MelB

22.8K posts

MelB banner
MelB

MelB

@MKB27

Left is best, F*ck Murdoch, Dog Mum. I'm back, baby! Follow me also at: @mkb27.bsky.social

Melbourne Katılım Ocak 2009
1.4K Takip Edilen728 Takipçiler
MelB retweetledi
angela rubin
angela rubin@angelar68197975·
I’m sorry to say this, but everyone who intends voting for One Nation is a bloody idiot She doesn’t have one policy that will help Her policies are spurious, divisive, corrosive ineffective All they do is feed her insatiable appetite for power & money
English
1.1K
180
993
30.1K
MelB retweetledi
💧Bev Denley
💧Bev Denley@josie_gale·
It’s all ended in tears for One Nation in Riverina. Branch dissolved. Pres of Branch and future ON candidate in Riverina has had his Party membership terminated…. and people allegedly think One Nation could be a party of government?? 😳
💧Bev Denley tweet media
English
11
55
134
2.3K
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
@psyclaw @shallowchal There's very little more cringe than uninformed cookers speaking authoritatively about things they are so obviously clueless about!
English
0
0
0
4
ARTHUR FRIEND
ARTHUR FRIEND@psyclaw·
@shallowchal I’d say that your skills in Statutory Interpretation (which is taught in Law 101) are sadly lacking and as a result you are romanticising. s57 vests power IN THE GOVT to call on a double dissolution if IT wants to, not the Senate, not fringe parties, not fucknutters, not RWFWs.
English
1
1
9
81
Scotty Chal
Scotty Chal@shallowchal·
What if I told you Australia has a political nuclear button built into the Constitution? It’s called Section 57 ❤️ Most Australians have never even heard of it, but it gives the Senate the power to stop legislation and force the country back to an election through what’s called a double dissolution🤔 That means: Every MP loses their seat, Every Senator goes back to the people and Australians get another vote on the future direction of the country. Today - we have….. Your country being invaded. Broken promises on power prices. Broken promises on tax. Broken promises on super. Record migration (invasion) during a housing crisis. Young Australians locked out of home ownership. Small businesses drowning in costs while Canberra lectures everyone about “fairness.” And now they want the Senate to just wave this budget through like none of that happened. I say “Treason” The Senate is not supposed to be a rubber stamp. It exists to scrutinise governments when public trust starts collapsing. Millions of Australians feel like the social contract has been broken. Work harder. Pay more tax. Own less. And somehow be grateful for it? A double dissolution is a constitutional reset button and I WANT the reset. #AustraliaFirst 🇦🇺🫡 #MillionsMustGo 🇦🇺🫡
English
240
826
2.6K
36.7K
MelB retweetledi
Paul Bronks
Paul Bronks@SlenderSherbet·
"Excuse me, I'll tell you when you've finished"
English
15
139
1.3K
24K
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
It looks like Faziah and @abcnews are getting their talking points this morning from Phil Coorey and not from the authors @KosSamaras Here's a wild idea @abcnews if you're going to use someone else's words, perhaps you could verify them first #auspol @ABCmediawatch
MelB tweet media
English
0
0
1
27
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
I just heard @abcnews refer to this analysis and despite the very clear words used by @KosSamaras they said it shows Labor would be pushed "deep into a minority govt". Can they do nothing right these days? Just so disappointing that ABC is a shadow of its former self #auspol
Kos Samaras@KosSamaras

The end of the Menzies project. Our Financial Review MRP projects a new political future for this country. In 1944, Robert Menzies founded the Liberal Party. Two years earlier he had named its base, the “forgotten people”, the suburban middle class, the small businessman, the owner-occupier. With the Country Party, the Coalition that emerged would govern Australia for two-thirds of the next eight decades. Our latest RedBridge | Accent Research MRP, modelling all 150 seats, suggests that project is ending. If an election were held now: • Labor - 31% primary, 76 seats. A majority government. • One Nation - 28% primary, 53 seats. The Official Opposition. • Coalition - 21% primary, 12 seats. A rump. • Independents - 8 seats. • Greens, KAP, Centre Alliance - one seat. 62 seats change hands. The Coalition loses 37 to One Nation. Labor loses 16 to One Nation. The Coalition wins zero seats in Queensland, WA, SA or Tasmania. Who votes for whom now: Labor has become a bimodal coalition (two distinct voter populations rather than one). University-educated, professional inner-metro voters in Grayndler, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide. Plus the multicultural outer suburbs, Watson, Blaxland, Chifley, Calwell, Bruce, Fowler. Renters and mortgage-holders. Younger. Non-religious in the inner city, Muslim/Hindu/Buddhist/Orthodox/Catholic in the outer suburbs. Two populations, one vote. One Nation is now the party of the Anglo working class. Regional Queensland, regional NSW, regional Victoria, regional WA. Plus the outer-suburban mortgage belts of every capital, Lindsay, Hawke, Latrobe, Forde, Longman, Canning, Pearce. No university degree. Trades and blue-collar work. Protestant or no religion. English-only households. Mortgage stress and government payments. This is the Coalition’s old base, voting somewhere else. The Liberal Party is left with a small bucket of seats. Bradfield, Mitchell, Berowra, Cook. Menzies, Deakin, Aston, Goldstein, Flinders. Wannon. High-income, university-educated, Anglo, owner-occupier, 45+. The seats the teals didn’t take in 2022. And even there, the Liberals are surviving on preferences, not primaries. A caveat on the Melbourne eastern seats, Menzies, Deakin, Aston, Chisholm. The model may not fully capture the impact of the Chinese diaspora vote. Those seats are too close to call. The LNP wins zero seats in Queensland. The Nationals are projected to nearly be wiped out. This is what a decade of choices looks like. A decade of not representing people economically. A decade of finding new ways to offend the multicultural communities that used to be persuadable. A decade of assuming the regional and outer-suburban base would stay home no matter what. The base didn’t stick around for the self indulgence and it found another home. The Menzies project rested on a “forgotten people” who could see themselves represented by the Liberal Party. They no longer can. They’re voting One Nation. Labor wins this scenario. But the structural story is on the right of politics. The Coalition is no longer the Opposition. One Nation is. More details on the MRP can be accessed via the link below.

