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Showing posts with label Indi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indi. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Cathy McGowan, Member for Indi

Sou | 4:17 PM Go to the first of 5 comments. Add a comment



Congratulations to Cathy McGowan, the new independent member for Indi.

18 September 2013

Voice for Indi


Thursday, September 12, 2013

ABC lists Indi for Cathy McGowan - Sophie Mirabella ditched?

Sou | 1:41 PM Go to the first of 17 comments. Add a comment

Update

Congratulations to Cathy McGowan, the new member for Indi.
18 September 2013


An update on the voting for Indi, the seat held by Sophie Mirabella and contested by local independent, Cathy McGowan.  The ABC website has dropped Indi from the "seats in doubt" and is now listing it as one of the "changing seats" going to Cathy McGowan.

It's not over yet and probably won't be until the end of this week at the earliest - possibly not for another fortnight.  However the fact that Sophie has come out and said she's not seeking a Cabinet position even if she wins is already a big plus for Australia and for our electorate.

Current situation: a 9.9% swing against Sophie Mirabella (38,209) for Cathy McGowan at 39,658 after preferences, with 83.1% of the votes counted.

Go Cathy!

Here is the website for Voice for Indi, where the campaign for better representation all started.

Sophie Mirabella campaigned strongly against the carbon pricing scheme and against the then Prime Minister, Julia Gillard.  Here is Sophie (just left of centre) with our incoming Prime Minister, Tony Abbott and incoming Speaker of the House, Bronwyn Bishop (bottom left), standing under two very ugly banners.



That's just in case HotWhopper's international readers doubted the abysmal quality or respectability of the incoming leadership of our once forward-thinking and progressive nation. (With apologies to Cathy McGowan, who has bent over backwards to avoid belittling Sophie Mirabella.)

(Juliar is what opponents called the then PM, Julia Gillard - among other things as you can see. Bob Brown recently retired as leader of the Greens party in Federal Parliament.)

Here is my earlier article on the election and the future of the carbon pricing scheme.  I don't normally write about politics - the climate is apolitical.  However all the signs are pointing to this new government taking actions that will seriously harm any hope that Australia will continue to reduce emissions quickly enough.

Not speaking out isn't an option.


$7 billion Wandoan coal mine scrapped


On the plus side, the world as a whole is moving on, maybe offsetting the incoming government's backward steps. For example, one of the biggest mining projects in the country – the $7 billion Wandoan coal mine in Queensland – has just been scrapped - despite the change of government.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Will Australia do an about face on carbon pricing?

Sou | 2:38 AM Go to the first of 27 comments. Add a comment

UPDATE: (Tues 10 Sept 6:14 pm AEST) Not looking so good for Cathy McGowan now.  She is less than 300 votes ahead Correction - the website is changed again.  Now Cathy McGowan seems to be 700 or so ahead of Sophie Mirabella and there are still around 7,000 postal votes to count.  Antony Green has called it for Sophie and he's rarely wrong - but fingers crossed for Cathy.


UPDATE: (Mon 9 Sept 13 5:10 pm AEST) Cathy McGowan is now ahead of Sophie Mirabella by nearly 1800 votes.  This will go down to the wire but IMO most preferences and much pre-polling will favour Cathy.


The Australian federal elections were well and truly won by the Liberal National coalition today.  The coalition is between the Liberal Party, a generally moderate conservative party and the National Party - another conservative party, which is associated with rural Australians.  The National Party operates more as a grassroots democracy than the Liberal Party, which means that on some issues it is more conservative but on other issues it is less conservative than the Liberal Party.  (Neither are as right wing as the current Republican Party in the USA although the coalition has arguably shifted more to the right under the Abbott leadership.)  The Liberal National coalition has been operating for a long time at the federal level, but it can't be taken for granted.  In some states the parties are separate and have not formed a coalition.  Neither party could ever hope to win a federal election in their own right in Australia today.

Anthony Watts is crowing as if he had anything to do with Australia or its elections (archived here).  Why he would care is anyone's guess.  (I notice that I'm moving up in the denier world, rating a mention in Anthony's article - and in the same sentence as John Cook and Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg no less.  I'm humbled to be in such company but recognise that it's just another example of Anthony Watts' dumb ignorance.)

For the benefit of HotWhopper readers from elsewhere, the election results are not a surprise and could have been a lot worse for climate politics.  Our new Prime Minister, Tony Abbott is a lowest common denominator style of politician, taking his lead from the tea party in the USA, with three word slogans being the extent of his policies for the past three years or so.  ("Stop the Boats"; "Great Big Tax"; "No Carbon Tax")

Once the election campaign got underway in earnest he shifted to a slightly more sophisticated approach.  He has sworn to get rid of the carbon "tax" (which isn't really a tax - it's a price on carbon).  To do that he will either have to wait till after the Senate elections appointments commence in July next year or call a double dissolution of Parliament.  That would mean he would have to call another election. (It's been pointed out in the comments that the LNP will probably have the numbers after July next year to remove the carbon tax.  So it may happen.  However nine months is a long time in politics.)

To explain - the Senate is the upper house of Parliament.  Half the Senate is elected every three years and senators have a six year term.  Today we voted for half the Senate and all of the lower house - the House of Representatives.

After today's election, the Liberal National coalition has the majority in the House of Representatives but it does not have a majority in the Senate.  That means that it will not be able to undo the carbon pricing legislation for at least 12 months.  It is arguable that business will not look kindly on them if they mess about too much with it.  Business has accepted it and, as always, prefers certainty to uncertainty.

A couple of other points that will give some (small) consolation to climate hawks.  The first is that Adam Bandt, the Greens member for Melbourne retained his seat with an increase in his primary vote and with the help of preferences from the Liberals.

The second is that in my electorate, Indi, the positively dreadful Sophie Mirabella, who in opposition was ironically the Shadow Minister for Innovation, Industry and Science, is under threat from independent Cathy McGowan.  Sophie is the least innovative person one could imagine.  She is also the most anti-science person one could imagine.  She was in a very safe rural seat until people power got behind Cathy McGowan.  Sophie has lost 8.3% of her 9% margin so far and as each count comes in Cathy sneaks a bigger proportion of the vote.  At the moment Cathy McGowan is around 700  votes short of winning the seat.  It will be a close one.  Sophie Mirabella would be to the right of Genghis Kahn politically and is one of the uglies on our political landscape. If Cathy wins, she'll be the first independent woman in Federal Parliament.  Even if Sophie gets back, our conservative electorate has sent a very strong message to her and to Tony Abbott.

Update: The latest figures show Mirabella has picked up a lot and now looks likely to retain her seat, I'm sorry to say. She is ahead by about 2,600 votes on preferences.  Now Cathy McGowan is ahead.

All up the results are pretty much as expected and could have been worse.

I won't go into all the boring details of Australian political silliness but one thing stands out as being excruciatingly silly.  The new PM Tony Abbott has promised to buy boats from people smugglers.  There are a few million dodgy boats in the world that will be heading for Australia tomorrow!  And a few million more waiting to take their place.

The next few months will be a challenge for Tony Abbott.  He won leadership within his own party from the more moderate Malcolm Turnbull by only one vote.  If Turnbull were to regain leadership (and hence become Prime Minister) in this term of Parliament the carbon price would no longer be under threat.  Turnbull is very aware of the dangers of global warming, as are some others in the Liberal National Party.

I don't know where the balance of power will lie now that there are more Liberal National members elected to the House of Representatives.  It could have shifted to the more conservative but with luck it will have shifted to the more moderate.  Perhaps someone who keeps a closer watch on our political scene than I can comment.