
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.
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
1,678 Comments so far
Mamamia Team – is Jessica Rudd still planning to respond to some of the comments on this post as was originally written when the post was published?
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She has already replied to some of the comments and has left a comment of her own
No doubt she will respond to more when she is able
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Thanks! I’ll look a bit harder!
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Sorry Jess you live in a bubble. Australian politicians, all sides, are the new ruling class. Look around how often do you see them doing anything or listening except at election time, when they trot out millions in unfunded promises. Unfortunatlly we need accountability to pull them into line. Come Monday, they will do what ever is best for them. Because what would be best for the country would be to desolve parliamet and have an election so the people could have a true say. The country needs two things the party in charge needs a true mandate, not some half baked situation where the whims of the few hold the rest of us to ransom, and that party needs to be accountable. Thanks.
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Well said OWA
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So much hate – what is wrong with everyone? Tall poppy syndrome is alive and well in our country… It’s a real shame.
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I agree with you. It’s more obvious observing from the outside.
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It’s not tall poppy syndrome – it’s frustration felt by the public who has had to put up with this crap for so long.
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Can’t believe we have the daughter of Kevin Rudd telling us to “own” his on-going sense of self-delusional power.
QUOTE: Experts said the battle between Gillard and Rudd was little more than a power play that had only succeeded in tearing the party apart and alienating voters.
“No matter who wins the leadership ballot, Labor loses. The destabilisation will continue,” said Rodney Smith, a political analyst at the University of Sydney.
Thanks, Kevin 07.
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Best you thank Gillard as well then, she started it. They’re both to blame, as well as the faceless men (for want of a better name..thugs springs to mind actually.)
Personally, I think the Labor party is just wrong on so many levels!
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I have just one thing to say: “Politicians are like diapers; they need to be changed often and for the same reason.”
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I don’t think it’s wrong for MM to publish this piece, but I tend to think it’s more than just an opinion piece, it has an agenda behind it and is part of a strategy. Which doesn’t really sit right with me. I have no problem with MM running it, they’d be crazy not to. But lets be honest.. as if Jessica didn’t write this with at least some small part of her intending it to be good publicity for her father.
It’s not purely her opinion on the situation, it’s a bit of campaigning on his behalf as well.
Which is understandable I guess, he’s her dad, and she’s in a position to have her voice heard. But still.. doesn’t sit well with me.
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Julia is very unpopular with the people, the reasons are varied but the lies haven’t helped. The carbon tax was a lie..albeit a twisted play on words, which pollies are very good at.
The Craig Thomson affair..
The missing money from union coffers by Julia’s ex-boyfriend, but he was her boyfriend at the time and her house was reno’d with some of that stolen money..she was also his lawyer, and handled his affairs, but claimed to know nothing about it.
Her links to the Fabian society..basically a communist group from what one reads.
Her condescending manner and the way she speaks when announcing something is very grating on the nerves.
The tent embassy affair was appalling! the leaked video of Kevin swearing was definitely done to undermine him. Another disgusting tactic.
Kevin..no scandal of any sort..and yet I remember the story of him abusing an airline hostess over a sandwich..his collegues say he was unbearable to work with. He sounds a horror of a person when not in front of a camera..or unknowningly in front of a camera for that matter…http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ipvdBnU8F8
I have the answer. Sack the both of them and elect someone more worthy, as I am of the conclusion neither of them are up to scratch as leader of Australia..
I don’t believe I will ever vote Labor again..I watched this nonsense during the Hawke/Keating years as well. Labor is just too messy for me to bother with any longer.
I’m a swinging voter and have voted for both parties over time..depending on their good character and the policies I’ve agreed with that appear fair.
I have to say though, in this instance, as PM of our country I do prefer Kevin…at the moment anyway. Sorry Labor, but I think you will get smashed in the 2013 elections.
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Susan, I absolutely agree with everything you say, except the last line.
Not at all sorry Labor, I know you’ll get smashed at the next election, which will be before 2013, and then I’ll dance in the street.
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I was being polite Caro..I really do think I will be quite pleased to see the back of Julia, Kevin, those very ugly and scary union guys, Shorten, Arbib and the rest of those faction bosses.
During the Hawke years, the unions took my husbands workplace out on strike for better wages..fair enough..but we had 5 kids to feed and nearly lost our house all for $5.50pw. The union men would rock up in their brand new commodores and thousand $ suits and hand out $10 to keep everyone going. Then waltzed off to the pub for lunch.
My bitterness was huge..but my beautiful but brainwashed husband thought the union men were doing a great job! they ended up settling for $3 pw over that strike..which lasted 13 weeks!
We lived on weetbix and vegemite sandwiches. My husband finally figured it out and hasn’t voted labor for a long time now. I have, but have been disappointed every time.
We paid off our house at 17% interest! very tough times! and while we were struggling to survive ..Hawke and Keating were bickering over who should be shafting us the most. Labor is doing it all over again.
I have to say at the time..Howard was a breathe of fresh air.
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Sounds like a nice story, a few weeks off work. Under liberal you wouldn’t get a few weeks off you wouldn’t have a job to go back to and would have no legal rights regardless of how long you had worked there and why you were fired. But hey ignorance is bliss yea. But if you want to put down the union guy’s driving their holden’s whilst batting for your pay rise, whilst your liberal friends are driving BMW’s and Merc’s whilst trying remove any workplace rights feel free. What was the name of the factory your husband worked in again?
