Australia’s scary step to the right.
When I start thumping a table during a political discussion about the differences between the parties in Australia, it is usually not about matters such as helicopter flights or changing the flag.
My passion, the heart of what makes me tick as a political animal and rally and rage against the machine, is justice. Not just in a legal sense, but a humanitarian one. It’s equality, compassion, respect and empathy for my fellow humans and planet that define my political allegiance. Which is why, until last weekend, I would consider myself a Labor voter.
Unfortunately, thanks to Bill Shorten’s adamant stance to retain the current Liberal government’s turn back the boats policy announced at the 47th national Labor conference on Saturday, I can no longer tick an ALP ballot box. It would be too close to voting for the LNP with Tony Abbott at its head (I believe my arm actually would rebel and physically take hold of my throat should I even attempt that).
And herein lies my dilemma: Where is my alternative? Where is Australia’s? What are we to do when both major parties are so damn similar in their policies? Yes, there is the Greens but, despite much progress, they are not a party fully formed enough to take over from what will be the steaming mess left by this current government (I say steaming, as Tony Abbott’s attitude to climate change and his spurning of renewable energy for archaic pollutants like coal is literally stoking the fires of global warming).
Basically, Bill Shorten, as Labor leader, has broken my heart and made me yet again (I will never forget the ALP’s treatment of Julia Gillard – ever!) question the party to which I once related. However, what’s so frustrating is that I can see so close behind him some of the most astute, impressive and inspiring politicians on the scene today in deputy leader Tanya Plibersek, senator Penny Wong and party stalwart Anthony Albanese.
Top Comments
Yes the only real choice you have now is pauline hason's one nation party its the only party that doesnt try and replicate each other. Your dead on when you say liberal and labor are the same. If you vote green you will be living in a cave welcoming refugees into the country.
Interesting that you cannot forget Labor's 'treatment' of Gillard. I will never forgive, nor forget, Gillard and Labor's treatment of our generation's Gough Whitlam - Kevin Rudd. Watch the Killing Season which shows what a low, conniving manipulator Gillard was. That will cure you. Maybe you may join the many other Gillard supporters that tweeted Kevin after the series to apologise to Kevin for the way they treated him.
Also, I must say that I find the topic, refugees, to be rather an ironic topic to deify Gillard in. Given that Gillard was the one who started the ALP's drift to the right on asylum seekers by seeking to re-introduce off-shore processing via the Malaysia solution. So it is hypocritical in the extreme, that you would decry the justified treatment of Gillard in the same article you bemoan the ALP drifting to the right. Do you understand irony, Wendy? Or are you truly not aware of the damage Gillard did by creating the drift to the right (as well as denying Palestine a vote at the UN, and throwing single mums off the pension and onto the streets)? Do you even understand what Gillard stood for, at all? Or are you just another starry-eyed person caught up with the 'first woman PM EVA!' mindless koolaid?