With the major parties flexing their muscles on border protection, the Australian public has sent Canberra a message that it is the protection of Australian jobs that is the real security issue for them.

Where the economy and culture collide… by Warren Brown in The Daily Telegraph.

In what looms as the sleeper issue for the 2010 election campaign, a quarter of all voters placed “Australian jobs and the protection of local industries” as key election issue, behind only economic management and health.

As the latest Essential Report shows that economic protectionism towers over headline-grabbing issues like climate change, asylum seekers, housing affordability, industrial laws and population growth as a priority election issue.

Q. Which are the three most important issues in deciding how you would vote at a Federal election?

Essential Report

What is striking about the high rating for protecting Australian industries is that it comes at a time of relatively low unemployment and a period where there has been little or no media attention on Australian jobs being sent offshore.

Instead the issue is emerging from the grass roots, the thousands of Australians in manufacturing industries – and a growing number of workers in white-collar industries like the banking sector – who see their jobs under threat from lower wage economies.

And while our leaders can crow about “turning back the boats”, 25 years of economic deregulation makes it very hard to turn back the corporate people smugglers.

It is an issue where the Liberal Party, with its knee jerk support for big business, pledges to cut government spending and reductions to the size of the public sector is struggling to gain any traction.  While it leads on issues like managing the economy and asylum seekers, when it comes to Australian jobs, people trust the ALP to the tune of 42 per cent to 28 per cent.

Economic insecurity has been a long-term problem for the Coalition and I have long argued that the Liberal Party’s fixation with asylum seekers is their way of diverting the issue – we can not deliver you economic security in a globalised economy, but we can take a stand for cultural security. This was the logic that drove the Tampa in 2001 and it has worked ever since.

For Labor, jobs should be safe ground and much of its first term success was built on its credentials protecting jobs, with people giving it credit for creating s through its stimulus package, even while questioning whether all of the money was well-spent. The National Broadband Network is another initiative that will create jobs in its construction – and build new industries in its execution.

But Labor is also missing opportunities. Last week it was reported that overseas companies had under-cut Australian solar manufacture Silex in its bid for government contracts to build new solar power plants. It appears to be a classic example of a job-creating project that, if the bean-cutters took the long view, would deliver environmental outcomes and jobs.

Likewise, despite a long-running campaign by the Finance Sector union neither major party has yet to commit to new principles including preventing banks off-shoring work handling sensitive personal information.

These issues are always going to be tough, it requires government stepping into the market place and forcing companies to take actions that may not be in their short-term commercial interests. The mining bosses have shown that businesses can bite back when told to act for a broader good, but these figures also show there are rewards for leaders prepared to stand up.

The battle to secure Australian jobs may lack the drama of high seas confrontations and photo opps on gunboats, but for the voters an increased focus on where the next generation of Australians will be employed could well be a vote-winner.

Don’t miss: Get The Punch in your inbox every day

Get The Punch on Facebook

92 comments

Show oldest | newest first

    • T.Chong says:

      07:02am | 20/07/10

      Job security for the voters is paramount - security of their own job., and the hard won award and conditions that go with it.
      Hence Phoneys election loosing fiasco of the last couple of days.
      Average wage earners fear for their jobs under the LNP, so despite The Phoneys cornball routine of worthless written pledges, voters will not trust him, or the LNP.
      Happy Joe Hockey, (destined to replace Abbott by 22/8), and all the other Libs big names were also part of the govt that brought Serfchoices- political poison, and they know it.
      Simple equation. LNP = Workchoices (regardless of its actual name), and the wage earning voters hate it.
      Most importantly, Phoneys,and the LNPs credability is gone.
      Another couple of turns on the opposition benches now await.

    • Phil says:

      08:23am | 20/07/10

      T Chong. Why dont you and your fellow comrads chip in and buy the place you work for. Either that or lobby your union super fund to do similar. You could start your own business, take a few risks and employ people at the wages you so aspire to earn.

      Did not private employment help through the GFC. Funny that the flexability that workchoices offered was used by the unions/government so as to avoid massive unemployment, job sharing, less hours etc.

      Most voters are wage earners, cept for those on the government purse.

      Labor will use this type of slogan because they must divert the attention from teh abject failures of the past nearly 3 years.

      Grocery Watch, Fuel Watch, ETS, No Workchoices (its not workchoices lite called Work Fair) Economic Conservatives, Mining Tax, Turn Back the Boats. Yes labor are reliable at keeping their word after an election arent they.

    • Joan says:

      08:42am | 20/07/10

      Liberals, gave job security, Howard left Australians relaxed and comfortable, a surplus in hand a nation moving forward, and leader Howard a respected name on the world stage. Keatings high unemployment figures were knocked down to all time lows. In November 2007 the Australian people felt good and confident and in just 2and a half years with Labor mess ups, surplus gone,Australian debt high most Aussies are nervous nellies, biting finger nails, tossing and turning at night worrying about the future- Labor having taken them backward to Keatings years as PM.  Meanwhile the phoney PM Gillard runs around Australia with whitewashed policies, the same brains behind these as with Rudd. The phoney PM wearing Lplates, with the phoney red hair and the phoney display of baby love, a laughing stock on the world stage, will head Australia for the rocks. Australians would have to be masochists to vote in Howes Labor for a second term.

    • T.Chong says:

      08:52am | 20/07/10

      Phil, why arent the 100s of thousands of Australians - police, defence, health,education,  govt agencies of varois levels etc wage earners, because they are paid by the “public purse “?
      You arent using the biggotted cliche that all public servants are office bound paper pushers are you ? Are most nurses? most police ?
      As for keeping faith with the electorate post election,  who invented “core “and “non core “promises ?
      Thats right, it was The Lying Rodent - (great name, thanks Mr Pyne) and his govt.  of which Abbott , Hockey et al were part of.

    • Felix says:

      09:07am | 20/07/10

      I’m an average, hard working Aussie who was better off under Howard. Enough of this ALP experimentation at the federal level. The Labor experiment has failed.

    • Tails says:

      09:09am | 20/07/10

      Are you talking about State Police or the Federal Police Chongo? To that end, how many teachers are paid out of the federal purse? You really are a sad, ranty imbecile.

    • Phil says:

      10:17am | 20/07/10

      T Chong. What I meant in regards to my comment about public purse, but in your usual biased interpretation you tried to misrepresent, from those on the public purse was those on Government Benefits. Unemployment, single mothers and fathers on benefits, pensioners including those on disability benefits. Not hard working Police, Nurses, Teachers, most of whom are employed by the state, whom I have much respect for.

      Only a few weeks ago you and your fellow comrads were delighting in Kevy not its Joolya.

      Life is all about choices. Those we make affect our lives daily. Some are good others not so. Noone held a gun to anyones head and said you must be a public servant, you must be a nurse or an unemployed person. Noone held a gun to an alcoholics head and told them to drink themselves stupid each day. Noone pushed drugs into peoplethe same way either. Australia is the land of opportunity. Those I know that have suceeded did so by hard work, not handouts. None of them expected anything for free.

      Many just need to look around and work hard and whether you are a public servant, medical specialist or self employed you can earn good money and get by.

      .

    • Brad of Bentleigh says:

      12:42pm | 20/07/10

      I think T Chong and the author of this article, are reading what they want from the table above. Management of the economy is the number one issue, with protectionism coming in equal to education. Important in the voters’ eyes for sure, but I don’t think many voters out there rate the ALP as stronger on the economy than the conservatives.
      People I talk to, all rate Labor very poorly on economic management, and their track record in this area is quite widely accepted as being poor.
      With a big helping hand from the fourth estate, some people might beleive the rubbish about Rudd’s/Henrey’s stimulus saving us from recession (it contributed slightly, be very, very little) but people who understand these things, understand that under the ALP, their mortgages will be harder to pay, as the government is actively persuing policy that can only put upwards pressure on inflation. If people are awake to this fact, the ALP would never get a vote from a swinger.

      So I’d agree that job security is important to voters, but they’re not afraid of loosing their jobs, they’re afraid of high interest rates… they’re Howard’s battlers, and whoever wins, needs to get their vote.

    • Tim says:

      02:00pm | 20/07/10

      Yes Brad,
      when the only people you talk to are rusted on Liberal voters, you might expect to hear how they think Labor are poor at economic management.

