them.” He claims to have killed 120 rebels in two weeks. GAM says the real figure is six fighters and an unknown number of civilians.

The good news is that the US is sick of the TNI’s recalcitrance. During his visit to Indonesia, Paul Wolfowitz said, “If the military gets in the way of that [political resolution], then the military should be pushed to get out of the way.”

It’s time to start pushing.

Baton crumbs

The lovely Elmo has passed a meme baton to me. I’m a bit confused though — if everyone passes the baton to three people, surely they only get a piece of it? And each of those pieces gets broken up, and so on and so forth.

So here’s my tiny crumb of meme baton.

  1. What’s the total size of music files on your computer?

    I’m not sure… only a few gigabytes. It’s about quality, not quantity.

  2. What is the last CD you bought?

    I bought two at the same time. “Coral Fang” by the Distillers, and the now disbanded Capital City’s “Capital City vs the Bangkok Ladyboys.”

  3. What is the last song you listened to before you read this post?

    I listened to the radio in the car on the way home from work yesterday, but I can’t remember what songs they played. That’s actually very annoying, because I can hum the tune of one song that I really like — every time I hear it, I try to remember who and what it is, but I can’t. That’s six or seven times I’ve forgotten.

    The last song I can remember listening to is A Guide to Being Knifey’s Wifey. You should listen to it; likewise, Pseudo Lesbian Girl. And if I could be so bold as to make a suggestion for the next song: Tillops’ election jingle.

  4. Name four songs that you listen to a lot or that mean a lot to you.

    This is a toughie. Okay, first would have to be Weezer’s “O Girlfriend,” which I listened to a lot while Manas was in East Timor. I missed her a lot, therefore emo was my friend.

    Second, Propagandhi’s “Resisting Tyrannical Government,” which provided the title for this blog.

    Third, from the ashes of Propagandhi rose the phoenix of the Weakerthans. And “Plea from a Cat Named Virtue” is just delightful.

    And I can’t have a list like this without a dash of Pearl Jam. At the moment my fave is “Red Mosquito.”

  5. Which three people are you passing the baton on to and why?

    (Pieces of baton, remember?)

    Manas, just because.

    Sunili, because she hasn’t posted in ages and I want to laugh at her musical taste again.

    Tillops, because he’s been given the blogosphere’s ALP leadership baton and the public deserves some answers.

95%

Check it out: The Other 95%.

Run, fascists, run!

Run, fascists, run! Top work everyone.

Bad news from Aceh

It’s been a while since my last update on the situation in Aceh. I wish it was good news that prompted me to post, but I’m afraid it’s the worst news I can imagine. Actually, it’s two separate pieces of horrible news.

First, the violent clashes between TNI and GAM:

Indonesian military spokesman Edyana Sulistiadi said yesterday there had been “many small incidents” between the military or TNI and the Free Aceh Movement, or GAM, and confirmed there had been about 34 clashes.

[...]

Lieutenant-Colonel Sulistiadi said no Indonesian soldiers had been killed in the battles, and only one had been wounded. As for rebel casualties, he said no strict count had been kept. “We haven’t counted them,” he said. “If we count them, then later GAM will blame us.”

GAM leader Sofyan Dawood told The Australian yesterday many of the so-called firefights were in fact the Indonesian military firing on civilians. “They consider them to be firefights and the victims have been recorded as GAM casualties,” he said. “The TNI said in total 110 GAM members had been killed, but according to our records it is 20, and the rest are civilians. So it’s an old song. If an Acehnese is shot dead, they say they were GAM.”

The rebel leader claimed only five of the 20 rebels shot dead were armed.

I’m obviously in no position to verify GAM’s claims, but a policy of indiscriminate violence is an obvious reason for the TNI to avoid counting the corpses — they would not be able to maintain the pretence that all their victims were armed rebels.

Second, the suggestion that an Timor-style militia is being formed. Britain’s Daily Telegraph reported that Errico Guterres, who led the militias that attempted genocide in East Timor, had visited Aceh. The Sydney Morning Herald says he is remains under house arrest elsewhere, but the matter does not end there.

The Telegraph spoke to Guterres’s representative in Aceh:

Eddy Juliansyah, a native Acehnese who runs the militia’s Aceh headquarters, said it already has 900 members ready to defend “Indonesian unity”.

Since the tsunami devastated Aceh, dozens of militia members have arrived, said Juliansyah. He claimed they were in Aceh to provide assistance for the refugees and to help remove the thousands of bodies.

But there is little evidence of this and, rather than reporting to a local military commander, they report to General Adam Damiri, a former military chief in East Timor. Rights groups say he directed militia operations there and he has led the anti-rebel offensive in Aceh over the past few years.

General Damiri was convicted for his role in the East Timorese terror campaign. The TNI has not denied his presence in Aceh, saying only that “many retired generals have come here to help.”

If this militia really is organising in Aceh, we can expect them to attack GAM in order to break the ceasefire. The TNI will probably deny the militia’s existence and claim GAM attacked innocent aid workers, providing the excuse for an all-out assault on the rebels.

People are going to die. Can our soldiers have their guns back, please?

Not 19 February

Geoff Gallop has ruled out 19 February.

2:56 pm · comments off

Yobbo won’t vote Lib

My regular sparring partner, Sam Ward, also thinks the Coalition are a bunch of muppets, and wonders, “What the hell does the WA Liberal Party actually stand for?” He says: “As much as I dislike the current Labor government, I have heard absolutely nothing at all from the Liberals that would suggest they are going to be an improvement in any way. … I really can’t see any reason to vote Liberal in this election.”

1:46 pm · comments off