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jessica rudd mamamia Jess Rudd writes: This spill is ours. Own it.

Tomorrow, when I fly in, I’m coming home to a political situation that most Australians think is a dog’s breakfast. What’s happening is ugly as. It’s infuriating. Messy. I agree. It is and it needs to be sorted out.

But unlike what happened in 2010, when Australia went to bed with one prime minister and woke up to another, now we have time.

This leadership ballot is happening in caucus, the group of 103 Labor MPs and senators we elected, but that doesn’t mean it is not our vote.

We are their employers. My Dad works for me.  I often remind him of that. He is my local member and I helped put him there. I walked into a church hall and in the privacy of a polling booth I put a one next to his name.

You’re all employers too. You might not be related to your employees, but that doesn’t mean you don’t have access to them. When they aren’t doing their jobs, you can tell them. When they are misbehaving, you can reprimand them.

I live in Beijing, a city with a population the size of our whole nation—twenty-two million people.

Like us, they get up in the morning. They have a shower and wonder if their favourite top is dry yet. They get dressed and go to work. They have lunch with their colleagues and bitch about HR. At the end of the day they swap heels for runners and go home. They order dinner from the grease-stained menus on the fridge, call their mum and switch on the telly.

At the same time each night on almost every free-to-air TV station all over China is the same national news broadcast. I don’t mean it’s similar, I mean the exact same show. In sync. You can flick between stations and the same guy is on your screen telling you what is going on, or at least what he’s allowed to tell you is going on.

You can’t just go, ‘this is boring, that guy’s tie is feral—I wonder what’s happening over on The Project.’

You can’t write to your local MP about it because you don’t have one and a complaint to the network is a complaint to the government.

When you watch international stations like the BBC and CNN, stories about China often disappear. The screen goes blank.

There’s no Twitter or Facebook. Don’t get me wrong, there are social media platforms and they’re epic. But in China it’s all still new and risky. People do say what they think but they worry about the consequences. Controversial posts are mysteriously removed from China’s equivalent of Twitter, Weibo. They just vanish.

We, the people of Australia, are different. We have power.

We are not a passive audience in a crowded cinema with popcorn on our laps waiting for the previews to end.

We are participants. We have a voice and I think we should bloody well use it. Get up and say something. Say it loudly. Be heard.

You might think Julia Gillard is the ant’s pants. Fab. Say it.

You might think my Dad is ace. Cool. Write it.

You might think everyone sucks. Scream it.

Tweet something. Rant on Facebook. Put a video on YouTube. Put a sign on your front fence. Have a chat with your neighbour. Tell your friends. Email your local MP. Ring them up. Stop them at the news agent and make them listen. Call your local radio station. Have a rally Vote in an online poll. Write a song about it. Get on Mamamia and say, ‘OMG she’s just saying that because she’s KRudd’s daughter.’

Look, I know the parliament can seem alien at times—believe me, it’s even weirder when you’re there—but it is not out of reach. It’s ours. We own it.

Let’s own this spill, people. Let’s make it ours. Make your MPs work for you. Tell them what you want. Because unlike my mates in China, we have no excuse for simply sitting back and letting it happen.

Jessica Rudd, is a Canberra-born, Brisbane-raised ex-lawyer, ex-campaign worker and ex-PR consultant who lives with her husband in Beijing. She has written the occasional column, a host of legal letters, countless press releases and two novels Ruby Blues and Campaign Ruby.
 Jess Rudd writes: This spill is ours. Own it.

So, if you were in caucus, which way would you vote?

Editor’s Note: We’ve been surprised that some readers have not understood that this is an opinion piece so we thought it might be helpful to clarify a few points. Jessica Rudd is the daughter of Kevin Rudd who is expected to challenge Julia Gillard for leadership of the ALP on Monday. That much is clear. Neither Jessica nor Mamamia is purporting this piece to be impartial political analysis. Jessica is not Laurie Oakes and has never pretended to be. But she is someone with a unique and undeniably newsworthy insight into the biggest news story in Australia this week.

Mamamia publishes opinion pieces every day and sometimes they are political. We publish views from the left, the right and everywhere in between. Tony Abbott, Jenny Macklin, Kate Ellis, Julia Gillard, Sarah Hanson Young and Malcolm Turnbull are among politicians who have had opinion pieces published on Mamamia in the past 12 months.

Mamamia is not the ABC but we do try hard to publish a variety of views to reflect the diversity of our audience but also TO START CONVERSATIONS among you, our readers. Because we don’t ever underestimate your intelligence. We know that you can see who wrote a post and make your own assumptions about their beliefs and motivations.

We are proud to publish Jessica’s posts here on Mamamia, just as we always have been. Yes, the invitation has been extended to any other politician or family member of a candidate who has something to say about this extraordinary and quite bizarre time in federal politics.

That invitation is ongoing.

And we are also pleased to announce the appointment of our first dedicated political correspondent for Mamamia, journalist Lauren Dubois who today files her first of many upcoming pieces from Canberra which you can read here.

- Mia Freedman

Kevin Rudd wins office during the November 2007 Federal election.

Comments

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1,678 Comments so far

  1. Article Submission

    bmLObu Great, thanks for sharing this article.

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  2. M Geeky

    Take a look at this, Jessica:
    http://www.expendable.rv

    Watch the film… all of it.

    Then tell me what you think of Australian politicians.

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  3. Acacia

    I cannot believe how mean some of these comments are. Regardless of my political beliefs or leanings, I think this is a well written and engaging piece. Jess, I think you’re great and an excellent role model for young women.

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  4. Anon

    I’m loath to add another click but I have to say that re-reading it 6 weeks after the event makes it even more obvious that this was propaganda designed to catch the not-too-clever plebs that the Labor Elite like to manipulate and look down their noses at. Nauseating? Sure. Unbearable? Not since the Queenslanders showed us how it’s done.

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  5. Michael

    It will be a crisis when there’s a rsgeoeivn default, and one or more countries exit the Euro. What’s happened so far is just a bout of anxiety.The bullhawks have been wrong all year about the strength of domestic economy, and imminent, real-soon-now, once-in-a-hundred years mining boom. If and when it eventuates I don’t see how its going to reverse the factors that are depressing consumer confidence, the housing market, retail and manufacturing. If the boom means even more tightening, all those sectors will become even more depressed.We’ve been lectured all year by the likes of Battellino about how rich we are, but outside of mining, construction and engineering, no-one is seeing much benefit, and I don’t think we will.If there wasn’t the carbon tax to blame for, well, everything, I reckon the RBA’s interest rate settings would already be a huge political issue. Fortunately for Tony Abbott and the RBA, Gillard is copping the blame for everything because of a modest, over-compensated tax that’s almost 12 months into the future!