      “People who understand these things…....?

      What like economists? The majority of whom say Labor have done a good job at managing our economy and keeping us out of recession.

    • Robert Smissen Rural SA says:

      05:35pm | 20/07/10

      The way your beloved leader Red Joooolia is going I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see her reintroduce that “lovely” piece of Labor legislation, the White australia Policy.

    • Robert Smissen Rural SA says:

      05:41pm | 20/07/10

      Tim, are you talking about the “economists” that didn’t see the GFC until it hit them like a semi-trailer? ? An economist is like a bloke who knows 12 different ways of making love but doesn’t know any women

    • acotrel says:

      10:23pm | 20/07/10

      The updated version of Workchoices will probably be called ‘Loveworker legislation’! I know when I’m being told lies!

    • Dash says:

      08:45am | 20/07/10

      Funny isn’t it that we had the most prosperous economy we’ve ever had under Howard with full employment. The unemployment rate has gone up under the Rudd Gillard government! Yet we still have morons in the media trying to make an IR issue where one doesn’t exist! Everybody knows that the single most important thing for jobs is the state of the economy. I’m now convinced that we’ll get whatever government the media wants us to have. You only have to look at the front page of the Sydney broadsheet over the last two days to realise that. It’s an absolute disgrace! Last election, editors of both major news outlets in this country actively campaigned for Kevin07. They should be impartial and report the facts. Yesterday the backroom deal as expected, was done with the Greens. The ALP/green coalition is now in place. Clearly, a green vote is a vote for the ALP.

    • AdamC says:

      09:43am | 20/07/10

      I certainly agree that some newspapers have essentially become uncritical cheerleaders for Gillard, just as they were for Kevin07. In their defence, I think the stance is commercially driven - newspapers need to keep an audience.

      And the main device they and the ALP are using to get Jools elected is a scare campaign about the Libs ‘bringing back WorkChoices’. Abbott is letting them get away with it too, when he should be being more assertive about it. For example, he should ask interviewers what they mean when they say WorkChoices - which particular aspect of it was so objectionable? Most intervewers would barely remember - if they ever knew - anything about the package.

      WorkChoices, in the way people remember it, was a union campaign advertisement with a woman and kids in it. It actually has nothing to do with IR policy. The Liberal Party should at least try to remind people of that.

    • Hamish says:

      11:59am | 20/07/10

      Totally true re WorkChoices AdamC. Most people, even those vehemently against WorkChoices, would have trouble explaining how it would be different to our current system.

      How dumb is the writer of this article? Seriously, what is he arguing? Bring back tarriffs? They’re great for long term jobs growth. Look how beneficial they’ve been for the Textile Clothing and Footwear industry. Or is he just using jobs an an excuse to launch into an anti-WorkChoices (and Coalition in general) rant?

      The big government-style welfare state/trade fortress economic model just doesn’t work. If it’s failing in Europe with ten times the economic clout and population of Australia, how is it going to work here, with the Asian Tigers and China on our doorstep?

      Lucky Gillard’s so desperate to me-too Abbott that people like Peter aren’t getting a look in…hopefully that will continue after the election as well. After the weeken’d performance, I’m not sure Abbott’s doing that well so far.

    • DC says:

      12:31pm | 20/07/10

      Hmmmm - personal debt rose considerably under Howard, house prices rose considerably, interest rates rose, petrol prices sky rocketed etc etc.

      Regardless, you are talking about the past - Abbott is not Howard (regardless of how many policies he recycles).

      As for the “IR issue”, Tony Abbott has told small business for the past 9 months that he would go to an election based on IR reforms.

      That is a fact - you don’t have to look to hard to find the proof of that.

      Hell, just last year, Tony Abbott was stating that Work Choices was good - http://www.youtube.com/v/ysbcRWOBzw0 .

      In Dec of 2009, Abbott stated that they might change industrial laws:  http://www.smh.com.au/small-business/managing/we-might-change-industrial-laws-abbott-20091201-k2bj.html .

      In April on Q&A, Tony Abbott stated “...the policies that we take to the next election will provide for individual agreements”.  Abbott then went on to state:  “...keep the unfair dismissal monkey off the back of very small business.”

      Abbott repeated this in May during another interview: “We’ll seek to take the unfair dismissal monkey off the back of small businesses which are more like families than institutions.”

      Opposition Small Business spokesman has said the same, Bruce Billson: “Tony Abbott has made it clear, and it’s my firm view, providing improved unfair dismissal relief for small business needs to be a part of the policy that we seek to get the approval of the Australian people.”

      And you expect people to believe Tony Abbott now?

    • Hamish says:

      01:15pm | 20/07/10

      DC, Kevin Rudd called climate change the greatest moral challenge of our generation and then just shelved the policy. So if Rudd can dump climate change, then surely Abbott can dump WorkChoices, especially when WorkChoices was simply a ‘brand’ created to market a particular set of initiatives.

      Abbott can quite truthfully say he’s going to re-introduce individual contracts and not bring back WorkChoices.

    • effyoo says:

      08:50am | 20/07/10

      While I do feel compassion for asylum seekers I don’t think that they are a significant election issue. Jobs are far more important and the future of the Australian economic landscape.

      Workchoices would have eventually created a massive underclass of lowly paid, poorly educated people working several itinerant style jobs because they couldn’t get gainful full-time employment. Families would have suffered because parents couldn’t be home because they had to work several jobs to pay the mortgage.

      Moreover, having no time to do anything other than work means people aren’t able to take time out to train themselves.

      While having a large pool of cheap labour works well for business, it is bad for society.

      Labor had to spend big to stimulate the economy during the GFC. This was unavoidable. If they didn’t we’d be seeing 20% unemployment right now compared to the current 5.1% forecast to fall to 4.5%.

      With the global economy still jittery they may need to continue this because business and consumers are still unwilling to take up the slack due to global concerns.

    • Toddzilla says:

      09:47am | 20/07/10

      You couldn’t be more wrong on all issues. Workchoices lowered the unemployment rate and increased wages, while saving small business from going bust by allowing them to shed employees when they needed to, rather than going through the odious redundancy process that resulted in the business going into liquidation. The unions protested because they were rendered as useless as they actually are, not, as is now the case, in a position of power hardly commensurate with their inherent weaknesses.

      As for the stimulus, it was never required. Given the structure of the Australian economy and the nature of the GFC, the recession was never likely to impact Australia and that proved the case. Claiming the stimulus helped is the intellectual equivalent of putting a fence around your house to keep out dinosaurs and then claiming it worked because you hadn’t seen a dinosaur in your yard. It is totally specious reasoning.

      Essentially the government (the worst one since Federation, just quietly) spend billions of dollars of our money, in the most inefficient manner possible, with the most waste possible, in order to alleviate a problem that didn’t exist in the first place.

      In addition, because of the stimulus Australia is now at risk of recession. A recession that will have been caused by the very handouts you now applaud.

    • Evan Findlay says:

      10:53am | 20/07/10

      Toddzilla,
      What a small and rosy coloured world you live in.
      “Workchoices lowered the unemployment rate and increased wages” Could you please state where you sampled this data or what your basing your extraordinary statement on.
      Does the company Spotlight ring any bells. Probably not as you seem to lack the ability to do any research. Spotlight withdrew their employees penalty rates and compensated them an extra two cents on their standard rate. Hardly what I would call increasing wages!
      “The stimulus was never required” You are a genius! All those people, a lot more educated than you, educated in economics and social policy, the same people with an accumulative amount of years in the thousandths within the field of economics and all Mr Rudd, Mr Henry and Mr Stevens, rather than listening to those experts, all they needed to do was to come and have a chat with you. “It was never required” How could they argue against such brilliant and concise logic.

    • Toddzilla says:

      11:45am | 20/07/10

      Actually Evan, I am an economist. I predicted the GFC 13 months ahead of time almost to the day. I predicted the size and scope of the impact it would have on the Australian economy. I made recommendations to business and government of the same, but was roundly ignored by people like Rudd, Henry and Stevens (none of whom are economists), whose knowledge of economics, especially macroeconomics is embarrassingly poor and clouded by dreams of socialism as an answer to a question that no-one posed.