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@ mr burnz. I lived thru those years when unions had way too much power and the difference was that the libs paid with their OWN money not their members money.
The unions were like the mafia and were worse than the govt for telling people what was “good’ for them. They used to bring the country to a standstill.
Payrises were mostly a joke anyway, everything else just went up to coincide.
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It was actually Hawkie that brought the unions’ strike rate down. The Accord and all that.
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Susan I understand where you are coming from.
I was too young to remember it but my Mum speaks bitterly of a time when Dad’s workplace did the same. He didn’t get paid for weeks on end and she had to beg the union for a $25 food voucher as we had no food in the cupboard at all. And she will rail against some of the union leaders who wanted to take Dad fishing.
However I do think times have changed and the Liberals would like to change the workplace acts to a point where employers can literally sack anyone without an explanation (cue workchoices). I hope that we don’t go that way again.
And mr burnz (below comment), my Dad worked at the powerstation in Gladstone. These things did happen, it isn’t just a nice story.
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I remember stories like that too! it’s the women that tell them! In my case my grandmother. Pop was a coal miner in the Hunter Valley.
Don’t ever get my Nan started on union guys in $1,000 suits while their silly members dressed from best and less lol!
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Companies can and do that anyway Ooopsy, or they just shut shop and go overseas, which they seem to be doing at a rapid rate. Either way, their workers are out on the street.
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You know what? We’ll hear good and bad about unions and private industry too. I know that my husbands melbourne plant sacked the permanent employees, who admittedly got way too greedy and then hired them on a casual basis and got them to train their replacements that they paid a significant amount less to. Private industry.
The nurses union went on strike for about 50 days in the 80s to secure better conditions and now have been pushed into striking again because the Vic govt won’t negotiate with them. It’s not just money, but nurse-patient ratios which are all important. The union sat around for months waiting for a resolution that still is not forthcoming before striking. They could’ve been a lot worse.
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omg! I remember Kevin Rudd eating earwax, I’d forgotten about that. Seriously weird!!
How do you explain that?
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I really have found this whole “get in touch with your local member” rather disingenuous given the Labor party has an extremely long history and current practice of not allowing an member to “cross the floor”. Yes, in theory we elect a local member to represent our views, in reality if their view (or those of the electorate) is different to that of the party line it’s never going to be heard anyway. Not that Tony Abbott is any better. In KRudd’s speech today he was already outlining what he will and won’t do…if he’s all for hearing the voice of the people shouldn’t he wait until he’s PM and then ask the other MPs what their electorates want?
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Hi Jessica. Thanks for your advice. I’ve written to my local member and told him to vote for Julia Gillard. She’s ace!
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So…why are so many hating on Jess? She’s got every right to say what she wants and feels; the same as you! She’s certainly much more intelligent than what I’ve read here from most people.
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The reason, Shez, is that this whole thing is part of the Kevin Rudd campaign that was thought up by Bruce Hawker who is his PR man. This has nothing to do with Jessica per se, just part of the PR push. It’s disingenuous, and as such, it’s right that people say what they think.
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Because no one likes to be had, especially not by self-serving lies written by faceless men.
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I worked in the Qld Cabinet Office back in ’94 as a lowly graduate policy officer when Rudd was in charge and was Wayne Goss’s right hand man. He (Rudd) was feared and loathed with equal measure. The few times I had to deliver a brief to him he never even looked up. Even though I was just a lowly minion I used to think my father would treat people better than that.
Sorry Jess.
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“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.”
Wasn’t it Rudd himself who chose to resign in 2010 rather than contest the leadership in a ballot, when he realised that Gillard was challenging? If he had wanted to take it to a ballot he could have. The process was just the same, it’s just that he resigned before the ballot was held. The 103 caucus members that we elected no longer supported him. It wasn’t some undemocratic coup by faceless men. It was the same process that is happening now.
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You’re right, he chose to resign as he knew how loathed he was by the party he had divided and hurt since being PM.
Australia just doesn’t get it…
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I understand you support your father but he is destroying the Labour Party with his leaking and undermining. Julia has saved the government and fixed up his unfinished messes – health reform, mining tax, carbon tax, education review and the list goes on. He is abusive and unstable and not fit to manage a smalll company let alone the government of Australia. I worry about the self awareness of anyone who refers to themselves in the thrid person to be honest.
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Or says “I’m just going to pop over to Zim now folks” on camera then mercilessly abuses his staff behind closed doors.
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seriously janeb.. do you work for the LNP ? you might want a carbon tax but the majority of Australia Doesnt! .. Where is your proof he is abusive and unstable??? watched a bit too much tv? or read to many newspapers? where is your poof he leaking and undermining? the only mining thats been going on is the ALP Union “mining” cronnies
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There’s plenty of evidence! Have you not read all the reports? From colleagues, staff members, senior ministers? There’s a mass of it.
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Seriously Jane, how did Julia fix anything? The health reform is a joke, wealthy people aren’t affected, only the middle class, the mining tax? A backroom deal with a few big noises in the mining industry who shafted the rest of the industry, the carbon tax is absurd, it’s nothing more than an ideological distribution of wealth and will do nothing to reduce emissions, the education building scheme by Julia was so badly administered that 50% of the total cost went in management costs, leaving only 50% in actual building, and the list goes on. Labor allegedly make life better for the lower parts of our society, yet they a dedicated to reducing services in the bush, where people work bloody hard for little reward. We continue to fund bad businesses with taxpayer money, such as the car industry, but anyone who truly wants to work hard and get ahead is punished by these ideologues. The only time the Labor Party has ever done anything good is when they are in opposition and they are effective. Having the ALP in government is something akin to having the rats in charge of the granary.