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  6. dean

    There are many libs in sheeps clothing in the labour party and they dont care about the polity…

    Jessica hun,,, darling you haven’t got all the public fooled.

    f…off as you would say also were not all plebs dear!!

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  7. sam

    The jerk elite…

    Sorry mia had to use that word as that’s how Australians are viewed globally.

    Cheers

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  8. MrMac

    “My Dad works for me”. Which is why your book was so successful. And, you work for your dad. Cosy, huh?

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  9. Peoples vegemite

    So glad someone other than Rudd owned the spill. The comments throughout this piece echo the sentiment of the vast majority. The Rudd family appears to have been delusional to think anything other than this result was goimg tp happen. The parading around with the family duringthis time was pretty nauseating. I can’t stand how low in the gutter our country has ended up at the hands of these imposters. My theory with Rudd is that he alway knew he had no chance of winning anything. This act or manouvre was purely about personal spite. To bring on this type of battle would have enormous repercussions and enrage the country even further. Again a calculated move to further destabilise those who dared to remove the Lord from his throne. All the talk of this is for the people and everything else was really just more material to make you gag. Good riddance to the troublemaker and good riddnace the rest of them once we get the chance to do what should have already been done, vote them out.

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  10. Anon

    I find it amusing that Mia made reference of the intelligence of the readership of this site.
    I sadly assume she is referring to the readers who, on the whole, seem to think we elect a person, not a party, that policy is decided solely by the PM, not parliament and that Rudd was overthrown by one person, not a group of party members. I’d be willing to bet that a fair number of these commenters don’t have a clue what’s happening in politics – so why care now?

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  11. JHT

    Rudd or Gillard, I can cope…but Abbott – why doesn’t the Liberal Party get rid of Abbott as leader? Because the majority back his ideas and that’s concerning – with Malcolm Turnball as leader we’d have some hope for the future, at least the man is moderate, keeps religion and politics separate and has a strong understanding of economics. I can’t forget many of the statements made by Abbott over the years, when he forgot himself – he can’t keep religion and outdated attitudes about women out of his politics, but then, does he want to do that? Prepare yourselves for the Dark Ages if Abbott gets in…the far right in control or out of control!

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    • susan

      Why oh why is this post about ABBOTT!!!! what on earth does he have to do with this nonsense!

      Why oh why don’t some people just grow up!

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      • Taqi

        I would like to take the ability of siyang thanks to you for your professional suggestions I have always enjoyed checking out your site. I will be looking forward to the commencement of my school research and the complete prep would never have been complete without visiting your web site. If I can be of any help to others, I’d be happy to help by way of what I have gained from here.

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  12. jane

    as I said to my students ” you can be clever with your language choices and appear to have any point of view. Persuasion is an art in itself.That is why we get a great education. ”
    It doesnt mean you you actually HAVE that opinion…..or dont have other motivations.
    This is a great illustration of that point.

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  13. Lee

    The “out-of-touch” gene seems to run fairly strongly through the Rudd family. Does Jessica really believe that all 22 million residents of Beijing, like us, have the luxury of taking a shower every morning? How many Chinese, one wonders, actually owns a ‘favourite’ top? And how many of them have access to clean running water or the soap and the clothesline/ dryer needed to wash and dry this top? Also, it’s hard to imagine the vast majority of the city’s inhabitants being able to afford lunch, at least the type of meal conjured up in the phrase ‘lunch with their colleagues’. As well, I doubt very many of the 22 million would be aware of the concept of HR let alone have the ability or energy to ‘bitch’ about it. Further, I find it hard to believe that, at the end of the day, many of these people, living as they do in a country of grossly minimal wages and appalling sweat shops, would swap heels for runners and go home – two pairs of expensive shoes? Really? And finally, one also wonders what percentage of this same population can afford fridges on which to stick greasy menus or indeed how many have access to the phones needed to call their mums or even how many own tellies to switch on in the evenings.

    Now for the more important stuff. Jessica says that her father needs the support of the people of Australia and that we should pressure our local MPs to vote for him. However, her father was *legally* removed from office in 2010 and our local Members are already our proxies. So Jessica’s exhortations are pointless. They are rendered even more pointless because Rudd was not a president. He was a prime minister and was removed from leadership by his own party. So, there was no coup. As well, Rudd was free to seek leadership of the party immediately after he was deposed and indeed he has been free to do so ever since. Initially, he chose not to because he knew he was unpopular. What made him think otherwise, last week…who knows?

    In Australia, it is members of the parliamentary party who choose the party leader. There is only one thing stopping any MP from becoming leader – the numbers. For Kevin Rudd, this fact was borne out today in spades.

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  14. Tony

    If the Rabid Abbott is elected as the Prime Monster of Australia will his government be a minority government because it needs the support of the Nationals? If so does this mean we can tweet every minute for a new election because this is a bad choice?

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  15. Guest

    TROLOLOLOLOLOL @ you Miss Rudd

    Ok, I’ll try and be mature about this for more than a second. Honestly though, I have no idea why I should have to be if your Dad couldn’t see the light.

    Absolutely decimated and for good reason too. His sense of entitlement is sickening. I really hope he goes to the back bench and gets over his time in the limelight. Thanks for the further destablisation of the Labor party, I think we are guaranteed Abbott as the next PM now, and you have your father to thank. So glad he could act for himself and no one else.

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  16. Guest

    “Undeniably newsworthy insight”? Newsworthy??

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  17. jennafelicity

    So many people have said they are disenfranchised with all sides of Australia’s government.

    I wonder I this spill has actually caused anyone to seriously think about their own future – perhaps within their local and/or state and/or eventually federal government.

    It’s all very well for us to bitch and moan yet sit on the sidelines.

    But my question is genuine and I would love an answer: has the past few days inspired anyone to get involved? Or at least think about getting involved?

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    • missy

      jennafelicity, I salute you.

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  18. James

    I cannot believe Rudd. He is beaten comprehensively and still tries to hog the limelight and go on about Australia’s foreign policy record. Biggest ego ever! If anyone thinks this guy will go to the backbench and toe the ALP line, then they better think again.

