IFocus
You are arguing with a Galah
- Joined
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I still don't think he is leadership material. He seems to be ahead by not saying anything. To date, I don't like his policies, or his ability to answer questions when pressure is applied by the labor govt. The only plus side is he isn't Rudd. Well that and he could kick ass in a marathon against other world leaders
IFocus, given you are a Labor supporter, your objectivity above is admirable.Easy to be a knocker but lets see if there is any substance to Abbott and his front bench when they eventually have to start putting up some policy's I expect a xerox copy of Howard,s ideas given their very limited statements on how they would run the country so far.
It's not an unreasonable question, but one which is honestly hard to answer.So tell me if Tony Abbott wins government will you get the government you deserve ?????????
Sorry Julia
IFocus, given you are a Labor supporter, your objectivity above is admirable.
I always find it hard to understand those ultra-committed voters who will still defend the party of their choice, no matter how dumb the behaviour of that party.
It's not an unreasonable question, but one which is honestly hard to answer.
i.e. I'm sure I won't be alone in voting for Abbott (though this could change between now and the election) not particularly because I have any faith in his capacity to be a good leader, but overwhelmingly because I want Rudd gone.
So I suppose if I do vote for Abbott and he gets in (extremely unlikely) then yes, I will have no cause to complain. Gives new meaning to the old "rock and a hard place" cliche.
That's not right IFocus. Almost all major political commentators, including Paul Kelly had said that the budget reply gave the agenda and momentum back to the Lib's. It came from left field, Labour weren't expecting it and it framed the terms that the Coalition wanted to fight the election on. It was one of the only budget supply speeches in recent years that gave a rise in the polling.Good point the budget reply was a shocker by all, how the Liberals manage things when they actually put some thing up policy wise will be interesting.
Good point the budget reply was a shocker by all, how the Liberals manage things when they actually put some thing up policy wise will be interesting.
Easy to be a knocker but lets see if there is any substance to Abbott and his front bench when they eventually have to start putting up some policy's I expect a xerox copy of Howard,s ideas given their very limited statements on how they would run the country so far.
The problem with the above for Abbott is there is no Costello and others to make it happen.
I don't think that's quite right, but even if it were, his elevation to the leadership has considerably improved the Libs' standing according to the polls, so there must be a reasonable number of Australians who much preferred things as they were under John Howard.Yep, you could see it from day one when he was voted in. He put everyone back where they were when Howard was in.
I don't think that's quite right, but even if it were, his elevation to the leadership has considerably improved the Libs' standing according to the polls, so there must be a reasonable number of Australians who much preferred things as they were under John Howard.
Given the chaos that has reigned under Mr Rudd, I'd have to say that I'd be one of them.
Howard.True enough, Wayne, but if you had the choice of Howard as he was when he lost office, and Kevin Rudd, which would you prefer?
True enough, Wayne, but if you had the choice of Howard as he was when he lost office, and Kevin Rudd, which would you prefer?
I have hesitated from posting in to this thread recently as I have rarely seen such garbage comment from so many normally prescient contributors.
The essence of Tony is that he is a pugilist, a boxer. He can take punishment and he can give it.
What he says and how it is interpreted by the lame mainstream media matters little to him. This a fight. The blows of last week matter little in the moment except to the anonymous judges
He has his eye on the clock for each round and the number of rounds. He has scored well against Rudd since he arrived as opposition leader. He is ahead. He will bide his time, jabbing here and there.
After all he's fighting a bloke with no fists, a shallow pitter patter ex-diplomat.
"There is a tide in men's affairs"
And Tony is riding a nice steady wave in to the Prime Ministership.
gg
He can hand out the punchy one-liners in attack mode, gg, but he's shown himself to be less than skilled in coping with the more subtle attacks from e.g. Julia Gillard who easily walks all over him.The essence of Tony is that he is a pugilist, a boxer. He can take punishment and he can give it.