      If you, with your lack of knowledge relative to mine, think that the stimulus worked, then you must answer this question: Why did the same stimulus (sometimes larger and always more efficient) not work anywhere else, given that hundreds of countries ran with it? Why, in the entire history of capitalism, with thousands of stimulus packages being implemented across hundreds of countries, was Australia’s the first to work. Are we the anomoly that proves Keynes right? No, the answer lies in the Australian economy itself, not the stimulus. We were never going to be impacted.

    • Shane From Melbourne says:

      12:09pm | 20/07/10

      @Toddzilla- If you’re an economist, how come you didn’t mention that China successfully implemented a stimulus package that not only kept their economy afloat but Australia’s as well? Considering that they are the only engine running in the global economy (and heaven help Australia if China goes into recession) I’d rather listen to Mr Keynes than you.

    • Brad of Bentleigh says:

      12:33pm | 20/07/10

      Shane, China’s economy bares very little resemblance to ours, or any [western] capatalist system. Apples and Oranges…

    • DC says:

      01:17pm | 20/07/10

      @Toddzilla:  You’re an economist?  Really?  There are plenty of economists out there that have stated that the stimulus packages did help keep Australia out of recession.

      Are they all wrong?

    • effyoo says:

      03:39pm | 20/07/10

      @Toddzilla

      I, too, have tertiary qualifications in economics. If, like me, you take a keen interest in economics then you will notice that the World Bank, IMF, RBA and G20 all praised the job of the economic stimulus from Labor. They all put our economic performance down to the stimulus.

      If you also think that Australia would have sailed through the GFC with no problems then you are seriously deluded. If exports fall because our major trading partners can’t buy our goods then all industries fall. A rising tide lifts all boats….....so too does a sinking tide lower all boats.

      Moreover, if you think that Workchoices was good in allowing businesses to sack employees just to save themselves or force employees to work on reduced hours/wages then you have a heart of stone.

      Surely, as an economist, you can understand that the prosperity of a nation is dependent, to a large extent, on the consumption power of consumers within that nation. No point having businesses “survive” if people can’t afford to buy what they’re selling.

      Moreover, if you think that having people out of work is good for the social fabric of the nation and can be dismissed with little notice because it suits the employer or be paid a low wage (leading to subsistence living) then you truly don’t know what makes a great nation.

      Wealthy and prosperous people make a great nation. Not a bunch of lowly paid serfs and a handful of kings.

    • Gregg says:

      03:41pm | 20/07/10

      The thing is DC that the answer will never be known for even with all the work that Insulation and BER may have created, it is not to be known just how many of those employed doing work on such programs may have been doing other work.
      For sure the pickings of government program work would have been attractive to many for what it offered.
      Do we in fact have a rollcall of the employed on government sponsored work?
      And then of course the next question is what happens next to people on government programs? and well we know of what happened to the insulators and so have others made enough to retire on it would seem.
      And as to what happens next with the economy?, yep a tax grab to cover for a lot of expenditure/borrowings, bloody great short term thinking for the budget and Julia but even then they cannot get their figures unrubberised.

    • effyoo says:

      04:21pm | 20/07/10

      Also, I just saw this from our very own Governor of the Reserve Bank - completely agreeing with my point

      http://www.news.com.au/business/breaking-news/higher-government-debt-unavoidable-rba-governor-glenn-stevens/story-e6frfkur-1225894593367

      “Generally speaking, the public balance sheet has played the role of a temporary shock absorber as private balance sheets contracted.”

      “Moreover, had the debt not been taken on it could well be that the economic outcomes would have been much worse, so increasing fiscal and other costs.

      “The simple truth is that, given a big enough shock, the public backstop to the financial system has to be used,” he said.

      [I do admit he says the following]:

      “The simple truth is that, given a big enough shock, the public backstop to the financial system has to be used,” he said.

    • DC says:

      05:10pm | 20/07/10

      @Gregg:

      The fact is that the stimulus packages were put in place to keep two main job sectors alive - retail and the construction/building sectors.

      They had a flow on effect of keeping other sectors alive and well at a time when they may very well have shut up shop completely, or who would have to have laid off their employees.

      The stimulus packages helped avoid mass layoffs - which would have had a very negative effect on the economy as people stopped spending.

      The insulation type programs weren’t designed to employ all those who had been sacked - they were designed to employ some people, but the main design of those programs were to make things like insulation more affordable, which would also save people money on electricity as well as reducing green house emissions.

      As we all know, there were some shonky operators that started up, didn’t train their employees appropriately and deaths resulted.

      And then the negative fear campaign started, the opposition jumped on the bandwagon, the program was closed down and some of those employed lost their jobs.

      Ultimately, the insulation program was put in place for the right reasons.

    • Seano says:

      08:56am | 20/07/10

      Why neither major party has proposed a policy to prevent our sensitive information being off shored is beyond me.  I would have thought protection of our privacy, security and jobs was a no brainer.

      It’s not an issue that will change my vote, Tony Abbott is unelectable, but it’s one I’d like to see at least one of the majors pick up.

    • Kordez says:

      09:36am | 20/07/10

      @Seano, I agree. But I don’t know that it’s possible to enforce. We may end up having companies google on us.

    • Seano says:

      11:06am | 20/07/10

      I think it could be enforced if one of the parties had the balls. Certainly it would play well to the punters.

    • Adam Diver says:

      09:00am | 20/07/10

      I know democracy is a representation of the population. But this poll-driven crap has gone too far. Obviously a vast majority of the population are not well-equipped in the mental capacity to make decisions that affect the entire electorate and as such the enlightened few who take office need to make decisions that are unpopular but neccessary.

      So listen to your electorate by all means, but at some stage make a stand on the principals you want to uphold whilst in office and let us make the choice between two sets of policies.

      The media constantly harping about these polls does not help either. We should do away with having a political system and instead just appoint or employ a set of people that implements policy based on the results of the polls. Imagine the savings that could be made and its not much different to what we have today.

    • DG says:

      09:35am | 20/07/10

      I agree that there are far too many stupid people out there voting (for both sides) but that has nothing to do with where they place their vote. Much of politics is one of ideology rather than a science. Each person votes for what they think will make the world better - for some it’s an increase in community programs for groups in need of assistance or improved public transport, for others it’s stopping boat people or filtering the internet. There’s no science to it - it’s just a list of “I want a world in which….”.

      Meanwhile, representative democracy is a tax payer funded popularity contest. Nothing more, nothing less. There is no inherent good or evil, no incentive to do the right thing. The only incentive is to do the popular thing with an aim to winning votes at the next election - and ensuring their continued employment.

      Why do the Labor Party spend so much time talking about Abbott and suggesting that he’ll be culling staff from hospitals? Because it makes the other person look bad. Equally the Libs rant on about the manner in which the Labor party elect the head of their party. There is no benefit to honesty or integrity - the only place benefit is to be found is in popularity.

      To your second point, and this is a problem noted around the world, in various fields of study as well as in politics, people tend to read things that agree with their point of view.

      The newspapers, as they want to be known, are really little more than a means of selling daily stories to readers. They are well aware that people prefer to read things that agree with their world view (since the alternative is to willingly read something that says “You are wrong”) - and they have a vested interest in selling as many papers as possible. That is not really conducive to open and honest reporting. It means reporting in a manner that is popular (just as politicians are driven by popularity) that will cause people to want to buy your paper.

      A newspaper that gives facts without spin would be a hard thing to sell, and an ever harder thing to produce. Essentially, to write an article for a newspaper you need a number of major unstated premises - primarily in the context of what makes the ideal world. A paper that wastes the first 5 pages stating their ideology is never going to sell a paper. Instead they hide it in their story.

      Consider: A news paper publishes a story about new speed cameras. The facts “100 new speed cameras have been installed”. Is that going to sell a paper? What about if we add “Government revenue raising hits new lows today, as they roll out more speed cameras”? Surely that is a more entertaining story. What about the alternative, equally valid, story “100 new camera’s have been installed to catch criminals in the act as drivers demonstrate a reckless indifference to the laws of the road”? The latter, while true, is hardly going to be popular - especially with all of those people who have acquired speeding tickets in their life time. So which story is going to sell a paper? If you are an editor whose job depends on you selling papers which do you publish?

      Just like the politician who says/does whatever will be popular enough to get them re-elected and ensure they keep their job.