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  19. Anon

    I’m just thankful the caucus made the right decision today. Australia dodged a major bullet there, not to mention the labor party and their future!
    I’m not sure why the Rudd family consider themselves to be above the rest of Australians, and feel they have a right to patronise their fellow (equal) citizens, but hopefully this is now the end of all this hoopla.

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  20. Sydney girl

    I would now very much welcome a follow up piece from Jessica Rudd, about why her father has been leaking assidiously against his own party since June 2010. About why he has been so clearly unable to move on from his humiliation, and about why he decided, once again, to put the party through such a pointless excersize as a challenge he had no hope of winning, or even of nearly winning.

    It is clear that Kevin Rudd’s numbers have not improved since June 2010, when he refused to face a party room vote. Today’s result is one of the worst (if not the worst) results ever recorded by a ALP leadership challenger.

    I handed out for Kevin Rudd, I campaigned for Kevin Rudd, and I voted for Kevin Rudd. I has a Kevin Rudd corflute on my fence. I drank the Kool Aid. I believed in him. But I now realise that the whole party – the whole country – was in the thrall of a mad man.

    In all seriousness, I hold quite grave fears for Rudd’s mental wellbeing. It is time for people who clearly love him, like Jessica and his wife, to tell him that enough is enough, and to help him move on with his life.

    The Rudd family (dynasty?) has collectively put this 120 year old party through hell, and it has been utterly without reason and in vain. I am embarrassed for them, and ashamed of them.

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    • female voter

      Well said. Kevin move on to something else – maybe Asian Development Bank…….. Jessica – have a think about the wisdom of your actions in writing this article.

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    • Kat

      Brilliant comment. I too voted for Rudd. I supported him throughout his prime ministership. I felt bad for him when he was replaced with Gillard (despite my excitment about having our first female PM). I questioned labor’s decision. But after Rudd’s disgusting behaviour in the last few days I completely understand why Labor felt that it was necessary to replace him. Selfish, self-serving, unprofessional, arrogant and delusional with absolutely no consideration for the Labor party or the country it runs.

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    • Em

      She won’t write one. Never apologise and never explain :)

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  21. Nia Coco

    Flagrant propaganda for her father.
    Appallingly patronising in tone.
    Bad decision to run this article, Mamamia.

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    • gina

      Absolutely 100% agree! Stop treating readers like dummies and tools to prop up failing politicians. If dad Krudd had had more support in caucus do you think Jess would have run this propoganda??

      The result should now tell you to stop feeding us this garbage.

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  22. Bemused

    CHAOS REIGNS! Jokes.

    Exactly what should have happened, happened. Congratulations Julia, you have the overwhelming support of your caucus, the most important way forward for a PM. Labor can now focus on what they needed to, govern our lovely little country.

    It was a victory for commensense, not ‘supposed’ popularity. The Rudd family propaganda wagon failed to achieve anything, except bring to light the many failings of Kevin Rudd as the leader of a political party.

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  23. Tony

    It’s time to tell the Prime Monster that we will no longer vote Labor. What she, Swan, Crean, Garrett, Roxson etc have done will come back to BITE them on the ARSE. The should be lining up outside their local Centrelink office to register for Newstart. Everybody should now email the Prime Ministers Office & their local members office and tell them of their mistake in not listening to the people. Remember its people power that brings change and the Labour Caucus needs to learn this lesson at the next Federal Election.
    Mr Rudd please resign from the labor party and start a new Australian Peoples Party I will join ASAP

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    • Kate

      Br!ing on a ‘no confidence vote’ and an election ASAP. Hopefully KRudd’s ego will be so dented that he becomes an independent… that will be interesting!

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    • Sigh

      Is that you, Jess?

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  24. Anonymous

    Looks like your old man better find a new job…

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    • Anonymous

      I think that will be all of Labor come next election…..

      They’ve just signed their (political) death warrant……..

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  25. Jennifer Wilson

    This is a good piece by Jess Rudd, reminding us how fortunate we are to live in a country where we do have freedom of speech.

    She’s right to suggest that everyone takes ownership of this spill, and remind politicians that they are accountable to the electorate.

    I’m not a Kevin or Julia supporter, am not in their electorates, and am sick of the whole thing, but have emailed my federal member about the caucus vote.

    I congratulate mamamia on publishing this piece. Jess Rudd shouldn’t be silenced because of her dad when she has interesting and pertinent things to say.

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    • Em

      But she doesn’t say anything! It’s a bunchof patronising platitudes which sound as if she’s talking about American politics. And I doubt she believes the claptrap she wrote any more than we do.

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    • female voter

      are you a family friend Jennifer Wilson??? come on!!!

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  26. Deborah Harris

    If I were in Caucus I would vote Rudd. Am concerned with where this goes next re national morale. What happened to Rudd and family was wrong and deserve now restoration of Kevin as PM. Because he said Sorry because he has Vision and Heart. Respect Kevin Rudd- he is worthy of being PM and deserves to have injustice overturned. Many would no doubt love to work with him and would find him inspiring and admirable and conscious of human rights – Assange, Reconciliation Social justice and FAIR GO

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    • Markynhos

      interesting, Shaun.I’ve worked in the virpate sector for 15 years, public for 3. I encountered a very few fine individuals in virpate employment, and many, many more shysters and spivs. Your tale about business owners over-extending their credit rings very true, it’s happened to 3 of my employers.Interesting that the wingnuts are absolutely savage against virpate homeowners who take on a too-big mortgage, but they’re willing to give a free pass to business owners who get themselves into too much debt (and usually try and get out of it by screwing their employees out of superannuation payments).I then worked in tax for a couple of years, dealing with companies who were behind on their income tax withholdaing payments. That’s right, they were paying their workers the after-tax income, but failing to remit the income tax portion to the public purse. Basically it meant they were trading while insolvent, unable to pay their obligations as and when they fell due. Absolute leeches on society as far as they were concerned, it was one rule for them, one rule for everybody else. I heard all the special pleading and dog-ate-my-homework excuses under the sun. And believe me, they were companies and names you have heard of.I find it peculiar that some people are so ready to throw an aura of secular sainthood around folks who are just out to make a buck. About 80% of the ones I dealt with were spivs, nothing more, nothing less.

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  27. Bec

    So if Rudd does get in, anyone care to hazard a guess on how quick another stimulas package might come our way!!? I need the spare cash!!!!