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Hear! Hear!
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Jane I totally agree.
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Jess, if your dad does not become leader on Monday will he resign?
The last thing the ALP needs right now is a bi-election but how could he stay on after all of this?
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He did say in his presser today he would go to the backbench if he loses and not challenge Gillard for the leadership again … but I guess he didn’t rule out challenging anyone else.
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Thanks Rick, I’ve been at a residential program this week and I’m way behind in the news.
Interesting times…..
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Who knows what he will do next. He is clearly unhinged and unstable. I think eventually Jess will be visiting Daddy Dearest in a private psychiatric facility.
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He is clearly unhinged and unstable. I think eventually Jess will be visiting Daddy Dearest in a private psychiatric facility.
I think that is completely over the fence and if you are going to say stuff like that I strongly suggest that you state your medical qualifications. For you to state that he is unhinged and unstable without you personally examining him in a medical context is complete slander against him. As well as being deeply offence to people who are unfortunately suffering from a mental illness.
It’s quite easy for the likes of you to get on a public forum and from the safety of your keyboard say the most terrible things about a person that you have no doubt never met and never will, not only say terrible things, but make a long distance medical diagnosis.
You should be ashamed of yourself
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Were have you been all blog, Shane?! Loving it!
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any one who admits to believing religious fairytales automatically disqualifies themselves from running anything more important than the lemonade stand
and that goes for the mad monk too
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That’s a pretty ignorant thing to say. As long as they can keep their personal beliefs out of their political process, why shouldn’t people be allowed to have faith?
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Personally, I feel the Rudd family have taken plenty from the public purse over the years, and that they should stand on their own two feet. Even mother’s successful business was the typical public servant teat-suck. I see Jess has invented herself as an Australian author, she visited near us on a government sponsored tour. We are in small business, we nearly beggar ourselves every quarter to pay the ATO, shame on you Krudd and Rudds.
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There are many, many people who know Kevin Rudd very well who genuinely believe that he truly displays the characteristics of narcissistic personality disorder, or sociopathy.
This included Dr John Mendoza, an adjunct professor of mental health, who worked with Rudd as an advisor. He quit in 2010, and has said publicly this week that he believes that Rudd suffers from NPD, and was ‘unfit’ to hold office. Mendoza has also said that Rudd was, in the end, removed for his own wellbeing.
Indeed, there are many Labor people who are concerned about Kevin Rudd’s mental health, especially when he loses on Monday, as he most assuredly will.
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It’s not difficult to label Rudd unstable and worse. There are far too many examples of severely erratic behaviour. By people who have worked very closely with him. Here’s just one example http://www.sunshinecoastdaily.com.au/story/2012/02/24/rudd-unfit-to-be-pm-ex-advisor-john-mendoza/
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@ Grace. That was a disgusting comment.
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That’s just plain nasty and uncalled for.
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Grace you have now responded on this post with at least 4 different names. Please stick to one name in fairness to the rest of the audience who now believe that there are other people who have the exact same opinion as you
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Grace you have now responded on this post with at least 4 different names. Please stick to one name in fairness to the rest of the audience who now believe that there are other people who have the exact same opinion as you
This is why the forum should be set that you have to register with a user name and sign in to comment. Once the sock puppets like Grace take over the forum and try to sway public opinion by posting under multiple names you may as well give up coming to the site.
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Who cares if Grace is changing her name? The MM team are just as faceless on this site, removing posts and shutting down negative feedback- like Grace’s comment, which was harsh but true. Kevin Rudd does seem unhinged. He needs to realise it’s not the K-Rudd show; he’s part of a party. I find his megalomania very disappointing, to be honest.
On the topic of disappointment, I must say this site has been very average ever since Mia employed the team. It’s a real peanut show now. I preferred when it was Mia alone, with occasional posts from Zoe Foster, Paula Joye and her other besties. It now seems like it’s run by students.
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Who cares if Grace is changing her name?
Because if she is sock puppeting all over the place she is trying to sway public opinion.
If one person says something it’s one person’s comment and view. If 6 people say a similar thing it’s six people who share the same viewpoint. HOWEVER it it’s one individual who’s posting the same viewpoint under six different user names…it’s still in essence only the view point of one person…not six.
But readers unless they have access to the IP numbers of the people who comment have no idea if someone is a sock puppet or not…
People who do what Grace is doing lack the ability to write persuasively enough to convince people of their own view point so they have to invent people to agree with them.
So yeah anyone who wants to read a fair and balanced forum care about sock puppets like Grace.
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I’m honestly not very fussed…no matter what happens Monday, my election vote won’t be influenced. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not happy with the choices available to me, but whatever Monday’s outcome I won’t feel that I have a better option than what I had before.
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You know what? Today was a sad day for women in this country.
While we’ve all been diverted by a daughter’s efforts to secure her father’s political future, a man has been acquitted of the murder of his new bride’s murder, and another man has won an appeal against his conviction that he threw his partner over a cliff to an horrific death.
Shame. Shame on all of us. And that includes JRudd – from her cosy, self-absorbed, expat-lifestyle (and I know, I’ve lived it) – to MM. What is this silly game of politics when compared to human lives???
