@MsDropbear42

That's an amazing article.
#CanberraTimes #JackWaterford

How is the public ever going to regain confidence in the #AustralianPublicService?

#AnthonyAlbanese's government seems to think that #CuttingOffBenefits, the #RoboDebtCoverup, the #AgedCareCrisis and the #PWC scandal will fade away and the corruption that produced them will be forgotten.

Looks more like letting syphilis go untreated.

https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/9024864/jack-waterford-barnaby-joyce-net-zero-war-could-banish-coalition-from-power/

QUOTE BEGINS

When Napoleon remarked that one should never interrupt an enemy when it was making a mistake, he was referring to the way the enemy was disposing of his troops, not about the policies and programs with which he proposed to govern.

Like all the countries arrayed against him, (even, effectively, England) Napoleon didn't do elections.

In some senses, Anthony Albanese and Labor must be exulting about the way Barnaby Joyce and other Nationals are seeking to prevent any Coalition consensus about net zero on emissions.

That may be popular among National members and quite a few Liberals in the Parliament, but all the evidence suggests that it is a policy that will continue to kill the Liberal Party in urban seats. Coalition indecision about, or resistance to climate action is one of the main factors that led to the teal phenomenon in recent elections.

Until the Liberals get their act together on the subject, they can forget about wooing back teal voters or anything like a majority of metropolitan seats. This is not merely a reaction to their historic failure to do much on the subject while in government and their seeming determination to do even less in future.

The subject has become a symbol of a party out of touch with popular feeling in the electorate.

It can represent the selfish instinct - in effect the refusal to make any serious sacrifice in the face of clear evidence of global warming and its consequences, including sea-level rises.

It can also represent the refusal to accept modern science and modern realities, perhaps in the hope that the nightmare will go away or cease to be before the chief proponents of inaction or limited action - old white men - have become ash in the sky.

It may be seen as a reflection of the way in which significant numbers in both parties - but particularly the Nationals - have become hostages to the hydrocarbon industry, and the mining industry, and will consistently put the interests of the polluters ahead of the public interest, even in their electorates.

But by whichever way it is seen, it is plain from poll after poll that the approach of the do-nothings is seriously out of touch with the views of most of the electorate, other than among the small mostly older male groups which control the conservative wings of the party.

Not only out of touch with the need for already urgent action to address a serious threat to the physical environment, but also to the social environment. And out of touch with reality, and any sense that we have, whether as Australians or citizens of the world, an obligation to take collective action to address the changes that are happening.

A terrible legacy from resistance, sabotage and inaction

Those who see the need for urgent and significant action include younger Australians, those who will inherit the earth, and who will find it a much harder environment, a more challenging economy, and a more difficult social and cultural living space if collective action does not succeed in slowing the rate of temperature change, pollution and impacts on our seashores, our agriculture and our safety and security.

They have every right to reproach generations who continue to make things worse. But also solidly getting the point are Australians who are in or approaching middle age, as well as significant proportion of older Australians.

Women of all ages favour urgent action at significantly greater rates than men, even where men, by majority, see the need for action. In almost every demographic, including in rural and regional communities, in the outer and inner suburbs, among people born overseas, and among the better educated and skilled, the problem is recognised for having become real and of increasing urgency. Nor, according to the polls, can it be dismissed as a "woke" issue, or a mere obsession of inner-city trendies.

Labor has recognised both the need for change and the demand for action. But it has timorously disappointed by not taking the crisis seriously enough.

Doing what the public and party members want, and what the platform is committed to, has taken a distinct second place to appeasing the many interest groups with a major stake in maintaining the old polluting empires.

That, of course, includes significant parts of the trade union movement because of the jobs which could be at risk from economic restructuring. It also includes armies of lobbyists who have moved smoothly from working inside the Labor government to prostituting their knowledge, their access and their contacts, trying to discourage Labor from doing what it has said it will do.

Labor has seemed to measure the size of the problem by the political, economic and social cost of doing fractionally more than the opposition, without anything like the mobilisation of public resources demanded by the popular will.

It has, moreover, faltered on most every occasion when it has feared local consequences from action of the sort required - such as closing coal-fired power stations.

The national achievement in reducing emissions is significantly less than it could be. Nor can we pretend that we are a clear path to reducing emissions to net zero. Indeed, successive government have embraced schemes of dubious worth in reducing emissions and used false accounting to claim results that are not there. Labor's phony war against the Greens - by which they distinguish themselves by claiming to preserve jobs the Greens had been happy to give away - has also seen it authorise long-term economic activities that unnecessarily keep emission levels higher than they should be.

Labor's inadequate action is well behind the popular demand for a more urgent response

It may well be that Labor's cynical pragmatism about doing a good deal less than the evidence, and the public, wants, is one of the reasons why more than two-thirds of voters have ceased to give their first preferences to either of the major party groupings.

More than a third of the electorate now votes for independents or the Greens, and by far the majority of these are voting for groups or candidates who are in the election for climate action. With most of these, of course, Labor is harvesting the second preferences, but it could not possibly have achieved its current large majority without the support of the Greens and community parties.

There are, of course, some Labor strategists who are saying complacently that Labor won a record majority with only limited climate action goals, an indication that the electorate was satisfied and happy with the type and pace of change. That is seriously deluded thinking. Labor's offerings, particularly in health and HECS fees, and its record may have served to attract votes.

Labor's big selling point was not the winning personality, character or agenda of Anthony Albanese. It was genuine voter fear of the predilections and intentions of Peter Dutton. As Kerry Packer might say, you only get one of these in your life.

The Liberals got belted, and beyond any hope of rationalisation as "messages not getting through".

It wasn't that their message wasn't heard, it was rejected. Serious Liberals understand that the party must change, and reform itself to offer policies more in touch with the needs of the community.

The party may not need to abandon fundamental principles and values, particularly as to individuals, human rights and free markets. But many Coalition obsessions, ...

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QUOTE ENDS

#AusPol #WhyIsLabor #HahahahaLiebs #NatsAreNuts #ClimateCrisis #NonLinear #TippingPoints #PositiveFeedbackLoops #FossilFools #RenewableEnergy #ChangeTheSystem #StateCapture #RightToProtest #Biodiversity #WeAreTotallyFscked #Misanthropy #Karma #NativeForests #StopLoggingNativeForests #FsckCapitalism #CognitiveDissonance #JackWaterford
If these climate extremists win, the Coalition can forget about getting into power ever again

Another net zero capitulation will pave the Libs' road to irrelevance.