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    • Kate

      Me too, but thanks to the surplus the Liberals had managed to accumulate KRudd had money to spend, as part of his ‘economically saving Australia’ campaign -not so now:( Perhaps one of the reasons Australia escaped recession (besides the mines) was because we had ‘money in the bank’ unlike many of our Western counterparts. The ‘debit card’ Howard government has given way to the ‘credit card with high interest’ Labor government. Thanks a lot for the $900….

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  28. KP

    Jess- your article has certainly sparked some debate. Everyone is entitled to an opinion and although yours was trying to encourage everyone to speak their minds, talk to local mps, etc regardless of who you support, it is very clearly just another example of clever rudd campaigning. Its really the only thing your family are good at and the only reason why Kev won the 2007 election at all.

    I am a coalition voter and in many ways have enjoyed watching this week the labour party eat each other alive. Unfortunately, this isnt a game and it sickens me greatly to think our hard earned taxpayers money goes to paying these monkeys for a week of schoolyard antics. Of which was started by your father!!!! Please spare me the poor little Kevin stories and how he was forced to resign because the PM didnt back him….seriously, you don’t need to be a politician to know he has been itching to knock Julia off as soon as he could. His return to australia reads like a presidential election campaign-its all about KRudd. People power….whatever! As for the 2010 ‘coup’, had your father been more in touch with his staff and perhaps even spent more time in our country then jetsetting around the world having his photo taken with the who’s who, he may have got the vibe that something was in the air. I dont need to hear such excuses as how he had so much to deal with eg saving Aust from the GFC whilst dealing with promised policies and reforms. How he took it upon himself to do it all because he is such a perfectionist. And how he didnt sleep…boohoo…its called management skills and delegating. He is not the only leader in the world-that is what the job of PM entails. He couldnt do it then and I doubt he can do it again.

    I am certainly not a supporter of Julia either, in fact, I think she and her minority govt are destroying this country. She has however impressed me this last week with how she has conducted herself with dignity, unlike your father who claims to have changed- I doubt that very much. In fact I doubt very much that your fathers passion to be PM, is not for the good of our country (or labour party) but rather of personal gain. He is so full of himself Im guessing the thought of being listed in political history as a failed PM must be horrifying.

    The fact that I would like Julia to win tomorrow says alot about the faith I have in your fathers ability to run our country. I cant bear the thought of having a PM whose daughter tweets “Im effing proud of you Dad”- classy, which was then followed up by your Mum saying “me too”.

    The only upside of Kevin winning tomorrow (God help us) is that it may put a halt to more money wasting policies being implemented because KRudd will spend the next 18 months in pre election mode. Not to mention he will struggle to work in with his greens and independent colleagues.

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    • Kate

      Well written KP- hopefully Mia won’t remove your comment in case it upsets Jess. I’m fairly confident we will see Kev licking his wounds again tomorrow- clearly he hasn’t changed. Bring on a more conservative government if that is the worse Abbott can do. Australia has become a more ‘conservative’ country in response to global issues, but the Labor pollies have been too busy bickering and backstabbing to notice!