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Both men were acquitted on available evidence. You are suggesting the legal system has a bias against women on the result of 2 cases. Just because 2 men in the entire world have been acquitted on the same day in high profile cases indicates absolutely nothing. There would be hundreds of other cases decided today.
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Both cases were a bit scetchy. I don’t know if they did it or not but I never thought they had strong enough evidence in either case.
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Believe me, if you knew the whole story of how Gordon Wood led Caroline’s family to the edge of the The Gap and the inconsistencies in his story you would think he was guilty.
The lack of evidence was due to police assuming it was a suicide and failing to investigate properly from the start.
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Of course, if a man is accused of doing anything to a woman then he must be guilty, regardless of that little thing called the law.
The biggest mistake men ever made was giving women the vote.
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oh, you can only laugh at this one.
nope, not going to bite.
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Shane, I’m surprised you could put that sentence together given your IQ.
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C’mon, Miss Green, it’s got to be worth something? I was really baiting the hook there and all I got was a really sad attempt to insult my intelligence. You’ve got to be able to do better than that!
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Jess, you have forgotten one important thing – the leadership vote belongs to the Parliamentary Labor Party, with respect, it does not belong to ‘the people’. Your family continues to mislead the public into believing they have a say in who leads the ALP. They don’t. If your family wants ‘the people’ to choose your dad as Labor leader then participate in the Labor proceses to change the way Labor chooses the leader – encourage ‘the people’ to join the ALP so there can be a change to the current system!
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Spot on. Everyone is confusing themselves that we live with a presidential type lets all elect the leader. No matter who is leader come Monday evening – the Labor party sets the policy agenda not brand KRudd or Julia Gillard.
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Wouldn’t this be an interesting scenario / test of Mr Rudd’s popularity:
1. Rudd isn’t successful on Monday
2. Resigns and/or goes to the backbench
3. Has a word with his buddy Bligh and then contests as premier for Queensland
Although I’m not sure if he could run for premier in Queensland if he still holds a federal seat…
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If this were my site, this piece would have run so fast that everyone would have thought that it stole something.
Shrewd move, MMTeam.
Jess, not sure that it was the easiest move for you, but props for putting your body on the line for your family.
To all the readers that are screaming your offense; think on this:
You’ll so be back.
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I smell cynicism in the air … and I hear the ring of truth, too!
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This article is website traffic GOLD … no way was it ever going to be knocked back.
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It’s not an opinion, it’s a strategy. That is the problem.
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Item 1 Mr Rudd has enjoyed an exemplary career in politics spanning some 30 years.
Item 2 Surely to anyone’s sense of simple logic, one can assume that Mr Rudd’s work practices, ethics, experience in managing people and teams etc. was extremely well known to both caucus and the ALP for a very long time prior to Mr Rudd leading the ALP to an astounding victory against the Liberal/Nationals.
Item 3 It is surprises me therefore that the claims made by the Gillard camp of Mr Rudd’s poor management qualities became such an issue and so unsolvable that was the apparent cause for Mr Rudd’s demise as our Premier.
Item 4 Claims of Ms Gillard’s accomplishments have and will always caste a permanent shadow of the “trust” factor of her administration as she was highly instrumental as deputy prime minister of opposing the CPRS scheme resulting in damaging the Rudd Government which in itself may be construed as an act of disloyalty together with Mineral Rent Resource Initiative which did not succeed under the Rudd Government.
Item 5 The Gillard Government now takes full credit of the Carbon Tax recently introduced together with the Mineral Resource Tax and many other visionary initiatives and policies originating from the Rudd administration.
Item 6 The Prime Ministers statement of “There will be NO carbon Tax under the Government I lead” shows the shear and blatant hypocrisy and mendacity of the present leader in introducing a carbon tax which we are all now well aware of. In addition with Ms Gillard’s opposition to Mr Rudd’s policy directives in cabinet one may safely assume that her contrary actions, recommendations and views were conspiratorial engineering the downfall of Mr Rudd’s Premiership thus eventually portraying to the Australian public at large that the Government had lost its way! Conclusion being yet another mistruth and misstatement to the voting public!
Item 7 The outpouring and poisonous vitriol of Mr Conroy, Mr Crean and Mr Swan portray what this government is really all about and maybe the ALP at large! How embarrassing to the Australian public and what an untenable working environment for anyone let alone Mr Rudd. Is this “Fair Work Australia?” There is an ALP opportunity for internal disciplinary measures, soul searching and cleansing. If they can treat their own in such an abominable and disgusting manner it shows what utter contempt they have for the voting public. There will be no chance of unity, or healing with internal festering of this malignancy within party ranks! The Speaker, Mr Peter Slipper has found a good home in this den of rats.
Item 8 The leadership challenge for Monday is already a success shining a huge light of TRUTH on the present leadership and the present Government and those that made deals with the devil will surely pay at the ballot box for an entire generation whoever becomes leader of the ALP!
Item 9 My sincerest condolences go to Premier Anna Bligh who conducted herself in an exemplary fashion and proved her metal in the floods of last year…..what a splendid job she did for Queenslanders; yet she faces a landslide defeat in Queensland as the ALP will at the next election.
Item 10 This is an opportunity for all Australians and a call to arms not only for the rightful restoration of Mr Rudd’s leadership but more importantly a call to arms of reasserting our national identity of Australian Values of decency, a fair go and mateship which is so reflected in the poll numbers of the seat of Griffith!!
You have a great Dad and please use my comments in whatever way you can to make this a success!!
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Sorry Jess, was that you responding?