    • Evan Findlay says:

      09:35am | 20/07/10

      I agree Adam. Politicians no longer stand on principle or for the good of the nation. If Mr Abbott truly believes in Workchoices, which it is blatantly obvious that he does, then he should campaign on industrial relations throughout the election. The same could be said for Ms Gillard. If she truly believes in an ETS then she should be running the election on climate change. But neither have any ticker.
      The problem for Mr Abbott is that whilst he tries to back away from Workchoices, which he is not doing a credible job of, reciprocally he is seen by the electorate as standing for nothing. Workchoices to Abbott is what the ETS was to Rudd. The moment they put the policies on the back burner the electorate questions their integrity.

    • Mick says:

      10:19am | 20/07/10

      “The best argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with the average voter.” (Sir Winston Churchill)

      But then he also pronounced that, “it has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried.”

      So I guess we just suck it up, hey. And please excuse my blanket “cut and paste” job. Mick.

    • Liam says:

      09:18am | 20/07/10

      “Economic insecurity has been a long-term problem for the Coalition”

      Sorry Peter, were you somewhere else from 1996-2007?

    • Brad of Bentleigh says:

      12:51pm | 20/07/10

      Must have been a typo, he meant to write “Labor are well regarded for their ecomomic mismanagement”, or something like that.

      It’s amazing reading these things, they really do see only what they want to see, and if they say it enough times, that hope it will become true.

    • nosthow says:

      09:21am | 20/07/10

      And thank goodness we had the Labor Party in government during the GFC ! Now we have one of the strongest economies in the Western World. Thank you Mr Rudd. Ms Gillard now has an excellent economy to work with and move Australia forward. Poor old Tony Abbott is floundering already in the campaign being totally stuck on Workchoices - no-one was fooled yesterday by his juvenile scribblings allegedly condemning Workhoices to the waste bin - No Tony Abbott will bring back Workchoices and cause untold pain to the good working people of Australia - goodbye Tony !

    • Joan says:

      01:13pm | 20/07/10

      Howes/Gillards Labor taking Australia backward to Keating days. Australia no surplus, big growing debt , shambolic messed up policies, Unions rule The desperate Howes and Labor turf out their Labor leader the peoples PM and Tanner and Faulkner flee the floundering Labor wreck. The reality is a Labor wrecked Australia- Work Choices never was and only exists in your dreams

    • nosthow says:

      04:03pm | 20/07/10

      @Joan - sweet thoughts joan - hold those as Abbott goes down the gurgler of history - he only has about 5 weeks as Liberal leader before he gets the chop !

    • Joan says:

      04:42pm | 20/07/10

      Keep dreaming nosthow…..ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ

    • Jason CR says:

      04:45pm | 20/07/10

      Speaking of 5 weeks ago, noshow - didn’t we have a different Labor leader?  A leader that you said was the best thing to happen to Australia since toilet paper….

      As I’ve said, Labor are like the dog chasing the car.  Once they achieve their goal, they don’t know what to do.

      Rudd looks at Gillard, Gillard gets on the phone for advice, Gillard looks at Tanner - he shrugs his shoulders and says it’s all too hard and leaves.  They all run along to Faulkners office for advice.  Unfortunately it’s too hot for poor Johnny and he jumps ship.  Little Kev (the blah blah black sheep of Labor) decides he wants to ruin international ties after ruining our country.  But much to Julia’s relief along comes Bob Brown to save her day.  Woo hoo what a party!!!!

      Labor geese will soon realise that scare campaigns are good and well if you’re in opposition.  However the voters have seen Labor’s credentials and they’re not fooled by cardboard cut out leaders and spin.  Liberals are home kids - take the $3.95.

    • Greek Snake says:

      04:52pm | 20/07/10

      I can’t tell if you are being sarcastic or not nosthow. Thank goodness we had the Labor party? LOL - forgive me, I try not to use those three letters in reasoned discourse, but your post has really left me chuckling.

      Does the ALP pay your wage?... I’m sure you’re a fine human being aside from that slight delusion you had while writing that post…

    • Robert Smissen Rural SA says:

      05:47pm | 20/07/10

      nosthow the only thing “good” about the Rudd/Gillard comedy show is they are a good example of how not to govern

    • nosthow says:

      06:27pm | 20/07/10

      @Green Snake - no Green Snake I am a Pensioner ! And I am deadly serious - dont you remember all those businesses thanking the Rudd government for the Stimulus packages ? Poor memory Green Snake ?

    • nosthow says:

      06:30pm | 20/07/10

      @Jason CR - we just keep running into each other Jason - you an emergency services worker and me a humble Pensioner - we will have to have a coffee huh ?

    • Richard says:

      09:24am | 20/07/10

      I don’t have a job. You know I wish there wasn’t any minimum wage laws and that workchoices was still available, because then an employer would be more willing to take a risk on me. It wouldn’t cost him very much to evaluate my performance and determine if I was adding value to his company or not, we would be able to reach a flexible agreement that suited us both, and if it didn’t work out it wouldn’t be more painful than extracting teeth for him to let me go.

      The fact is that in a free market economy everyone wins. More people working means a stronger economy and more wealth produced. More people working means that labour becomes scarcer and therefore more valuable, causing wages to rise spontaenously in a sustainable manner.

      But when the government gets involved and sets rigid laws in stone, artifcial constraints hamper further growth in the job market and makes everyone suffer: employers who are prevented from running a profitable business/expanding a profitable business, employees who are only protected for as long as the company is solvent, but as soon as the company goes bankrupt its gg; and unemployed people like me who can’t even get a foot in the door because the law mandates it to be my right to take a mile even though my merits may only deserve an inch.

      There will always be problems when governments, unions and businesses are able to grow too big… Power always corrupts.

    • Shane From Melbourne says:

      10:18am | 20/07/10

      Emigrate to America. There’s no minimum wage there and you can compete with the thousand of unemployed there with its unemployment rate of 10%. The fact that the Liberals want to take us down the same route that the Republicans travelled and end up with an economic basket case and a political system permanently dysfunctional says it all.

    • Beirut Brickie says:

      10:44am | 20/07/10

      @Richard, my thoughts exactly. Try being a 20yo uni student looking for work in an area with high unemployment, and having a government-set wage as a millstone around your neck - why should they have the right to tell me what wage I want to work for?

    • AdamC says:

      10:49am | 20/07/10

      Shane, there are both Federal, state and, in some cases, local minimum wage laws in America. Until quite recently, Australia didn’t have a minimum wage, instead it had myriad Federal and state ‘awards’ that regulated pay and conditions by industry, sometimes down to microscopic detail. Now there is also a minimum wage overlayed on that award system, which Jools apparenty ‘modernised’ down to only a few hundred, instead of several hundred, awards.

      Richard is right, and the US malaise has little to do with US IR laws. I would argue much of the US unemployment problem is created by the informal ‘day worker’ economy tolerated by the Federal government, with which formal American workers must compete. It doesn’t surprise me that the controversial Arizona immigration law has been enacted now, rather than in 2007.

    • Evan Findlay says:

      10:59am | 20/07/10

      Well Richard, we have just seen what the free market economy is capable of without some form of regulation. Ask all of those people who lost their jobs due to the free market economy whether they would agree with you! By the way did your superannuation cop a battering due to the free market economy!

    • Hamish says:

      12:05pm | 20/07/10

      Shane, mate, there is a federally-legislated minimum wage in America. There isn’t in Australia. We just have a system of complicated entitlements which varies from state-to-state and industry-to-industry. Howard was essentially going to introduce a minimum wage/entitlement system, but you voted it out. It was called WorkChoices. See, the unions like to have complicated state and industry specific systems because it makes them more relevant and gives them more issues to negotiate/strike/stand-over people about.

    • Brad of Bentleigh says:

      12:58pm | 20/07/10

      errr, Evan, it was the free market that gave your super value in the first place…

    • DC says:

      01:25pm | 20/07/10

      @Richard:

      Why don’t you pick yourself up and start a business?

      It doesn’t have to be anything big - anything is better than nothing (I’ve been in the same situation as you - I know exactly how it feels).

      I was made redundant during the 90’s recession and just over a year ago, I was made redundant again because my employer at the time was incompetent and lost truckloads of money because of poor management (who are still employed by the way).