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      • MaryAlice

        Grubsheet’s source – there’s a risk that yet tenahor leadership change will hurt the party by reinforcing the notion that the Labor leadership is a revolving door, totally hostage to the opinion polls. Within Labor, this is called “the New South Wales disease”, after a succession of leadership changes there saw a tired and corrupt government reduced to a rump in the parliament in the last state election. Yet such is the disillusionment with Gillard that MPs are coming to realise that switching jockeys is their only hope, and the sooner the better.This school of thought has it that felling Gillard now will give her successor a clear run of two years to establish himself and have at least some hope of reversing the tsunami of community support for the Liberal-National Party Coalition. Labor foolishly believed that Coalition leader Tony Abbott was unelectable. But Abbott – a fiercely effective opponent of the carbon tax – has streaked eleven points ahead of Gillard as preferred prime minister in the latest poll.Labor now faces a nightmare scenario – that Abbott will not just win the next election, whenever it’s held, but Labor will be so badly beaten that it will be out of office for a generation and may, indeed, cease to be any significant force in Australian politics at all. What to do? Well, here’s the startling scenario outlined to Grubsheet by our source – a Labor “grandee” with close links to all of the main players.Gillard is a dead woman walking and according to this source, most credible figures in the party are now openly conceding the fact. This includes traditional power brokers and number crunchers like former national secretary, Karl Bitar, and former Keating minister, Graham Richardson, who is openly telling people that “the government is f***ed”. Labor is now privately canvassing alternatives. And while there’s some support for former ACTU secretary Greg Combet – Gillard’s Minister for Climate Change – the smart money is on the other former senior union boss in Gillard’s cabinet – Bill Shorten, the Assistant Treasurer.Shorten shot to national fame and popularity five years ago when he became the spokesman for the families of Tasmanian miners trapped in the Beaconsfield mine disaster. He’s credible, articulate and has some powerful connections beyond Labor and the union movement. Shorten is married to Chloe Bryce, the daughter of Governor-General Quentin Bryce. And it’s not lost on Labor that the couple and their 18-month old daughter, Clementine, would present a sharply more voter-friendly image as the nation’s first family compared to Julia Gillard and “First Bloke” Tim Mathieson – her live-in lover at The Lodge.But being Labor, of course, it’s the politics that really count. And what’s decisively in Shorten’s favour is his membership – and leadership, as former national secretary – of the Australian Worker’s Union, the dominant faction in modern Labor. The AWU makes and breaks ministerial careers at will – its Queensland boss Bill Ludwig arguably Labor’s most powerful figure, to whom senior figures like Treasurer Wayne Swan owe their entire careers.So Bill Shorten is both “connected” – in Mafia parlance – and user friendly. The bookies in Queensland already have him as odds-on favourite to replace Gillard and Labor’s elder statesmen like Bob Hawke and Kim Beazley long ago identified him as a potential future prime minister. And he has the all important killer instinct to both succeed in politics and survive in Labor ranks, a key figure in the political assassination of former prime minister, Kevin Rudd, and the installation of Gillard as his successor.Will Shorten actively move against Gillard? Only the coming days and weeks will tell. But one thing is certain. The draft is well and truly on, with senior Labor figures – including some of Gillard’s own ministers – convinced that the electorate has stopped listening to her and her chances of a political resurrection are now zero.The one wild card is Kevin Rudd, who makes no secret of wanting to make a comeback. The chances of that are also said to be zero, such is the personal animosity towards him in Labor’s ranks. But if the party calls the bluff of the independents and removes Gillard and installs Shorten, what then? Would Rudd seek to bring the whole house of cards down by resigning his Queensland seat and prompting a bye-election that the polls show Labor would surely lose? Here again, the growing mood is to call Rudd’s bluff, to dare him to enter history as a Labor “Rat”, who brought down a government and made Tony Abbott prime minister in an act of petulant personal revenge.Some Labor figures now perceive the entire future of the party to be at risk, as its traditional “aspirational working class” constituency turns to Abbott and “left leaning progressives” in the cities turn to the “save-the-planet-at-all costs” Greens. Certainly, there’s a growing sense that the Greens – with whom Labor entered into an uneasy coalition to govern – are the real enemy, more dangerous even than Abbott as they steadily erode Labor’s primary vote.So here’s tenahor scenario. That if the independents make good on their promise of “Julia or dust” and sacrifice themselves by returning the country to the polls, Labor will turn on the Greens. They’ll do a preference deal with the Liberal-National Coalition to put the Greens last on ballot papers across the country and try to destroy them as a mainstream party altogether. Sound extreme? Well, some senior Labor figures now see this as the party’s only hope of keeping it alive in any form at all to continue its proud record of governing Australia stretching back more than a century. “May you live in interesting times”, goes Chinese saying.Comment:This will happen and the sooner the better, for Labor likes nothing more than a good knifing of a failed leader at five minutes to midnight. Gillard is just waiting for a tap on the shoulder. Those currently plotting to knife her are the same conspirators that installed her after stabbing Rudd in the back last year, sooner or later they might get it right. If they do go with Shorten, it would be something of a fleeting surge for him, not unlike the act Hawke pulled on Hayden, of which I was reminded as to just how repulsive he was then (and still is) in a film on Foxtel on Sunday night. To think that Australia had that egocentric bodgie as our PM for nine years, it doesn’t say much for the quality of the electorate, does it?Admittedly, Shorten has a bit more style than Hawke, but he’s still only a lacklustre pick from a party devoid of any real talent. The reason I think this change will happen, is because Labor knows that the loathsome rural independents only have one self-serving objective in mind, and that is to qualify for huge retirement payments that are triggered around the end of 2011 and early in 2012. They couldn’t care less what happens to Gillard, so long as they get their ‘super qualification dates’ attained. Charming – isn’t it? Mind you, if any ‘one’ of them had a grain of decency and a genuine concern for Australia, they would pull the pin on Labor and force an election but pigs can’t fly as far as I’m aware. I don’t believe Rudd would cause a problem, but then wouldn’t it be lovely if he did, since we know he’s nether forgiven nor forgotten their act of treachery.The political landscape would alter slightly with Shorten as the ALP leader, for the reasons mentioned above – he being a far more acceptable type than the hapless one who currently, unfittingly, occupies The Lodge. But Shorten is someone that can only be called extemporaneous prime minister material as he’s only been in parliament for 5 minutes. However, this Labor government, as Graham Richardson so eloquently put it – “ .is f***ed”. The electorate are definitely not buying this ridiculous carbon tax sham for starters, plus they’re fed up with the never-ending wholesale mismanagement of everything this bunch of morons try to implement, so irrespective of whatever leadership stunt they try-on, nobody is listening and they want them out urgently. The sooner Labor acknowledges that they’ve totally stuffed up the whole shooting match and call an election, the better. I tend to think the point above about the Greens being their biggest worry for the future, is spot on, as let’s face it – these feckless ex-union types are all about self preservation, what the hell else are they going to do – go back to the union?

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    • Alley Cat

      Absolutely agree with you, KP.

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    • Allie

      Agreed. When Gillard knifed Rudd in 2010, I saw it coming a mile away. Gillard had leadership ambitions for a few years prior to that, and it was said she hated Rudd but came together with Rudd to challenge Beazley so she could be Deputy and closer to the prize. The problem with Rudd was that he was barely in Australia as PM. He was the Clayton’s Prime Minister. He was Prime Minister in NAME only – Gillard did all the work as Acting Prime Minister and spent more time as Acting Prime Minister than Rudd spent on Australian soil.

      Rudd couldn’t have made it more obvious that his heart was not in the job, he was all about getting a job on the UN etc. The public only hate Gillard because they know her. Rudd was NEVER HERE as PM, so its hard to hate someone who IS NOT HERE. I know PMs must travel, meet heads, diplomats etc, but Rudd virtually ran Australia from the air. Rudd as PM was virtually a stranger. He was the legal PM in name only; Gillard as Acting PM was the only PM so many knew. I guess it was only fair that she got the job officially in 2010, since it was her that did all the work while Rudd showed a total lack of interest in even being in Australia.

      Perhaps if Jessica’s father actually WANTED to be on Australian soil and wanted the job of PM in the first place, he wouldn’t have been deposed. Australia needs to be run from its soil, not from the air in a 737, as Kevin737 did. Australia deserves a full-time PM, not a quarter one.

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  29. Kathy Green

    I am a STRONG supporter of Kevin Rudd. I wish him all the best and pray for a favour able outcome of the ballot and ghat some caucus members have a change of heart towards Kevin. All things a possible through Gid. I will never vote Labor again if these polies

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    • Anonymous

      I’m not asking this in a smart ass way, I genuinely want to hear your thoughts, but aren’t there more important things to pray about (if you have faith in God that he can fix all things) than a leadership spill?

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      • Meri

        Yeah, like an election.

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  30. Morag

    ‘Hope’ is the best thing to have, ‘Confidence’ in yourself means you don’t need to seek it elsewhere, ‘Pride’ equals our personal worth and I believe the Rudd Family have that.
    As an Australian I hope tomorrow Kevin Rudd is reinstated, I have the confidence in Kevin Rudd that he can run this country and I have pride in the success that Kevin Rudd can bring to the Labor party.

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  31. Mia

    Yet another reminder to keep this civil. Personal abuse about any Mamamia contributors will not be tolerated and those comments will be deleted.

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    • Kate

      Mia- interesting response to an article about advocating free speech- removing comments as you perceive the persons opinion as personal abuse. Jessica’s article was clearly written for political motives and if you put yourself in the public eye- you open yourself up to criticism. My point was that as a mother now she should consider the impact exposing herself to unnecessary stress may have on her fetus. That’s not opinion -it’s a biological fact!