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Edward, I was about to say something bitchy in response to you, and then decided it wasn’t necessary…..because not many will bother reading that wall of words…..
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Step aside, rescue is here.
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Lost me after “Item 1. Mr Rudd has enjoyed an exemplary career in politics…..:….
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Perhaps if you paragraphed, your post would be easier to read Edward.
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I find reading the comments in this article quite disheartening. Not everyone has to agree but a bit of respect for others would be nice.
I don’t have any real political allegiances (I’ve voted Lib, National, ALP, Independent – based on who my local member is) but I do think the attacks against Jess Rudd are a bit off. She has never pretended to be anything but a Kevin supporter and it is an opinion piece. So what if it tells people to contact their local member. I may not be a Kevin supporter (I am not a Julia or Tony supporter either) but I do respect the love and support she shows to her family (from what I have seen). If I were her, I’d be doing exactly the same.
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My dad is taller than your dad.
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Mine isn’t, but I love and respect him anyway At least he has integrity which has never, ever compromised!
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Jess – with respect, some of us have worked with the former PM. There is a reason he alienated the entire public service in a Labor town. It is not because we are lazy. It is because despite his good qualities (I don’t doubt his intellect) he is a very bad manager. He was chaotic, he was dysfunctional. It doesn’t give me any pleasure – I am a leftie – but he is reaping what he sowed.
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I did what you asked and emailed all Qld federal members and urged them to vote for julia
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As a woman I’m disgusted that Julia Gillard had to publicly screw her way to the top by back stabbing Kevin Rudd. It makes all women look bad – that this is the only way a woman can achieve anything. I count myself as a strong labor voter but I will not vote for Gillard. Without Kevin Rudd, Labor will not be in power, I would rather vote for Abbott or better yet the Greens. Let Kevin Rudd return to the position that we elected! Put right what you made wrong!
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She “screwed” her way to the top????? WOW!!!!!!!!
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There’s a joke I could make about Anthea’s comment, but I won’t – because we’re all having a dinner party conversation, aren’t we?
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Anthea – correction – we did not elect Kevin Rudd to be Prime Minister. The Prime Minister is elected by the Caucus – we have no say in it. And that applies to both parties. We elect our local member and our Senate team – that is all.
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That’s rude in the extreme, Rudd himself replaced a prior labour leader, and he was cool about the process then. The current situation is a typical case of sour grapes Big Time. He is still indignant because he thought that his own party had no right to set limits on his conduct, and because he somehow thought he had “immunity” from repercussions just because the party was currently serving? says who? there is no law that makes it so and none has been broken…. it’s a bruised ego and an attempt to manipulate the naive and the ignorant, in this he was aided by the discretion of his former parliamentary supporters. They have now had enough of him taking advantage of their dignified silence. He has only his own hubris to blame for so much that has happened and is to happen.
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chris
congratulations
you win the prize for best and most accurate comment
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This post absolutely does not deserve a response.
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Note to Jessica Rudd. PLEASE tell your dad that every time he refers to himself as “K.Rudd”, it makes the general population cringe. He comes across as a nerd desperately trying to be cool – but failing. He should embrace his “geekiness” and he would seem much more genuine. I am not a fan of John Howard, but he did manage to win a few elections without trying to deny that he was a nerd.
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I’ve been reading with interest a lot of the comments on here today. I’ve been back and forward, sometimes reading positive comments, but most of the time, negative.
I love this site. I never know what I’m going to read once I click on. So this is a piece from Jessica Rudd who wants us all to contact our local MP’s to voice our opinion. I don’t remember reading up there ‘Hey my dad’s ace! Vote for him!’ Call me naive, but I honestly don’t understand the big deal. Mia has said she welcomes anyone to submit pieces for publication and I believe her. You think she’s holding back a post from Tim Mathieson because she’s in bed with Jess and the Labor Party? Come on.
I look forward to reading Lauren Dubois’s posts, not to mention a good mix of hair straightening instructions, motherhood stories, pics of the week and fashion shoots. It’s what makes this site the fabulous place that it is.
Keep publishing interesting and varied posts Mia, no matter who the author is. And I for one will keep reading them.
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I’ve read every comment, and I don’t think people think she said “my dad’s ace, vote for him”. I get the impression many people would have preferred it if she did say this. People can see that Jessica is asking us to “contact our local MP to voice our opinion”, they are just annoyed that she didn’t admit that she wants us to contact our local MP because that’s her dad’s current campaign strategy. And, because this is her dad’s campaign strategy, to many people, it came across as a bit dishonest/disingenuous pretending that her reason was to remind us we have a voice. I also don’t think many people have questioned Mia’s integrity, just her judgement in not realising how these things would come across to her readers.
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Well said, Sue. I’m not getting why people are not understanding this. It’s not rocket science!
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Have been reading these comments for the last 24 hours and just want to say that I’m thrilled to write for a site that has such a smart, engaged and – dare I say – opinionated community. Women and their views (particularly on politics) are so often overlooked in mainstream media and the commentary here is proof that we have plenty to say.
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Angela I love to read your submissions. You are one of my favourite writers and I’m delighted to see you on this site.
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This will probably be really unpopular but I’m going to put it out there: a good proportion of these comments cause me to become all pessimistic about the state of media in this country.