      Thankfully, my IT knowledge and experience still brings me in money.

      Speaking of unemployment, is Tony Abbott still bringing in his plan to send under 30 year olds off to work in the mines?

    • Evan Findlay says:

      09:16pm | 20/07/10

      Brad of Bentleigh,
      And if the banking and financial industry in America had not been fully de-regulated by the likes of Greenspan and Clinton, I probably still would have that value!
      You need to read and digest my comment properly before making your own.

    • Ed says:

      09:52am | 20/07/10

      The above chart shows climate change at 12% on the public priority scale.
      We now know the Greens have done a preference deal with Labor.  So what was the policy agreement behind such a deal?  Politicians do not give anything for nothing.  We may be witnessing a re-run of recent Tasmanian political manoeuvrings that shocked and angered that State’s population.

      Tasmania has suffered from Green over-influence for decades.  Bob Brown’s home state has sadly languished due to Green demands, and still does.  The Greens there are proud that Labor couldn’t form a government without the inclusion of two Greens, despite public anger.  Unpopular Labor’s pre-election insistence that the Greens were unwelcome in their Cabinet was quickly reneged. 

      There’s a rather comical aspect to the Tasmanian government’s inconvenient yet tolerated association with the Greens.  The Tasmanian Opposition won the popular vote.  Graham Richardson advised that Labor should team up with the Greens in order to retain government.  A government which, just like today’s incompetent federal Labor outfit, had failed miserably. Tasmanians did not want more of the same - but they were forced to take it - courtesy of the Greens.

      Several decades ago, the Tasmanian Greens stopped development of future clean hydro-electric energy for their State.  Tasmania now buys dirty coal powered energy.  This has been a sorrowful and negative outcome for such a beautiful, liveable place.  Tasmania will never reach its undoubted potential while it remains under Labor/Green control. 

      Consider a similar scenario.  Victoria reaps huge revenue from their evening sporting and entertainment culture. Green energy austerity could become an unexpected, adverse economic factor in that State.  Greens cannot justify advocating restraints on ordinary domestic energy use, yet ignore massive over-use of energy by big stadium/AFL/cricket/entertainment business that can readily do things another way. 

      If it is correct the Melbourne Cricket Ground consumes more than 4 million kilowatt hours of electricity pa, and if the seat of Melbourne falls to the Greens, how long would it be until Victorian night-lit venues would be under Green pressure to halt their profligate electric energy waste. Sport can be played just as well under daytime solar as it can under electric lights.  I believe this subject may already have received Green attention.

    • dancan says:

      10:48am | 20/07/10

      Painful, this just shows that neither party know or understand the issues which are on the minds of Australians, and that both sides are just running a poor “scare” campaign to try and scrape through as winners

    • Amber says:

      11:04am | 20/07/10

      Jobs are important to Australian Working Families who want to Move Forward, which is why their vote is crossing over to Liberals - the traditional the job-factory.

    • DC says:

      01:29pm | 20/07/10

      Ha ha ha ha - quite funny.

      If only that was correct - most people I know (from a wide range of job sectors) spent more time unemployed while Howard was the PM than under Rudd/Gillard.

      Sure, I know the theory, but the practice was quite different.

      Of course, Howard also changed the stats by claiming that anyone who was employed for a few hours per week was not considered unemployed - just under employed.

    • Robert Smissen Rural SA says:

      05:56pm | 20/07/10

      So what was the sectors, spin doctors & charlatans? ?

    • DC says:

      12:55am | 21/07/10

      @Robert Smissen

      “So what was the sectors, spin doctors & charlatans? ? “

      What part of “from a wide range of job sectors” don’t you understand?

      Spin doctors and charlatans?  I’m guessing you’re quite familiar with those sectors - as can be seen from your comment.

    • Jason CR says:

      11:20am | 20/07/10

      I note that ensuring the quality of Australia’s health system is ranked second with voters (55%).

      At last we have a party who has a ground breaking mental health policy.  Labor have no policy and don’t understand the importance of this.

      As an emergency service worker, I see first hand that this is a serious issue and the impact is has on ambo’s and police when dealing with those and the impact on the whole community.  A scare campaign on ‘workchoices’ won’t fix this problem Labor.  33% of young women have a form of mental illness and 25% of young men. 

      Fix this problem will not only help those with mental illness, but also every Australian. 

      Gillard dodged the question on mental health just this morning and rambled on about Abbott’s cuts to health (more scare campaigns) .  Enough is enough.

    • Peter Faulkes says:

      12:01pm | 20/07/10

      Adam C should realise that the “malaise” in the U.S.A. is the result of the dictatorship like style of their present ‘dear leader’.  That country is being brought down to its knees through inept government, crazy goings on by the Administration that are actually treasonable, against public interest, serving a leftist and communistic ideology, disrupting their Constitution, putting control into the hands of Bureaucrats, defying the wishes of over 80% of the people, passing ridiculous laws, not acting when there is an oil spill, blaming Wall Street for the mistakes of the leading party in power,  wanting to go green, killing jobs in the oil industry, seeing private enterprise losing its impact - even impeachable offences - these are the reasons of what is happening to our cousins.  Just make sure you vote correctly, oh you voters, or you may be led down that same garden path.  The leftists in the Labor Party, with Julia Gillard put into power illegitimately one could say, will bring about a sliding economics and a greater fall in unemployment than they now have.  The reason this government has been successful in relation to the fact that we are better off than most other countries in the Western World is due not to their expertise, of which there was none, only failure, lying and great waste of taxpayers’ money.  It was due to our trading partners in Asia, who bought our precious minerals under our ground.  Incidentally, no political party owns this country.

    • Rene Doherty says:

      12:08pm | 20/07/10

      Let me talk about unemployment, also, as my husband and I are in a predicament.  He was off work for a long time due to work injury, for which compensation was refused.  Relatives had to come to our help as they are still doing.  We used to have a business that failed quite a while back not due to our efforts but because the company many mistakes.  So we have no recent work experience.  We are both nearly fifty years of age.  We have done courses, and applied with Center Link, Employment Agencies and on line to over two hundred jobs.  Do you know that there is no reply?  My husband had one job as a possibility.  He and another applied (from the Employment Agency).  He failed to obtain the position because of “no recent work experience”.  Fortnightly he and I go to our different Employment Agencies.  This is the usual form.  “How are you this time?  Had any luck?”.  “No.”  “See you next time”.  For this, the Agencies receive money from the Government.  I was told by one that they have never done such a time of unemployment as has now hit us.  So why are the Unions always trying to raise wages, and why are authorities trying to import workers (who cannot speak English) while such as we are out of work?  What is wrong with this Labor Government?  I might add that we are presentable, intelligent and willing.  No Jobs.  Keep all the migrants out until Aussies whose forbears fought our wars, are placed in decent employment.

    • Brad of Bentleigh says:

      01:06pm | 20/07/10

      I’m terribly sorry to hear of your plight, Rene. I wish you and your husband the very best of luck in gaining employment. Though I’m tempted to make a political point from your post, I’ll refrain, leaving you only with my good wishes.

    • DC says:

      01:38pm | 20/07/10

      @Rene:  While I feel for you, I know many people who experienced the same situations under the last Liberal Government (I only mention this because you are asking what is wrong with this Labor Government?).

      For me, this happened around the 2000-2003 period, where most of the people turning up the Agencies were IT workers.

      I was picking up intermittent work for months at a time, but it was still hard.

      I also met quite a few older workers who were being rejected because of their age.

      The sad fact is that when you are around the 50 year old mark, employers don’t want to know about you - it doesn’t matter which Government is in power - it still happens.

    • S.L says:

      03:03pm | 20/07/10

      Rene your husband being refused compo for a work related injury sounds strange to me! Without sticking my nose into your business I’m curious to know the general circumstances.
      Now employment…............ I employ ten people in my business and only three (including myself) are under fifty. To say you and your husband have applied for two hundred jobs without success, what sort of jobs are you applying for? Maybe you are aiming too high? It’s never too late to start at the bottom again.
      You are complaining about importing workers to do jobs when there are locals out of work but a lot of the tasks people are being imported to do a local wouldn’t even consider trying. I’m sorry Rene but I’ve been down the same path as your husband with injury and just started again. If you want a job they are out there…...........Just lower your sights a bit.

