by wycbloods » Tue Jul 21, 2009 4:28 pm
by wycbloods » Tue Jul 21, 2009 4:29 pm
by Leaping Lindner » Tue Jul 21, 2009 6:37 pm
by Psyber » Tue Jul 21, 2009 6:41 pm
It was Cheryl Turncoat who finally put me off them, and drove out all the moderates.Leaping Lindner wrote:Thank you Meg "Oh look John Howard paid attention to me" Lees.
by Leaping Lindner » Tue Jul 21, 2009 6:45 pm
Psyber wrote:It was Cheryl Turncoat who finally put me off them.Leaping Lindner wrote:Thank you Meg "Oh look John Howard paid attention to me" Lees.
I'd known and liked John Coulter, and almost joined them as they were reasonably balanced back then.
I was speaking to his wife at the local supermarket only a couple of weeks ago.
by dedja » Tue Jul 21, 2009 7:17 pm
by Jimmy_041 » Tue Jul 21, 2009 9:43 pm
by mick » Wed Jul 22, 2009 8:26 am
by Leaping Lindner » Wed Jul 22, 2009 10:19 am
mick wrote:The GST was a poor idea, I'm sure Mr Rudd will repeal that terrible bit of legislation soon.IMO the democrats were a party of protest that attempted to follow a central line. However, I think various leaders after Coulter defaulted to either ALP or Liberal bias. When Stott-Despoja was leader I saw them to the left of the ALP. I think "major" minor parties have a lifetime of about 25 years, DLP being a good example. Just as matter of interest was there ever a tie up of the "Australia Party" - a progressive centrist party of the late 1960s-early1970s with the Democrats? Pysber might know this one.
by dedja » Wed Jul 22, 2009 10:33 am
Jimmy_041 wrote:It was Cheryl Kernot $hagging Gareth Evans that turned me off them - no taste / poor form
by Psyber » Wed Jul 22, 2009 11:52 am
Again, it is all in the perspective - at the time of the Democrats forming I had some loose association with the Liberal Movement but was not a member of any party.Leaping Lindner wrote: It may have been Cheryl Kernot that turned you off the democrats but it was Lees who killed the party. She got into bed with Howard over the GST and that was that. One political party dead.
by Psyber » Wed Jul 22, 2009 11:59 am
It is part of the fiction we maintain that the MPs are elected to represent their Electorate, not as a cog in a party machine. So, they keep the seat when they leave a party.dedja wrote:... Just as an aside, it has always bothered me for some reason when a politician threatens or actually leaves the Party that they got elected under or changes stripes mid-term, depriving them of the seat won under their banner. Even more so when that Member has never been elected by the people. Is it just me or is there some constitional loophole here?
by mick » Wed Jul 22, 2009 1:02 pm
Psyber wrote:It is part of the fiction we maintain that the MPs are elected to represent their Electorate, not as a cog in a party machine. So, they keep the seat when they leave a party.dedja wrote:... Just as an aside, it has always bothered me for some reason when a politician threatens or actually leaves the Party that they got elected under or changes stripes mid-term, depriving them of the seat won under their banner. Even more so when that Member has never been elected by the people. Is it just me or is there some constitional loophole here?
Once upon a time it was true, and MPs were primarily loyal to the people they were elected to represent.
Bring it back!!
by mick » Wed Jul 22, 2009 3:58 pm
Leaping Lindner wrote:mick wrote:The GST was a poor idea, I'm sure Mr Rudd will repeal that terrible bit of legislation soon.IMO the democrats were a party of protest that attempted to follow a central line. However, I think various leaders after Coulter defaulted to either ALP or Liberal bias. When Stott-Despoja was leader I saw them to the left of the ALP. I think "major" minor parties have a lifetime of about 25 years, DLP being a good example. Just as matter of interest was there ever a tie up of the "Australia Party" - a progressive centrist party of the late 1960s-early1970s with the Democrats? Pysber might know this one.