So many of these comments, particularly those *liked* several times, refer to how “intelligent”, “smart”, “mature” the readership is. I just don’t see it. A good publication has thought provoking contributions with contributors from all walks of life who present a breadth of perspectives. You are not supposed to agree with all of them. That would be boring. It is great when you can develop and put across a well-structured argument in which to oppose the arguments contained within the article and even the premise of particular contributions in and of themselves. But to simply resort to empty platitudes such as “this insults our intelligence” is appealing to the lowest common denominator.
A truly intelligent audience wouldn’t need to remark upon said intelligence in every fourth or fifth comment. It wouldn’t need to claim that qualifications to contributions are “patronising” or “condescending” when they have obviously been included to clarify, at a global scale (i.e. rather than respond to each individual comment), the intention of the posting. It would just respond in such a way that their comments speak for themselves i.e. demonstrate the intelligence that so many of the audience obviously believe that they possess.
Can we stop telling ourselves how intelligent we are and instead demonstrate it through the quality of our comments? I can only imagine if I’d stumbled upon this site today and read the comments, I’d be turned off thinking “there is a good proportion of self-congratulating commentators there, too caught up in their own smugness to realise that not everything is designed to insult their intelligence”.
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Absolutely BRILLIANT comment!
Very,very well said!
I mean take the example of how someone who disagreed with me asked sarcastically in their reply to my comment if I was “disabled”….. Seriously!
We need to DEMONSTRATE our intelligence and depth through our words otherwise everything is meaningless.
Thank-you Pia for restoring my faith!
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Well said, Pia.
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Okay, so it really wasn’t that unpopular – glad to see that some are feeling the same way that I am. I am more accustomed to the Guardian website but they don’t have great coverage on Australian issues and I wanted something a little more light-hearted – it shouldn’t have to mean that the quality of debate can’t be great as well though.
Funnily enough, it is not just this contribution though – I’ve seen so many comments in a number of contributions where people are claiming to have their intelligence insulted. I have to say, I’ve never quite come across it before and I find it bizarre to say the least.
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Yeah, calling yourself intelligent is a bit like calling your country ‘The Democratic Republic of Congo”. If you have to say it, then you patently ain’t.
Why is everyone so offended about bias or ethical minefields that they’ve quite plainly managed to navigate?
It’s safe to assume that the 99% majority are going to filter an article by Jessica Rudd accordingly.
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‘not everything is designed to insult their intelligence”’
Just like all advertising, this isn’t designed to insult intelligence, it’s designed to circumvent it. And, judging by the polls, it’s successful in the community at large. I think a bit of congratulations is in order for those not buying it.
Mr Hawker is the king of retails politics, and a site with a byline of “News, views and shoes” should have been perfect for his wares, but it looks like it wasn’t.
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I don’t create a comment, however I browsed a few of the remarks on Jessica Rudd talks politics, Kevin Rudd, the spill and owning it Mamamia. I actually do have some questions for you if you tend not to mind. Is it simply me or does it appear like some of the responses appear as if they are written by brain dead people?
And, if you are writing at additional sites, I’d like to follow you. Could you make a list of the complete urls of your social pages like your linkedin profile, Facebook page or twitter feed?
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Stand by your decision to publish this piece all you want, MM, you’ve alienated a large proportion of readers. Not because they necessarily like Gillard and want her retained as Prime Minister, although a heartening number do, but because in doing so you’ve allowed yourselves to be manipulated by the Rudd Family party political machine. Successful young author Jessica Rudd may be, but independent she is certainly not. Please stop pretending her piece is anything more than a Bruce Hawker-orchestrated propaganda piece.
I’ve been around a fair bit longer than Ms Rudd and I reckon I’ve seen her father’s type before – egomaniacal, narcissistic, butter-wouldn’t-melt-in-his-mouth. I’ve seen them in political life and I’ve worked for a few. They are a nightmare. They destroy morale and destroy good governance. In fact, and Jessica may not remember this, but in my home state of Queensland we had a dictatorial leader who, for too many years, ruled with an iron fist in a home-spun gosh-darn Christian family-values glove. Who made decisions without consultation. Who punished dissenters and rewarded toadies. And the people loved him.
If only someone in Bjelke-Petersen’s National Party had had the decency and the guts to stop his reign of terror before he gerrymandered Queensland into a state of political paralysis for 20 years.
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Awesome comment. Loved it.
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I have to say I disagree. For gods sake, I don’t even agree with everything my husband or mother say, am I going to stop talking to them? To say that Mia is going to lose readership from her site because of this post is a bit melodramatic. Variety is the spice of life. I have been having differences of opinion with my grandfather for 30 years. I call him the “wooden spoon” because he likes to stir me up, he calls me the “electric wizz” because I do the same to him but am 50 years younger.
I am deeply unhappy with the way politicians (from ALL parties) conduct themselves in this country (and others) but politics is ugly. The way Mr Rudd was ousted from PM left a sour taste in my mouth, but I got over it. I am neither pro Rudd nor pro Gilliard.
I have to say after yesterdays post about confessions of infidelity and people wishing their MIL dead, getting knickers in a knot about a post on politics seems a bit silly.
After reading all of these posts I feel the way I do when I have drunk a bottle of red over dinner with friends and gotten belligerent, banging on about politics, religion and how the world is going to hell in a handbasket. It always looks better in the morning.
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They bought people off with the pumpkin scones…..
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You know, its just struck me that the only reason I have heard Rudd offer for forcing this spill is basically that Crean was saying nasty things about him and Gillard didn’t stick up for him. Something that he didn’t discuss with her before resigning his post as foreign minister. One thing I did think Rudd had going for him was some great vision (although he seemed unable to implement it). I don’t even think that, anymore.