    • MH says:

      01:26pm | 20/07/10

      “Economic insecurity has been a long-term problem for the Coalition…”

      Seriously Peter.  By all means present your point of view but you’ll do a lot better if you remove the blinkers occasionally.  Who honestly believes that the economy is the long-term problem for the Coalition?  That’s like saying the environment is the Greens’ weak point.

    • DD Ball says:

      01:39pm | 20/07/10

      The ALP have been appallingly bad in office, having weakened the economy, border protection and bungled all of the spending initiatives and foreign affairs. It has become very hard for the media to be balanced without seeming to be gung ho ALPites. Mr Abbott isn’t helping either. Rather than announce dumb or bad policy, he is quietly and calmly stating the conservative position. The result has been commentators highly critical of Mr Abbott have begun trying to tell him what his lines should be, and would be if he were less competent. For example, on Industrial Relations, Mr Abbott has dumped Work Choices and promised not to legislatively change Fair Choice, but merely administering it properly as the ALP has failed to do. This got some upset who began to point out how bad and dysfunctional Fair Choices is. I have been talking about that for years, and most have ignored me, but now the genius that is Mr Abbott has those scoundrels telling me about it. Or border protection. Apparently Mr Abbott has made a mistake by not laughing at Gillard’s pathetic efforts of adopting a Pacific Solution lite without choosing elements that made it workable. Many of these critics had previously said that the Pacific Solution was a crime against humanity.

    • Ryan says:

      03:59pm | 20/07/10

      Visualise this.. You are in a trench, there a bullets flying and you have to go over the top.. Who would you prefer to be in that trench with, Gillard, Abbott or Swann. I wonder which would actually have your back and follow you out of that trench!

    • DC says:

      12:59am | 21/07/10

      I would want Abbott in the trenches with me - but there would be a “fragging” involved.

    • DT says:

      04:19pm | 20/07/10

      If I was Labor I would want to move forward, move forward, move forward, looking back is not a pretty sight is it.

    • Gregg says:

      04:35pm | 20/07/10

      Jerry Lewis, Wrongy Chongy and cohorts would really like to have their cake and eat it too and yes asylum seekers is always going to be something of a side show but still needs proper addressing as it will fester under Labor as just about everything does.
      It is the most simple mathematics to to know that if you have $X and want to spend $X+ then you will either borrow and have interest to pay or you tax more and both in fact will increase taxes and disposable income.
      We have seen the macro version of this with Labor splurges and the resources super tax -
      The cake will not be there for the eating for a couple of years with the discussion big three and so aside from impact on business/future development plans and jobs what will be the result if commodity prices fall and they are never too stable.
      Oh!, just a great big budget hole, more borrowing, more interest payments and so it goes, that’s Julia’s Moving Forward.
      ” What is striking about the high rating for protecting Australian industries is that it comes at a time of relatively low unemployment ” and could that be because there are many people who can see beyond the scenario created by stimulus?, perhaps the economy not as strong as it may seem?  ” and a period where there has been little or no media attention on Australian jobs being sent offshore. ” and why so media people?, the picture a bit too black looking?
      ” Instead the issue is emerging from the grass roots, ” for yes, people do need to be concerned for the future
      ” who see their jobs under threat from lower wage economies.”
      ” 25 years of economic deregulation makes it very hard to turn back the corporate people smugglers. “
      Will having more flexible workplace practices help people keep jobs?
      A choice about work perhaps needed!
      ” It is an issue where the Liberal Party, with its knee jerk support for big business, pledges to cut government spending and reductions to the size of the public sector is struggling to gain any traction.  While it leads on issues like managing the economy and asylum seekers, when it comes to Australian jobs, people trust the ALP to the tune of 42 per cent to 28 per cent. ” and is it a false trust to have trust in a government that will forever have a burgeoning debt and interest payments to be met, that X+ factor style of management.
      ” Economic insecurity has been a long-term problem for the Coalition and I have long argued that the Liberal Party’s fixation with asylum seekers is their way of diverting the issue – ....... “
      Peter Jerry Lewis, you are such a comic!
      Economic security is something that Liberal governments usually get faced with addressing after the splurging periods of Labor government, racking up the loans and interest bills.
      The Tampa merely addressed an issue of the time before Christmas Island was ready.
      ” For Labor, jobs should be safe ground and much of its first term success was built on its credentials protecting jobs, with people giving it credit for creating s through its stimulus package, even while questioning whether all of the money was well-spent ” and not just questioned but answered in the negative….and creating many jobs will only see them last as long as money keeps flowing and if it is borrowed money!
      ” The National Broadband Network is another initiative that will create jobs in its construction – and build new industries in its execution. “, and such confidence with no business plan, no need to conduct a benefits study according to Labor!
      There’s a toll tunnel in Brisbane that people avoid because of the cost!
      ” But Labor is also missing opportunities. Last week it was reported that overseas companies had under-cut Australian solar manufacture Silex in its bid for government contracts to build new solar power plants. It appears to be a classic example of a job-creating project that, if the bean-cutters took the long view, would deliver environmental outcomes and jobs. “
      And what of Unionists and Labor Politicians, many also ex Unionists taking a longer term view rather than head in the sand and pricing themselves out of jobs!
      ” The battle to secure Australian jobs may lack the drama of high seas confrontations and photo opps on gunboats, but for the voters an increased focus on where the next generation of Australians will be employed could well be a vote-winner. “
      And yes, hopefully many generations of Australians will realise that cutting up the credit card and living within their means is a great start, something that Labor leaders always struggle with in setting an example because they will be too busy saying look at what we have done and promise to do without considering the future.
      The way forward is certainly to get rid of Labor and Labor’s debt.

    • dead to me says:

      09:09pm | 20/07/10

      Labor is a basket case of a government. Everyone I know including myself (as well as the twits who voted for labor last time) agree that we were better off under the Howard government. It wasn’t a perfect government but much better then this group of Labor spenders.

    • Louise Crane says:

      03:24am | 22/10/10

      <a >Causes Of Low Testosterone</a>
      <a >Parental Controls Rover</a>
      <a >Free Short Ghost Stories</a>
      <a >Ellen B Met Art</a>
      <a >Ragnarok Online Hacks</a>
      <a >God Of War To Walkthrough</a>
      <a >Wow Mining Coords</a>
      <a >Making Love Videos</a>
      <a >Download Complete Nero Free</a>
      <a >First Place Award Certificate Template</a>
      <a >My Planet Girls Eva</a>
      <a >Myspace Account Hacking</a>
      <a >Kids Wizards Costume Uk</a>
      <a >Tai Chi Pictures</a>
      <a >Police Scanner Torrent</a>
      <a >Female Discipline Stories</a>
      <a >2000 Timeline Pop Music</a>
      <a >Toyota Previa With Body Kit</a>
      <a >Turtle Tattoo Images</a>
      <a >Black Bear Coloring Sheet</a>

    • Leanna Rowe says:

      06:31am | 28/10/10

      <a >Nc Practice Praxis Test</a>
      <a >Fingernail Cosmetic Surgery</a>
      <a >Msn Hack Password Finder Ice</a>
      <a >Lizzie Mcguire Dress Up Doll Game</a>
      <a >Ancient Greek Battery</a>
      <a >Search For Hotmail Addresses</a>
      <a >Free Air Pollution Pictures</a>
      <a >Little Mermaid 2 Songs Free Download</a>
      <a >Video 1 Night In China Free</a>
      <a >Myspace Marquee Pictures</a>
      <a >Big Bra For Mature</a>
      <a >Birthday Poem In German</a>
      <a >Clipart Free Transportation</a>
      <a >Free Download Of Real Media Player</a>
      <a >Female Doctor Medical Exams Stories</a>
      <a >Free Org Chart Template</a>
      <a >Round N Brown Free Videos</a>
      <a >Cool Scottish Name List</a>
      <a >Hidden Camera In Ladies Locker Room</a>
      <a >Marlin Rifle Prices</a>

    • Martina Rodriquez says:

      11:52pm | 01/11/10

      <a >Japanese Myspace Icons</a>
      <a >Baby Scrapbook Free Printables</a>
      <a >Lil Wayne Wallpaper</a>
      <a >Tattoos Trinity Knot</a>
      <a >Lobster Themed Decor</a>
      <a >M1 Garand Parts Diagrams</a>
      <a >M1903 Sniper For Sale</a>
      <a >Animal Pictures To Color</a>
      <a >Sensual Massage In Atlanta</a>
      <a >Green Tea Jello</a>
      <a >Bald Eagle Drawing</a>
      <a >Celebrity Fake Free Toplist</a>
      <a >Free Background Boarders</a>
      <a >New Argumentative Topics</a>
      <a >Money Test For 2nd Grade</a>
      <a >Printable Paper Cut Outs</a>
      <a >Animals Cell Pictures</a>
      <a >Best Salsa Recipe</a>
      <a >Florida State Tree Coloring Page</a>
      <a >Funny Odes About Women</a>

    • Andrew Elliott says:

      07:12am | 18/11/10

      <a >Free Birth Records</a>
      <a >Petaluma Ca Zip Codes</a>
      <a >Web Site Publishing</a>
      <a >Web Browsers List</a>
      <a >Blue Cheese Balls</a>
      <a >Chetwynd Bc Street Map</a>
      <a >Dempsy Insurance New York</a>
      <a >Paper Airplane Templates</a>
      <a >Maternity Wedding Dress</a>
      <a >Orchard Bank Online</a>
      <a >Maryland Mega Millions</a>
      <a >How Long Is A Senators Term</a>
      <a >Women Behind Bars</a>
      <a >Advantages Of Direct Marketing</a>
      <a >People Coloring Page</a>
      <a >Buick Regal Subwoofer</a>
      <a >Steps To Write A Book</a>
      <a >Nfl Picks Week 9</a>
      <a >Warren County Nj Incumbents</a>
      <a >What Does Bella Mean</a>

    • Shannon Long says:

      07:35am | 18/11/10

      <a >Aquatic Physical Therapy</a>
      <a >Powerball Lottery Numbers</a>
      <a >Toy Story Nutcracker</a>
      <a >To Make Money For Kids</a>
      <a >Pork Chop Casserole Recipe</a>
      <a >How To Buy A Diamond Ring</a>
      <a >Air France Flights</a>
      <a >82-92 Camaro Seat Belts</a>
      <a >Crock Pot Recipes Simple</a>
      <a >Internet Alarm Clock</a>
      <a >Shelby County Reporter</a>
      <a >Movie Stars That Are Age 69</a>
      <a >Skidder Coloring Page</a>
      <a >Arizona State Capital</a>
      <a >Flaky Crust Recipe</a>
      <a >Cool Names Uncommon</a>
      <a >Camaro Rear End</a>
      <a >Usb Hub</a>
      <a >Rennaisance Festival Clothing</a>
      <a >Manufactured Homes For Sale In Fl</a>

    • Brooke Cohen says:

      11:33am | 25/11/10

      <a >Ct Dmv Change Of Address</a>
      <a >Sony Bravia 40 Inch Lcd</a>
      <a >How To Start Writing A Journal</a>
      <a >1781 Garfield Rd N Travese City Mi</a>
      <a >Staging Of Colon Cancer</a>
      <a >Free Ebooks Website Template</a>
      <a >Walt Disney Vacations</a>
      <a >Family All Inclusive Vacation</a>
      <a >2010 New Ford Taurus</a>
      <a >Johnson County North Carolina</a>
      <a >Hp Psc 1350xi All In One Drivers</a>
      <a >City Council Of Nairobi</a>
      <a >Heated Mattress Pad</a>
      <a >Term Care Insurance</a>
      <a >Discount Wedding Favors</a>
      <a >Goldman Sachs Job S</a>
      <a >Edmonton Ky Voting Results</a>
      <a >Tv Programs</a>
      <a >Msn Satellite Maps</a>
      <a >Reno Find Dentist</a>

    • Raul Fleming says:

      10:21am | 01/12/10

      <a >Fantasy Women Art</a>
      <a >Online Mature Fashion Games</a>
      <a >Easy To Read Tabs</a>
      <a >Does She Love Me Myspace Quiz</a>
      <a >Free Star Wars Imperial Logo</a>
      <a >Who Wrote Love Story Music</a>
      <a >Birmingham Hospital Diet Danger</a>
      <a >Hallmark Holiday Calendar 2008</a>
      <a >Adult Body Airbrushing</a>
      <a >Creative Ideas</a>
      <a >Screw My Wife Plea</a>
      <a >Free Leaning From Virus</a>
      <a >Teacher Free Font</a>
      <a >Labor Symptoms In Dogs</a>
      <a >Thomas Tank Engine Printable Rosie</a>
      <a >Horror Move Free</a>
      <a >Chopper Frames Plans</a>
      <a >Ga Fox Five News</a>
      <a >Higgins Fishing Lure</a>
      <a >Tomato Beef Barley Soup Recipe</a>

    • Teressa Hansen says:

      11:31am | 02/12/10

      <a >Free Printable Heart Stationary</a>
      <a >Modest Swing Dresses</a>
      <a >Six Feet Under Season 4 Cast</a>
      <a >Free Norton 2005 Product Key</a>
      <a >5th Grade Science Project Volcano</a>
      <a >Washington Sales Tax 2007</a>
      <a >Motorcycle Tires Europe</a>
      <a >World Feet Ranking</a>
      <a >Pictures Of 6 Month Pregnancies</a>
      <a >Fj Cruiser Pics No Lift</a>
      <a >Short Elegy Poems</a>
      <a >Printable 30th Birthday Card</a>
      <a >Free Disney Note Piano</a>
      <a >Trike Building Plans</a>
      <a >Mario Party 64 Rom Download</a>
      <a >Appartment Plan With Garage</a>
      <a >Pictures Of Endangered White Tigers</a>
      <a >Farewell Quotes Poems</a>
      <a >Wooden Duck Boat Building</a>
      <a >First Time With Daddy Stories</a>

    • Dannie May says:

      08:21am | 06/12/10

      <a >Christian Valentine Word Searches</a>
      <a >Artic Cat Prowler 1995</a>
      <a >Wood Pellets For Sale In Oregon</a>
      <a >Software Clone Hd Free</a>
      <a >Ar Tests Online For Free</a>
      <a >Church Coloring Pages</a>
      <a >Weak Free Gallery</a>
      <a >Changing Spark Plugs On 2003 Ram</a>
      <a >Fun Flip Flop Clip Art</a>
      <a >Terminal Server 2003 License Crack</a>
      <a >Magic Cards Values</a>
      <a >Madam C.J. Walker Poem</a>
      <a >Free Samsung Blackjack Unlock Code</a>
      <a >Mens Long Curly Hairstyles</a>
      <a >Ford 302 Performance</a>
      <a >Half Up Hair Styles</a>
      <a >Tijuana Massage Parlors</a>
      <a >List Of Persuasive Argument Essay Topics</a>
      <a >Paper Bag Puppet Patterns</a>
      <a >Hp Scanjet Xpa Drivers</a>

    • Gina Livingston says:

      03:46am | 15/12/10

      <a >Hottest Black Females</a>
      <a >Love Poems For A Husband</a>
      <a >Science Fair Ideas For 8th Graders</a>
      <a >Pokemon Ruby Rom Translation</a>
      <a >Free Movies Of Women In Slips</a>
      <a >Free Cross Stitch Patterns Of Monkeys</a>
      <a >Bypass Xp2 Home Edition Activation</a>
      <a >Homemade Baby Formula</a>
      <a >Natural Gas Conversion Subaru</a>
      <a >Homemade Breakfast Bar Recipes</a>
      <a >Play Mini Golf Games For Free Online</a>
      <a >Worksheets On The Human Heart</a>
      <a >California Hairless Cat Rescue</a>
      <a >Haunted Phone Numbers</a>
      <a >Helicopter Maintenance Jobs</a>
      <a >Vintage Seiko Watches</a>
      <a >Tweedsmuir State Park</a>
      <a >How To Size A Pool Table Rug</a>
      <a >Working German Shepherds</a>
      <a >Chest Strength Exercise</a>

    • Adan Cantu says:

      08:11am | 17/12/10

      <a >Call To Uk Very Cheap</a>
      <a >Free Clip Art Custom Wheels</a>
      <a >Lyrics I Want To Be In The Cavalery</a>
      <a >David Beckham Jerseys Layouts</a>
      <a >Calcium Deposits Homeopath</a>
      <a >Baby Shower Crochet Favor Patterns</a>
      <a >Free Bird Stencils</a>
      <a >Changing Meters To Inches</a>
      <a >Pink Shower Punch</a>
      <a >Used Postal Vehicles For Sale</a>
      <a >Cheat Codes For Sims 2</a>
      <a >90s Music Artists</a>
      <a >Bird House Plans Free</a>
      <a >Pokemon Ruby Rom Cheat Codes</a>
      <a >Bible Verses For Funeral</a>
      <a >Gm 350 Oil Pressure</a>
      <a >What .22 Cal Target Pistol</a>
      <a >Puppies Eugene Oregon</a>
      <a >House Plans With Underground Garage</a>
      <a >Download Line Rider With Undo</a>

    • Carla Mccullough says:

      03:50am | 23/12/10

      <a >Medical Supply Sf Scrubs</a>
      <a >Wow Quest Patch</a>
      <a >Free Zip Software</a>
      <a >Free Rock Sheet Music Drum</a>
      <a >Nissan 350z Tomahawk</a>
      <a >Powerpoint Design War</a>
      <a >Birthday Gifts For Girl</a>
      <a >Free Phone Locator</a>
      <a >World Of Warcraft Walkthrough</a>
      <a >California Sun And Free Sheet Music</a>
      <a >Free 80th Birthday Party Invitation</a>
      <a >Schwinn Tandem Bike New York</a>
      <a >Cleavage Pictures Women</a>
      <a >High School Cheerleader Candids</a>
      <a >Tickled Feet</a>
      <a >Four Leaf Clover Myspace Comments</a>
      <a >Ear Wax Pictures</a>
      <a >Argentina Dessert</a>
      <a >40th Birthday Quotes</a>
      <a >Free Online Doujin</a>

    • Stephanie Sanders says:

      07:23am | 01/01/11

      <a >Poodles For Sale In Arkansas</a>
      <a >Gain Laundry Coupons</a>
      <a >Free Argyle Sweater Patterns</a>
      <a >Myspace Animated Adult Gifs</a>
      <a >Blank United States Map Learning</a>
      <a >Grim Reaper Tattoo Designs</a>
      <a >Monster Energy Stickers</a>
      <a >Color Page For Foot</a>
      <a >Long John Silver’S Species</a>
      <a >Resident Evil Sound Scheme</a>
      <a >Make An Animal Cell</a>
      <a >French Family Free Worksheets</a>
      <a >Life In Ancient Greece</a>
      <a >100 African American Names</a>
      <a >Windows Mobile Freeware</a>
      <a >Free Form Employees</a>
      <a >Indoor Coal Furnaces</a>
      <a >Free Line Dance Steps</a>
      <a >Free Crochet Stocking Cap Pattern</a>
      <a >Writing Games To Play At A Picnic</a>

    • Shiela Lang says:

      05:42am | 04/01/11

      <a >Free Adult Emoticons Gif</a>
      <a >The Winchester Of 1876</a>
      <a >Cat Worksheet Preschool</a>
      <a >Transformers Myspace Default Layout</a>
      <a >Free Cause And Effect Essay Outline</a>
      <a >Giving Good Oral To Men</a>
      <a >O Negative Blood Type Foods</a>
      <a >Wine Dog Motorcycle</a>
      <a >Picture Of Worlds Biggest Zit</a>
      <a >Sony Ericsson Free Java Games</a>
      <a >List Of Canadian Artists</a>
      <a >Rare Ps2 Air Force Ones</a>
      <a >Ultrasound In 28 Weeks Of Gestation</a>
      <a >Watch Old Cartoon Network Online</a>
      <a >Basic Plumbing Layouts</a>
      <a >Truth Or Dare Ideas Adults</a>
      <a >Race Car Bed Plans</a>
      <a >Kids Reward Star Chart Free Printable</a>
      <a >Math Coloring Designs</a>
      <a >Mp4 Movie Aplle</a>

    • Christa Hopper says:

      09:15am | 10/01/11

      <a >Crushing Animals Pictures In High Heels</a>
      <a >Bird Flu Images</a>
      <a >Average Size Of A 9 Month Baby</a>
      <a >Gary Roberts Sisters Comics</a>
      <a >How To Make A Cake Stand</a>
      <a >Cheats F R Sherwood Dungeon</a>
      <a >Dress Up Men And Women Games Online</a>
      <a >Structural Steel I- Beam Dimension Table</a>
      <a >Free Clothes Patterns Chihuahua</a>
      <a >Wordings For Thank You Card</a>
      <a >Gps Map Unlock</a>
      <a >Spanish Love Hate Quotes</a>
      <a >Free Woman Oiled Wrestling</a>
      <a >Adult Aurora Costume</a>
      <a >Small Cute Poems</a>
      <a >Indian 1300 Calorie Menu</a>
      <a >Rap Video Auditions Jasmine</a>
      <a >How To Till Performance Appraisal</a>
      <a >Total Gym Workout Dvd Download</a>
      <a >Tribal Bear Tattoo</a>

    • Linda Snider says:

      08:54pm | 08/02/11

      <a >Free Printable Math Brainteasers</a>
      <a >Chinese New Year Symbols Tattoo</a>
      <a >Sales Call Templates</a>
      <a >Mother Of The Bride Poem</a>
      <a >Bridsmaids Dress Patterns</a>
      <a >Clip Art Beach Scene</a>
      <a >Free Pic Sharing My Wife</a>
      <a >Free No Downlad Games</a>
      <a >Free Celtic Lettering Alphabet</a>
      <a >What Does A Strep Rash Look Like</a>
      <a >Women Who Make Men Wear A Diaper</a>
      <a >Example Of Informative Speech Outline</a>
      <a >Spanish Dirty Poems</a>
      <a >Ghetto Slang Dictionary</a>
      <a >Hard Rock Bands Of The 80</a>
      <a >Money Shower Poems</a>
      <a >Arched Window Treatment</a>
      <a >Worksheets On Literary Terms</a>
      <a >Invader Zim Gir Posters</a>
      <a >The Laughing Jesus Picture</a>

 

Facebook Recommendations

Read all about it

Punch live

Up to the minute Twitter chatter

Daniel Piotrowski

RT @popculturechris: Meanwhile, Gotye holds no.1 for a sixth massive week in the US - "that" song has now sold over 4 million copies there.

ToryShepherd

@loupascale if the survey made you sad, probably skip the comments...

Paul Colgan

@paulwiggins @richardkendall that fountain pens yarn is a great social trend story

Paul Colgan

I like how a tip erodes so only you can use it MT “@paulwiggins: BBC News - Why are fountain pen sales rising? http://t.co/0hk2MRtf

Recent posts

The latest and greatest

Protecting the Barrier Reef is the Fin end of the wedge

Protecting the Barrier Reef is the Fin end of the wedge

When you take on a job like being Environment Minister there’s some hits you can see coming. …

ICB: Is white bread the worst thing since sliced bread?

ICB: Is white bread the worst thing since sliced bread?

Welcome to this week’s I Call Bullshit column. It’s a regular column that looks at skulduggery…

Sometimes, you’ve just got to stick it to the bloody ref

Sometimes, you’ve just got to stick it to the bloody ref

We are taught early in life that we should not question authority. We must listen to our parents, our…

Nosebleed Section

choice ringside rantings

From: They must pay for one’s bitter disappointments

Michael S says:

"A teacher at Geelong Grammar had criticised her for using words that were too long, which had left her confused and had made her doubt her ability to write essays. She became ''quite distressed'' when her English marks began to fall." I can sympathise. My scholastic mentors conveyed to me a causal relationship… [read more]

From: Welfare for breeders is a bonus for everyone

Change Up! says:

I have no problem paying my taxes. As a single, childless person on a very decent income, I can afford it and not have my life severely altered. Plus I understand that my taxes paying for things like schools, childcare and infrastructure is ultimately a good thing. A better community is better for me… [read more]

Gentle jabs to the ribs

They must pay for one’s bitter disappointments

They must pay for one’s bitter disappointments

A private school girl’s family is sueing her elite, extremely expensive private school for not… Read more

243 comments

Newsletter

Read all about it

Sign up to the free daily Punch newsletter