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      • Mia

        Kate some of the comments on this post that have been deleted have been personal and nasty. To Jess and to others. I do not buy the defence that if you put yourself in the public eye you have to cop anything that’s thrown at you. Not on this site. Not on our watch. Regardless of your politics.

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        • Kate

          Those in the public eye do attract attention both positive and negative – hence our love affair with celebrities and the debate that Jess has generated for your site. How they take that response depends on their self esteem and expectations like any one else. Unlike this website, humanity can’t be airbrushed in the real world

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          • Anon

            Mia is right – the personal vitriol is unnecessary. Kate – why are you commenting on Jess’s fetus? It’s absurd.

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            • Kate

              Not from the fetus’s point of view! Being exposed to higher levels of cortisol, impacting on it’s developing nervous system because Mum is stressed. No action is taken in isolation

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  32. female voter

    The more I read the comments here, the articles and news coming out about Rudd’s character, lack of decency or common politeness the madder I am with this cynical Jess Rudd/Krudd campaign PR article trying to get the public involved in getting this guy his job back.

    I guess, in fact, this article has had the opposite effect for some of us.

    I certainly will never read any JRudd material again and I question MM’s judgment in publishing it.

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  33. Claudia

    You would be kicked out of my dinner party….nasty.

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  34. Just Saying

    Caterina, the elections were in 2007. It was called Kevin 07 remember?

    I take umbrage to the fact you refer to our Prime Minister as a Red Head Cow and a back stabbing bitch.

    I find it so sad we are so disrespectful to our PM.

    I implore you to do some homework as to why Kevin was ousted by his own party in 2010. And it looks as if there will be a two thirds majority vote for Gillard tomorrow. There must be a reason for that, don’t you think?

    Its so incredibly disappointing that you have resorted to personal insults to make your point.

    I really hope that karma doesn’t get its way and you are never on the receiving end of such insults yourself.

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  35. Louisec

    The person who “took the job away from the Prime Minister” was Kevin Rudd. No one to blame but himself.

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  36. sybil

    Misogynist insults don’t trip moderation around here?

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  37. Tony

    Subject: Australia’s Prime Minister
    Comment: After first voting for Gough as a 19 year old and voting labor ever since I will for the first time vote for another party if you retain the leadership of the labor caucus. I grew up in a blue collar working class family in Woolloomooloo before it became trendy. A suburb of wharfies, council workers, labourers, fishermen etc. But Prime Minister you have consistently lied and misled us the people of Australia and as such will never again vote Labor whilst ever you or people like Wayne Swan, & Simon Crean retain control of this most peoples party. I will however give you my word to never vote for Anthony Abbott as I find this person to be even more distrustful than you, but only just…

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  38. Anonymous

    Oh dear, all you julia supporters truly are brain washed arent you. Perhaps you prefer her because she…. Speaks…. Slow…. Enough…. For…. You…. To…. Understand…? I keep reading about kevin doing this wrong, kevin doing that wrong. What may i ask did he ever do wrong? Of course besides from back away from his cets? Which (by the way incase you are blind or deaf) julia convinced him to do. Some of you may say ‘oh but julia has done alot’. Bollocks! Almost everything julia has done was originally promised and planned by kevin! Some of you may bring up the topic of the bungled roof batts scheme, i am sorry but the problem wasnt kevin, the problem was cowboy backyard companies trying to cash in. Cmon, try to find a real bone to pick about our kev, i bet you cant find any, because there just isnt any. You gillard supporters are just like typical schoolyard bullies. You cant stand someone being happy or making achievements, so you pick and pick, and when you cant find something to pick about, you make lies to pick about. Oh how dismal life would have been in australia if our kev, our saviour, hadnt of been elected.

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    • Claudia

      Here’s an idea, why don’t you read the story on this site called ‘Is this why Kevin was ousted in 2010?’

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    • Just Saying

      Lets just stick to the topic rather than reduce ourselves to personal insults. We are all adults here I hope.

      The roof batts scheme incidentally was the original idea of Malcolm Turnbull that got recycled when Kevin Rudd came in to power.

      Read it here –
      http://www.themonthly.com.au/why-one-year-after-election-voters-still-don-t-know-who-gillard-prime-minister-interrupted-annabel-c

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    • Just Saying

      I have only recently become an admirer of Julia. Before that I sat on the fence and didn’t really take a huge amount of interest.

      But the way that she has handled herself in the past week has really shown me her true colours.

      I don’t want a “popular” PM with a huge ego. I want a PM that is going to hold themselves with grace under pressure and get through the tough times when it is required of them. A bit like how John Howard was during his years in government.

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    • Faybian

      Kev the saviour??? Give me strength. Anyone who puts a politician of any persusuasion on a pedestal seriously needs help. They’re people with foibles and faults just like everyone else.

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    • chris2

      I would like to point out that making fun of the way Julia Gillard speaks is the same as making fun of the way anyone speaks, its offensive to mock anyone for that aspect of their being. Anyone who hasn’t had their head in the sand would know that this kind of ridicule is the every same as we are trying to rid our schools and society of as it victimises the person whom it is aimed at ads well as fostering and endorsing similar behaviour on the part of other “onlookers”. Stick to the topic.

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      • Caro

        Torpedo the Speedo? Mad Monk? Wingnut?

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  39. Lynne

    It really upset me, and many others too, when Kevin Rudd was ousted from his position as PM of Australia, in such an underhanded manner, and it is further infuriating me that people who once praised Kevin to high heaven are now hell bent on destroying him with their vicious character assassinations in the media. Now, once again, Gillard supporters are treating the people of Australia as idiots who can’t see what’s going on. Gillard is saying she “get’s things done” but her successes are few. She also says that Mr Rudd “started things but never finished them” well how was he able to finish long term projects when he was kicked out beforehand. Many people , myself included, will not vote for the ALP in the next election with Gillard as leader. We believe that Kevin Rudd should be re instated as PM as it was wrong for him to be removed in the first place. When he resigned as Foreign Minister, we all knew it was because Gillard was on the verge of sacking him for “disloyalty” “undermining the leadership” and “destabilising the government”. What a hypocrite she is as this is exactly what she, and her cronies, have done. I’ve never heard Kevin Rudd say anything against Gillard or the government . I heard him say only that he was continuing to work in the interests of the Labor party and that he was enjoying his role as Foreign Minister,even that Gillard had his full support as PM. On the other hand Gillard has rarely missed an opportunity to blame Mr Rudd for anything and everything, including her many failures as PM. A large number of the voters in this country want Gillard out and prefer Kevin Rudd as her replacement. She has accused Kevin Rudd of being egotistical and putting his own agenda before the good of the Labor party but, there again, what she accuses him of is what she’s actually doing herself. If she had the party’s interests at heart she would resign on Monday and hand over to Mr Rudd. I would hate to see Tony Abbott become PM but fear this may happen in the not too distant future. Please Caucus members, do the right thing for our country and support Mr Rudd as leader of the ALP.