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Exactly. It was all a lie, a ruse – it was never about not having the PM’s support, it was always about releasing himself for a challenge.
Unfortunately he didn’t give Australian voters enough credit for the intelligence to ‘join the dots’.
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Its not so much the fact that it was a ruse (and a pathetically flimsy one at that) that surprises me. Its that he hasn’t come up with *anything* else (or has he, and I missed it?). Seriously, what actual basis has he got for challenging? Is there some kind of fundamental policy disagreement? He seems to think the party should just give him back the prime-ministership because…….he thinks they should?
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This has got to be the most irrelevant post here. Flight rules vary btw. She’s only 6 months I understand which is ok I believe.
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It’s funny how the commenting guidelines for Mamamia are that we have to discuss and debate in a similar fashion to “dinner party conversation”, but then publish blantant political propaganda. Mamamia, didn’t anyone ever tell you that you never talk politics at the dinner table?
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That’s the best part! Well, for me anyway. Politics and religion!
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I agree. So many things are so political it’s hard to avoid anyway. But still, people have been known to get angry and throw things when the conversation gets nasty! It’s a shitfight in here today! haha
p.s I’d prefer to keep Gillard. I think Kev has a good humanitarian heart, but I don’t think he is leader material. I think Jules’s percieved coldness is professionalism and I think she cares about the country very much. I’m sure Jess is a good girl, but I wouldn’t vote for her Daddy again unless he’s up against Abbott.
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Agreed. Julia walks, talks and acts like a lawyer. But that’s not a bad thing – she’s a great negotiator and a very hard worker.
There’s much talk of ‘Kevin 24/7′ working very long hours and not sleeping a lot, but it should be noted that Gillard isn’t exactly a slacker when it comes to putting in long days!
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That is true, she is such a lawyer.
You know, it really hit home for me how much of a lawyer she is when she had unscripted responses to the press in the last two days. I’m not a Labor voter, but I gained much respect for Julia in the last two days and thought “bloody hell, that’s a lawyer, so quick on her feet”. I imagine a hungry press room would be more terrifying than any judge she would ever have appeared in front of!
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Great piece Jess! Kevin would have my vote – hope he gets up on Monday.
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Great post Jess. Well said. It really should be so…that we have a voice and are allowed to use it.
That said, I shared a funny “postcard” on FB today. It had a picture of John Howard, toasting with a glass of wine in hand. The caption read “Miss me yet? That change you wanted…going OK?” I thought it was just pretty clever and a bit of light relief from the political crap theatrics of the moment. A friend of mine thought so too, and attempted to share it on Twitter. Guess what? It was swiftly taken down – by Twitter!
What happened to a) Free speech b) The right to an opinion, and c) A bit of comic relief? Hmmmph…
Hmmm…
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What???!!! Twitter took that down? What the hell? Are you sure?
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Oh, & by the way Jessica, your darling father is the problem here. If I was you I’d be hiding under a rock somewhere.
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Furthermore all those that have worked for Julia in the past and present say she is a delight to work with…
She is a great negotiator and Mr Abbott isn’t, otherwise he would be in her position, a point that is sadly lacking in all this soap opera.
Political people(some) hold massive grudges and Kevin Rudd has demonstrated that point quite well, a psychological analysis at some point is required,
that is very weird and disturbing to say the least…..
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Incorrect, kui. ‘Negotiation’ had nothing to do with who formed Government. Windsor and Oakeshott never had any intention of siding with the Coalition. Google ‘Tony Windsor and John Anderson’ and read about Windsor’s shenanigans. While you’re at it read about the millions of dollars he’s made from selling his land to mining companies after advising his neighbours against it. He’s made a killing.
Some integrity would be nice and Tony Abbott has it in spades.
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Integrity Caro? He deliberately lied about the abortion statistics in the RU486 debate to prove his political point by including miscarriages (of which there were almost 50,000, wildly inflating his figures). NONE and I repeat NONE of my Catholic friends would do that. He has no integrity to use my sadness in a political lie and I will NEVER forget it.
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You are so right about Windsor Caro.
That man is the most shifty person one could imagine!
Yet he comes across on the telly as forthright and full of integrity. An amazing actor! Goes on and on about the coal mines being polluters but sold the family farm for squillions to them and it was all kept very quiet from his constituents. I live on the border of New England and have many rello’s there. That man is wrong on so many levels!
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This lot are doing a really good job to guarantee another 10+ years of Liberal government. Which wouldn’t be so bad if Tony Abbott wasn’t the man in charge. Bring back Malcolm Turnbull, a man who wouldn’t embarrass the nation overseas.
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Wow that is such a funny comment! It’s astounding that you can cringe at the thought of Tony Abbott being an embarrassment to our nation overseas in light of the current situation. I don’t think there could be anything more embarrassing to Australia than these stubborn and narcissistic characters, Rudd and Gillard, and their back-stabbing stablemates – accusations, disloyalties, power grabbing. Such a shame they can’t be working for the greater good of Australia. It seems so obvious that they are concerned only for the greater good of their egos……….
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Sorry Nenebe, I meant Turnbull would be better than any of them, I’d have to put Abbott second, though I prefer Julia’s religious views. That’s something Abbott & Rudd agree on, nutty religion..
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she is part of the krudd mafia family media machine……..why would she do it otherwise?
interesting observation there, well done!!
