Reading the polls makes it clear that Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is a hit. Overnight, Rudd's return has turned the tables for Labor. From staring down electoral annihilation, Labor is now on par with Liberal leader Tony Abbott. The election is a contest once again.
鈥淜evin07鈥 was a popular campaign that gained mainstream traction among Australia鈥檚 youth in the 2007 federal elections. Even though 鈥淜evin13鈥 lacks the same ring, his return has marked clear moves by Rudd to regain his attraction to young voters.
Kevin Rudd
The Northern Territory鈥檚 new mandatory alcohol treatment law came into effect on July 1.聽Now, anyone taken into protective custody for drunkenness three times in two months can be referred to three months鈥 mandatory rehabilitation in a secure facility.
I was browsing the 鈥淩ecognise鈥 site recently 鈥 the hip, new rebranded 鈥淵ou Me Unity鈥 organisation tasked with promoting constitutional recognition of First Nations Australians 鈥 when I came across this curious fact: 鈥淩esearch by Auspoll in late 2012 found strong Indigenous support for constitutional recognition.
鈥淭hree-quarters of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people surveyed were in favour of recognition, and only 8% opposed it. The same overwhelming majority felt recognition would help protect against a loss of culture for future generations.鈥
About 400 activists from across Australia converged on Sydney over June 21-23 for Australia鈥檚 .
As the science of climate change becomes ever more alarming, and as the refusal of business and political elites to act becomes ever more glaring, the activists met to share ideas and strategies to build a strong movement for a safe climate.
Whatever their views on the relative merits (if any) of Julia Gillard and Kevin Rudd, there were many people inside and outside the Labor party who breathed a sigh of relief when Rudd replaced Gillard as Labor leader and prime minister.
The reason was simple. It offered the hope that Tony Abbott and his Liberal National Coalition would not have the landslide victory in the next election predicted by all opinion polls for many months. It offered the hope that even if Abbott won, perhaps he would not capture both houses of parliament.
Markets are neither free nor efficient, and they are bad for the environment. Market choice is not cheap. While that may sound like a timeless left-wing credo, it's also a simple assessment of Australia's 20 years of privatisation and market-oriented restructure of electricity supply.
Outside small left-wing dissident circles (from Keynesians to Marxists), operating the power industry according to market principles has become an unquestioned and unspoken assumption.
Those who live in Australia are used to hearing about how lucky they are. The idea that Australians just don鈥檛 realise their luck has become popular in the lead up to the next federal election by some who feel that it would be crazy to vote out the federal Labor government.
The mining companies鈥 best friend in the federal Labor government, former resources minister Martin Ferguson, supported a Kevin Rudd comeback and fell on his sword after the Labor leadership spill-that-wasn't.
Ferguson said he was resigning from cabinet and retreating to the backbench on March 22.
He said: 鈥淭he class-war rhetoric that started with the mining dispute of 2010 must cease. It is doing the Labor party no good."
He appealed for Labor to "govern for all Australians" like the Hawke and Keating governments supposedly did.
Having tried absolutely everything they could think of to win the support of voters besides push good polices in favour of working people, there was really nothing for Labor's parliamentary caucus to do except launch yet another leadership spill on March 21.
It might have been a farce that will help worsen Labor's defeat in September, but it did reveal one startling fact: Simon Crean is still in parliament. I know, right?
Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Bob Carr, US Ambassador to Australia Jeffrey Bleich, and writer and activist Eva Cox took part in the ABC鈥檚 Q&A on February 25. More than 15 minutes of the program was spent discussing WikiLeaks journalist Julian Assange.
Media watchers should be forgiven for a degree of confusion over statements by federal treasurer and deputy prime minister Wayne Swan in the past two weeks.
Petty politicking over whether refugees should be illegally deported to Malaysia or to Nauru forced the Australian government to abandon its policy of 鈥渙ffshore processing鈥 of refugees on October 13.
Since the 鈥淭ampa election鈥 in 2001, competition between the two main parties over who can most mistreat the small number of refugees arriving in Australia by boat has been at the centre of Australian electoral politics.
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