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    • Just Saying

      I suggest you read this well researched and in depth article written by the brilliant political commentator Annabel Crabb. It will give you some insight.

      http://www.themonthly.com.au/why-one-year-after-election-voters-still-don-t-know-who-gillard-prime-minister-interrupted-annabel-c

      The fact is Kevin Rudd wasn’t very well liked by the Labor party even when he went ran in the 07 election. But he is very good at campaigning, self promotion and PR spin. He is great at getting on popular TV shows and using up the oxygen in the room and we have again seen evidence of this since he has staged his come back.

      I for one am glad that he wrestled the government back from the Liberals in 2007. What has unfolded since has proven that he was great at getting Labor in to power but not very good at actually managing and leading the government.

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      • Lizi

        Yes, do read it. It’s long, but worth it.

        It’s a really fascinating insight as to what happens when a party will overlook pre-existing misgivings about a potential leader because they’re so desperate to get back into power after a decade in opposition.

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  40. janes

    Let me start by saying that I have no time for Kevin Rudd’s politics, nor, it seems, his daughter’s. In my 40 years plus in the work force, all except two of them in one form of government service or another, I have been ‘shafted’ by government decisions, processes or actions on no less than five significant occasions – two under Mr Whitlam, one under Mr Hawke, one under Mr Keating and now one under Ms Gillard. I am as far from being a ‘traditional Labor voter’ as you can get. That said, in my voting career I have voted Labor; only once, I admit, but I did so based on what I believed that particular member could potentially do for my family and me. The fact that his promises never came to pass was a lesson learned, and I moved on.

    Thus, it is no secret that I am conservative in my poitical views and will usually vote Liberal when given the option. That said, what happened to Kevin Rudd in 2010 at the hands of his own party, by those who were supposedly loyal to him, was a gross miscarriage of the Australian political system. Although I don’t agree with a US-style leadership process, and that certainly isn’t how our system is supposed to function, there is no hiding the fact that Labor’s landslide win in 2007 was very much on the back of Mr Rudd’s personal standing. His poor performance as PM was reflected in the polls, his government’s inability to govern effectively on show to the whole nation. Even the Labor party saw that, and so staged a political assassination of the man at the top. That Brutus, in the guise of his Deputy PM Julia Gillard, wielded the knife by accepting the position after a ballot was called, was an indication of her lust for power, not her desire to steer the country out of the mess it was in. In recent days she has cast great criticism on the government under Mr Rudd, yet she fails to mention that, as Deputy PM, she was equally culpable. So too was Wayne Swan.

    The honourable solution would have been to call for an election there and then rather than seize power in a coup. If the Australian people were happy with Labor they’d have got back in. Instead, in less than twelve months they frittered away a once massive advantage.

    Since then Ms Gillard has shown that her own political ambition outweighs the concept of what is best for a majority of people in the country. Her approach of socialism-by-stealth is no longer by stealth. How do we appeal to those ‘workers’ we’ve lost? Portray ‘the rich’ as evil incarnate, then redefine ‘rich’ to collect more spoils without actually doing anything for those same poor workers.

    I hope Mr Rudd wins the ballot tomorrow – not because I want him back as PM but because the way he was deposed was simply wrong, and was not a decision of the voters who helped put him there.

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  41. marniequin2

    Bec, like you, I am bemused but not surprised by Jess referring to the
    ‘mess’ to be sorted out – a mess of her father’s making.

    Also, you say that you’re ‘really failing to understand why Jess had to come back and why mother and daughter are doing interviews’…You ask why they are doing interviews/writing “opinion” pieces?

    Bec, these people are very, very clever and they have an extremely competent, politically savvy manager.

    What they’re doing is sophisticated and effective PR; anything positive in the media relating to the Rudd family helps Kevin, so they’re making that happen!

    Both Jess and Therese are attractive and appealing; they win mindless hearts for Kevin ! You will have seen it here-“Jess, I love you.” “Jess for Prime Minister”- all this does Kevin no harm.

    Smart PR also allows scripted words to emanate fromTherese and Jess. e.g. Therese has just dropped some ‘innocent’ remarks about Julia Gillard not being able to ‘look her in the eye. Up until then I had always thought she was a team player.” Clever, huh?

    You would have noticed that many of the comments made by Jess on TV, even some of the ‘spontaneous’ jokey bits, were exactly the same as in her well-written Mamamia piece.

    In Jess’s Mamamia article, you’ll see how skilfully the following is worked in:- “ But unlike what happened in 2010, when Australia went to bed with one prime minister and woke up to another, . . . “

    Perhaps the next stage will be the presentation of Kevin as “the martyr”, crucified because he was . . .? It will be good, you can be sure, and worth watching out for!!! although it won’t happen immediately.

    ( First, though, we’ll probably see ‘Kevin, the good little Vegemite,’ ‘Kevin, the good loser’, ‘Kevin, loyal to Julia Gillard, Prime Minister’ and ‘Kevin, the staunch Labour team player’)

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    • Louisec

      I strongly disagree that this has done no harm to Rudd. It’d done enormous harm. It’s made him appear weak and as at least one commentator stated in the newspapers this weekend, he appears as though “he’s hiding under skirts’.

      That’s exactly what I think as well. At least Gillard has the fortitude (and the common sense) to stand on her own.

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  42. savannah

    Jessica should have advised her dad that revenge is bad for the soul and to take the ousting gracefully and be satisfied in doing the job of Foreign Minister!

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    • Savannah

      And have more time to enjoy being a new grandfather soon!

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    • Lynne

      He probably would have been satisfied with that, but he wasn’t going to be Foreign Minister for too much longer, Gillard was on the verge of sacking him when he resigned. the result of yet another conspiracy involving her and her “advisors” . In addition, I believe he’s having another shot at being leader of the ALP in response to the many Australians who disapproved of the way he was ousted and want him back rather than for revenge.