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I honestly cannot see the purpose or value in this post. Just watching The Project interviewing JRudd right now and I ask myself the same question. She has flown home from somewhere..and is in the media…why? I just don’t get it?
You may as well post the opinion of Barry Smithers from Dapto. It would be of similar relevance.
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I haven’t read all the comments so forgive me if it has been said but I wonder if the family pitch is a way to make a point about Julia not having kids. Julia’s parent’s are too old to be involved in this sort of stuff, they want to be left alone, I gather and Tim keeps quiet. He plays the family man card for ‘working Australian families’.
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I’m assuming that Julia’s PR machine has told him and his daughter to keep in the background after a few cringeworthy moments in the public spotlight. Who can forget that article on love and proposals on the front page of the Sunday papers??
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This article has generated a lot of comments. Comments questioning the motives of the author and of the site for publishing said article at this time. For me, I believe I have the intelligence to discern that there may be some alternative agenda at play. But you know what? I don’t really care! MM is about starting a conversation. Anything and everything that gets people talking about politics, our leaders and the way we wish our country to be run is a good thing! For that reason, I applaud the publishing of this article and that is the sentiment that I choose to take away from it. Take an interest and be involved.
On Monday at 10am when the Labor Caucus votes either Gillard or Rudd as their leader I just hope the interest doesn’t fade. We need to keep having the conversations. We need to talk about what a bad leader is so when we are finally presented with a good leader we are able to recognise them.
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Chloe, I think we are all capable of discussing politics, the future of Australia et al without a self serving, condescending, righteous, bias post by Jessica Rudd.
We are all “involved” we just don’t want bias opinion shoved down our throats.
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Sydgrl, I totally understand what you are saying and I don’t for one second believe that this post was anything but self serving, condescending etc. But I disagree with the statement this was ‘shoved down our throats’. It was self-evident that when I started reading this article by Jessica Rudd there was always going to be an element of bias. How could there not? But I chose to read the article knowing that Jessica Rudd was the author. It’s an interesting perspective and I took it with a grain of salt.
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Great post……………we Australians have a reputation for being laid back which, whilst being a lovely trait, also means that we often do not actively engage in the political process………………….maybe this is our opportunity. Also please remember that we do live in a democracy so people are entitled to have differing opinions……….some of the comments made border on bullying. Please play nice kids! and please give Jessica Rudd a break ………she is loyal to her Dad………..also a nice trait.
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Loved hearing from J Rudd, especially at this time.
This is why I check this site. Thanks!
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Support Kevin – https://www.facebook.com/KruddPMagain
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According to your own reasoning, only people who voted for a successful Labor candidate at the last election can be thought of as if they are the “employers” of the Labor parliamentarians who will participate in Monday’s vote.
So the foundation of your argument only provides a basis for encouraging that limited class of people to believe that they have some sort of legitimate say in the outcome of the Labor Caucus vote on Monday.
But, in any event, your logic is flawed – because under our system of government the leadership of political parties is not determined by a public vote.
At present, everyone else only gets to have their say at elections – as our Constitution provides.
That is not to say that people can’t effectively express opinions in very persuasive ways between elections: say by trying to influence the outcome of those internal party votes.
But it is wrong to suggest, as you have, that an outcome on Monday which is at odds with the weight of existing public opinion will reflect badly on our democracy.
If you want to change the existing system (something which probably shouldn’t be attempted over a weekend at the end of Summer), then perhaps your labours would be better spent encouraging people to debate that interesting constitutional question?
Peace be with you.
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I facebook hug you Julie Z and thanks for that lovely comment.
Regards x0x0x
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** Blush **
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This poll has just come in, which is heartening for Gillard supporters…
LNP DOWN 3% TO 52%….ALP UP 3% TO 48% TWO PARTY PREFERRED…EVEN WITH LEADERSHIP TENSIONS in the past few weeks.
http://www.roymorgan.com/
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Lies, damn lies and statistics.
That’s the so called infamous Morgan Face-to-Face Poll.
Essential Poll, News Poll and Nielson Poll for months now all have LNP support 55% to ALP 45% 2PP. These are the polls that have proved to be a very good guide in recent elections.
The Morgan face to face has always flattered the ALP and is not usually a poll quoted in news stories. 52/48 is pretty usuual for this poll.
I’ve got a better poll for you. If you really want to know the appeal of a politician, check out the reaction of school children. Tony Abbott gets mobbed, Kev Rudd gets mobbed and Juliar gets the vacant stares. Kids know.
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Yeah, well, my kids adore it when the dog licks their faces.
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They love it more when it’s TwoDogs!
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I really feel that Kevin is a egotist who cannot surrender his place in the spotlight. Enough already.This debacle is embarrassing, annoying and ridiculous.Kevin show some dignity and walk away.As I wrote previously on this site.Please, please,please, Peter Costello,please come back.
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That editor’s note is very insulting. Mia, I’m absolutely mortified. I know it’s an opinion piece but don’t insult us, your readers! come down off your high horse, please!!
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Agree 100%
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Why is it insulting?
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Well, if I was JG’s media advisor, I’d tell her to keep her speeches as short as possible and just take media questions. She can’t make a speech to save her life but is terrific with questions.
She’ll quite rightly wipe the floor with Kev and hopefully this will give her the legitimacy that him piking out of a leadership vote in 2007 denied her.
It’s happened to better people than you Kev. Margaret Thatcher also got dumped as PM by her own party – she had the sense to go graciously.
Onya Julia.
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