Mick as I understand it the Australia Party was formed (as you say in the late 60's) by members of the Liberal Party (LCL at the time) that were disenchanted with some of the LCL's social policies at the time - Conscription being the most obvious. They merged with the "new" Liberal Movement in 1977 and became The Australian Democrats. The new Liberal Movement being what was left of the Liberal Movement that had been formed by Steele Hall in the early 70's by disenchanted State Liberals. I remember there was a split over policy in the Liberal Movement and members where given the choice to back to the Liberal Party or form the New Liberal Movement. Steele Hall went back to the Libs and Robin Millhouse went onto the new LM became a major player in the Democrats along with Don Chipp ( a former Fraser Caretaker Government minister). Chipp was dumped from the ministry when Fraser won in 1975 causing severe tension between the two and eventually leading to Chipp leaving the Libs.
My parents were involved in the LM (pre-split)and were amongst those that went back to the Liberal Party. I spent many an hour handing out how to vote LM cards in my younger days. You reckon I didn't cop some abuse from supporters of BOTH sides of politics.
Also Mick why would Kevin Rudd repeal the GST??? He's the best Liberal Prime Minister we've ever had
by Sojourner » Thu Jul 23, 2009 11:33 am
by dedja » Thu Jul 23, 2009 11:40 am
by Leaping Lindner » Mon Jul 27, 2009 2:07 am
mick wrote:Leaping Lindner wrote:mick wrote:The GST was a poor idea, I'm sure Mr Rudd will repeal that terrible bit of legislation soon.IMO the democrats were a party of protest that attempted to follow a central line. However, I think various leaders after Coulter defaulted to either ALP or Liberal bias. When Stott-Despoja was leader I saw them to the left of the ALP. I think "major" minor parties have a lifetime of about 25 years, DLP being a good example. Just as matter of interest was there ever a tie up of the "Australia Party" - a progressive centrist party of the late 1960s-early1970s with the Democrats? Pysber might know this one.
Mick as I understand it the Australia Party was formed (as you say in the late 60's) by members of the Liberal Party (LCL at the time) that were disenchanted with some of the LCL's social policies at the time - Conscription being the most obvious. They merged with the "new" Liberal Movement in 1977 and became The Australian Democrats. The new Liberal Movement being what was left of the Liberal Movement that had been formed by Steele Hall in the early 70's by disenchanted State Liberals. I remember there was a split over policy in the Liberal Movement and members where given the choice to back to the Liberal Party or form the New Liberal Movement. Steele Hall went back to the Libs and Robin Millhouse went onto the new LM became a major player in the Democrats along with Don Chipp ( a former Fraser Caretaker Government minister). Chipp was dumped from the ministry when Fraser won in 1975 causing severe tension between the two and eventually leading to Chipp leaving the Libs.
My parents were involved in the LM (pre-split)and were amongst those that went back to the Liberal Party. I spent many an hour handing out how to vote LM cards in my younger days. You reckon I didn't cop some abuse from supporters of BOTH sides of politics.
Also Mick why would Kevin Rudd repeal the GST??? He's the best Liberal Prime Minister we've ever had
Nice story Nick, I think that era was certainly one of the most interesting in SA and Australian politics, I think the contribution to reform people like Robin Millhouse, Steele Hall and later David Tonkin are much underated, certainly in the shadow of Don Dunstan, these guys really had to fight against the cave dwellers on their own side of politics.
by Psyber » Mon Jul 27, 2009 9:27 am
Playford and the gerrymander..Leaping Lindner wrote: Couldn't agree more. Hall's Government actually fixed the gerrymander that Playford had in place which effectively saw him cost himself office. Now THAT is a politician. Unlike these "wannabe statesmen" we currently have.
by dedja » Sun Mar 21, 2010 10:08 pm
by CK » Mon Mar 22, 2010 9:02 pm
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