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  43. Bec

    Also, love how Jess says this is a mess and needs to be sorted out..can’t help thinking there would be nothing to sort out if Kevin didn’t start it.

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  44. Bec

    Really failing to understand why Jess had to come back and why mother and daughter are doing interviews…isn’t this challenge between Kevin and Julia?. Seriously why are they doing interviews/writing “opinion” pieces??. Really pisses me off. What do they have to do with this? I don’t go to my parents work when they want a position change. God, just stay out of it!

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    • janes

      Bec, the truth is that this is a matter for the Labor caucus, and no-one else. If MPs really wanted to cast their vote tomorrow based on how ‘we, the people’ feel they’d be asking us now. I, for one, know our local Labor member is very quiet. I have no idea how she’ll vote, though I suspect for Ms Gillard as she (our MP) got elected in 2010. I seriously doubt she knows how the majority of her constituents feel about the ballot. There is no way we can “own this ballot”.

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  45. Mrs B

    Didn’t realise this was a hustings.

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  46. Kat

    Jess, I am a great fan of your books and I admire your father. However, I don’t think what he is doing is doing the Labor party, and himself, any good.

    I support the prime minister because, like all of us, had had everything going wrong for her from day 1 and yet she had the energy to get up every morning and keep going.

    I wake up every morning, being a mother and a full time worker, and out of 5 days that I have to go to work a week, I feel like calling in for a ‘doona day’ (your words) at least 3 out of those 5.

    Being a prime minister is a 24/7 job. At least I walk away from my job at 5.30pm and my kid goes to sleep from 8pm to 8am and yet I struggle. So I admire Julia Gillard for getting up every morning (possibly at 4am) and keep going no matter how hard Tony Abbott, the press and your dad made it hard for her. For that, I admire her more.

    My vote is for her.

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    • Lynne

      Kat, I admire you as a mother who also works full time as I have done the same thing myself. Not so Julia Gillard, she has never had children and is working only to further her own career and feather her own nest.

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      • Louisec

        What difference does it make that Julia Gillard has not had children?! You have no right to make such a judgment about her.

        Maybe she could not have children, or maybe like many of us she didn’t find the right person in time.

        Running a country or being a senior politician or executive has nothing to do with having children.

        She’s ambitious, hard working, decent, smart and, unlike Rudd, has the respect of the majority of people who work with her.

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        • Claudia

          I agree Louisec.

          Sexism is awful, but it’s particularly bad when it comes from women about women.

          Why is it that no male politician without kids ever gets spoken about in such a way. In fact, most people would be hard pressed to name the male politicians without kids…because it doesn’t even enter their heads.

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      • Lizi

        Lord, that’s a mean- spirited comment!

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        • Satyam

          The Howard/Costello government gave us the lonsegt period of prosperity since Federation. All economic indicators improved significantly between 96 and 07. It lowered income tax by a massive amount and introduced the GST which as underpnned the revenue the States lost because of the Ha Case. It kept our borders secure and steered us through the economic fallout from the Asian collapse and 9/11. Best of all it won the culture wars.It’s clear that none of the posters here work in the private sector which was devastated by the GFC. There has been a massive downturn in M&A activity and capital expansion whilst the government frittered away billions on school halls that nobody wants.The Rudd government has failed at every point. Most importantly they effed up dealing with the GFC by spending all of the surplus and running up a huge debt, whilst ensuring that lots of people in middle Australia lost their savings as a result of the bank guarantee.Fuel watch, grocery watch, $900 cheques to dead people, BER, pink batts, blowing the surplus, running up huge borrowings, the health fiasco, the mining tax, the Henry damp squib, the 170+ deaths of boat people. And all this in one term!Are you people blind or just so sheltered in your little public service bubble that you just can’t see that this generation of the ALP is unfit to do anything but stay in permanent opposition whilst the grown ups on the right lead us to prosperity and real freedom from the lefty puritans and fools.

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      • MJ

        Oh vomit. Why are kids a badge of honour that make you a saint? Plenty of people with kids work to further their own career and ‘feather their own nest’ for their own comfort.
        Maybe she’s working because she wants to make a difference and help people. There are far easier paths to make the money that she does apart from being PM.
        What a mean, thoughtless comment.

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  47. Cath

    Thanks for the suggestion Jess Rudd. Inspired by you to get off my bum and do something, I have contacted my local MP and implored him to vote for Julia Gillard tomorrow.

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  48. Janet

    I’ll tell my MP what I want. It’s called an ELECTION.

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  49. Vicki PS

    “Let’s own this spill”? I’m sorry, Jessica, but I haven’t the slightest idea what that is supposed to mean. All the bleating, Twittering, Facebooking and flagwaving in the world won’t matter a damn in the Caucus. Nor should it. Australia is not a presidential republic, despite what the millions of ill-informed US television-viewing electors may think in their muddled way. Nor are our MPs and Senators our “employees”: that status belongs to the public service. Let’s be clear — we vote for our parliamentary representatives to *govern* us. That’s why they’re called the “government’, get it? Have an opinion on the leadership by all means, air that opinion all you want, but when it comes to facts vs. opinions, facts are trumps. Every time.

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    • Margareta

      Vicki PS. Well said. I agree with you 100%

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    • janes

      Exactly. The next time our opinions will count; when we can ‘own this’ will be the next election, and not before.

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  50. The Writings Of Ava Jones

    Come on people, we live in AUSTRALIA… Where people, and the media, have the right to publish various opinions. Would all of you be complaining if our current PM wrote an article like this? Probably not, because you are clearly not interested in any other opinion other than your own. Any decent person respects the opinion of others, but yes, has the right to disagree. Your comment above complaining on the decision to publish this article are, however, not disagreeing with the article, but instead you are angry about the publishers decision to express an opinion other than your own. Why not spent your time and energy writing an educated response or counterpart to Jess’ article?
    If you read the article correctly and come to an educated conclusion, you will notice that while this expresses Jess’ opinion, it is not totally biased. She is merely trying to get people involved in the political system – to have your say. She even says, if you like Julia then say it, if you like Kevin express it, and if you hate them all then shout out. Three totally different views.
    Stop wasting time complaining about this great article being published, and put your time and energy into ‘having a say’ about the mess that is our current government.

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    • marniequin2

      So if I my conclusion is the same as yours, it’s ‘educated’ but should my conclusion be different from yours, it’s ‘UN educated’in your opinion?
      Isn’t this a bit silly?

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