I don't know if that's true or not, but anyone who discounts the influence of the media is simply foolish. They create the opinions of those too apathetic or lazy to scrutinise the politicians for themselves.What he says and how it is interpreted by the lame mainstream media matters little to him. This a fight. The blows of last week matter little in the moment except to the anonymous judges
Yes, he's ahead, but essentially by default, because the electorate is so utterly disillusioned with Rudd. If said electorate were really so enamoured with Mr Abbott, the votes lost from Rudd would have gone to Mr Abbott, not the Greens.He has his eye on the clock for each round and the number of rounds. He has scored well against Rudd since he arrived as opposition leader. He is ahead.
Too early to tell yet, gg, and if he does get there he's going to need to develop some more defensive skills along the way. Already, the constant uttering of "that great, big new tax" is starting to sound as irritating as Mr Rudd's "you know something?".And Tony is riding a nice steady wave in to the Prime Ministership.
FWIW, I reckon Tony Abbott is more sincerely motivated by what he believes is good for Australia.
Not so sure, though, that most of the population are agreeing with his ultra conservative values.
He can hand out the punchy one-liners in attack mode, gg, but he's shown himself to be less than skilled in coping with the more subtle attacks from e.g. Julia Gillard who easily walks all over him.
I don't know if that's true or not, but anyone who discounts the influence of the media is simply foolish. They create the opinions of those too apathetic or lazy to scrutinise the politicians for themselves.
I may be wrong, but I also believe the voting public are well and truly over politicians spending tax dollars attacking each other, rather than spending that same time in constructive policy delivery.
I don't want a boxer/pugilist for a Prime Minister. I do want a statesman who can conduct himself on the world stage with dignity and who is truly representative of the wishes of the Australian people. Not someone who's simply on their own personal ego journey, as Mr Rudd has shown himself to be.
FWIW, I reckon Tony Abbott is more sincerely motivated by what he believes is good for Australia.
Not so sure, though, that most of the population are agreeing with his ultra conservative values.
Yes, he's ahead, but essentially by default, because the electorate is so utterly disillusioned with Rudd. If said electorate were really so enamoured with Mr Abbott, the votes lost from Rudd would have gone to Mr Abbott, not the Greens.
Too early to tell yet, gg, and if he does get there he's going to need to develop some more defensive skills along the way. Already, the constant uttering of "that great, big new tax" is starting to sound as irritating as Mr Rudd's "you know something?".
And I'm astonished that in response to "that great, big new tax", the government have not hit back with some comment about Mr Abbot's own big new tax on companies to pay for his supa dupa totally excessive parental leave programme.
I have hesitated from posting in to this thread recently as I have rarely seen such garbage comment from so many normally prescient contributors.
The essence of Tony is that he is a pugilist, a boxer. He can take punishment and he can give it.
What he says and how it is interpreted by the lame mainstream media matters little to him. This a fight. The blows of last week matter little in the moment except to the anonymous judges
He has his eye on the clock for each round and the number of rounds. He has scored well against Rudd since he arrived as opposition leader. He is ahead. He will bide his time, jabbing here and there.
After all he's fighting a bloke with no fists, a shallow pitter patter ex-diplomat.
"There is a tide in men's affairs"
And Tony is riding a nice steady wave in to the Prime Ministership.
gg
Oh please, Gillard beats him up and takes his lunch money every time they have a verbal stoush. I am not saying Rudd over Abbott, but rather we have some poor choices. You only have to look at state government to see voters will put up with a lot of crap from a current government rather then vote in a weak opposition. Abbott has a lot of work to do. Rudd has done a lot of damage and I want him out. But Abbott (while a nice enough bloke) doesn't hold my confidence.
In the end I will vote for whatever government will benefit me the most (over all aspects not just money).
Gillard is good, no doubt about it.
The ALP Right though is a sexist mob, and they only allow good looking goyles like Keneally in, to keep the NSW muppet voters quiet, and the seat warm for the next alpha male in the pack.
I cannot see them backing Gillard.
gg
I don't agree. People often park their votes with muppets like the Greens. They did it with Pauline Hanson before Howard grabbed them back.
gg
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