John Alexander

Something to chew on while we all wait for this tedious election stalemate to sort itself out. It’s about sports people who become politicians, and the way their former sport influences their political leanings.

Tennis champ turned Liberal MP John Alexander, looking like you could only look in the late 70s

Here’s the deal. Politicians with a background in individual sports gravitate towards the conservative side. Conversely, politicians who made their name in team sports usually end up on the left.

Makes sense, really. In individual sports, the struggle is yours and yours alone. Fail, and there’s nobody to blame but you. It’s pure, sweaty libertarianism.

Latest 2 of 22 comments

View all comments
 
  • Michael says:

    03:44pm | 31/08/10

    Sooooo ... by this analysis, if you’re an individual sportsman, your coach, sponsors, and other people who support you have no part in your victory at all if you do win? If you lose, there’s nobody to blame but yourself and you can be cut down by fierce market forces,… Read more »

  • Andrew says:

    01:27am | 31/08/10

    Steve Irons, liberal member for Swan played for east perth in the wafl. pretty sure I read in one of his flyers he is still involved with footy also. Read more »

 

It normally takes about two hours to get a sense of which way an electorate is going to vote. In Bennelong, the site of John Howard’s humiliation in 2007 where he became only the second prime minister to lose both his seat and the election, the longer you spend talking to voters, the more confused you become.

Howard's legacy, for good and for ill, hangs over his old Sydney seat. Illustration: John Tiedemann.

On paper, Bennelong should be an electorate which represented the peak of Labor’s 2007 landslide, which with a 1.4 per cent margin should revert to the Liberals in 2010.

That is not the case. The giant-killing former ABC journalist and 7.30 Report host Maxine McKew might have won by just 2400 votes, but there are signs this middle-class seat in Sydney’s inner north-west might be easier for Labor to defend than some blue-collar electorates.

Latest 2 of 71 comments

View all comments
 
  • Dave says:

    01:00pm | 13/08/10

    The problem with John is that he doesn’t seem to understand the difference between State and Federal issues. Yes the streets are clogged but this is very much a NSW Government and Hornsby, Ryde and Parramatta Council issue. To suggest that he can do something about this is misleading. His… Read more »

  • Dave says:

    12:54pm | 13/08/10

    Sadly wrong. On Monica Attard’s ABC programme, John Alexander indicated he would continue to commentate with Channel 7 during January. Is he serious about representing our seat, especially with his false claims that Maxine is strangely absent. The best part of the campaign though, has been his pamphlet which has… Read more »

 

Facebook Recommendations

Read all about it

Punch live

Up to the minute Twitter chatter

ToryShepherd

Cheeky beers with morning papers in unexpected sunshine http://t.co/MD7VPRne

Anthony Sharwood

http://t.co/Zq0nGxkf nice pic of Thredbo this morning

Paul Colgan

@seamus yeah it's now called Smooth or Soft or Douchey Dad FM or something

Paul Colgan

It's a Sydney thing, but 95.3FM... Why? It used to be all Bohemian Rhapsody and Walk this Way; now it's Father to Son and Country Road. Wah.

Recent posts

The latest and greatest

We don’t deserve this huge, exciting scientific project

We don’t deserve this huge, exciting scientific project

I’d like to be able to say that sharing the world’s largest radio telescope with South Africa…

Mining money talks the loudest in Australian politics

Mining money talks the loudest in Australian politics

When North Queensland Liberal MP George Christensen got the idea of launching a new political organisation…

Please enter your password

Please enter your password

Help! I’ve succumbed to a crippling modern illness that can strike at any moment. Symptoms include:…

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