English
1
0
1
58
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
@skyeliner Wtf is that banner?? Absolute deliberate misinformation. Be ashamed @Channel7 you dirty grifters
English
0
0
1
27
Jeli 💉x 7 ….. VOTE YES ......... Schnauzer mum.❤️
She’s is deliberately confusing, the already confused, ch7 viewers. He couldn’t have made the explanation any clearer. Jane Hume not saying a word, for once. Sitting there looking like she’s had too much Botox. 🫪
English
196
168
817
121K
MelB retweetledi
Josh Butler
Josh Butler@JoshButler·
fact check article here - tax experts tell us there's no death tax in the trusts changes “There’s no death tax being introduced in the budget, that is a complete furphy" - Stephen Bartos, professor of economics at the University of Canberra theguardian.com/australia-news…
English
25
378
712
20.6K
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
If this is the Libersls "listening" then they deserve to die, but fuck me what a legacy #auspol
MelB tweet media
English
0
0
1
39
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
@blowingtom2 Agree. Really confronting. I'm so disturbed by the concept of potentially this many ON in Parliament. I understand disaffection. I don't understand throwing it all out in the wash when we see what is playing out globally before our very eyes
English
0
0
4
108
Tom the whistleblower
Tom the whistleblower@blowingtom2·
That’s a really confronting & thought through piece. It’s about right. I still the eastern Melbourne seats that were liberal and some now Labor, will be Labor. I’m not sure Wilson can hold Goldstein, nor Hawke can keep Mitchell.
Kos Samaras@KosSamaras

The end of the Menzies project. Our Financial Review MRP projects a new political future for this country. In 1944, Robert Menzies founded the Liberal Party. Two years earlier he had named its base, the “forgotten people”, the suburban middle class, the small businessman, the owner-occupier. With the Country Party, the Coalition that emerged would govern Australia for two-thirds of the next eight decades. Our latest RedBridge | Accent Research MRP, modelling all 150 seats, suggests that project is ending. If an election were held now: • Labor - 31% primary, 76 seats. A majority government. • One Nation - 28% primary, 53 seats. The Official Opposition. • Coalition - 21% primary, 12 seats. A rump. • Independents - 8 seats. • Greens, KAP, Centre Alliance - one seat. 62 seats change hands. The Coalition loses 37 to One Nation. Labor loses 16 to One Nation. The Coalition wins zero seats in Queensland, WA, SA or Tasmania. Who votes for whom now: Labor has become a bimodal coalition (two distinct voter populations rather than one). University-educated, professional inner-metro voters in Grayndler, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide. Plus the multicultural outer suburbs, Watson, Blaxland, Chifley, Calwell, Bruce, Fowler. Renters and mortgage-holders. Younger. Non-religious in the inner city, Muslim/Hindu/Buddhist/Orthodox/Catholic in the outer suburbs. Two populations, one vote. One Nation is now the party of the Anglo working class. Regional Queensland, regional NSW, regional Victoria, regional WA. Plus the outer-suburban mortgage belts of every capital, Lindsay, Hawke, Latrobe, Forde, Longman, Canning, Pearce. No university degree. Trades and blue-collar work. Protestant or no religion. English-only households. Mortgage stress and government payments. This is the Coalition’s old base, voting somewhere else. The Liberal Party is left with a small bucket of seats. Bradfield, Mitchell, Berowra, Cook. Menzies, Deakin, Aston, Goldstein, Flinders. Wannon. High-income, university-educated, Anglo, owner-occupier, 45+. The seats the teals didn’t take in 2022. And even there, the Liberals are surviving on preferences, not primaries. A caveat on the Melbourne eastern seats, Menzies, Deakin, Aston, Chisholm. The model may not fully capture the impact of the Chinese diaspora vote. Those seats are too close to call. The LNP wins zero seats in Queensland. The Nationals are projected to nearly be wiped out. This is what a decade of choices looks like. A decade of not representing people economically. A decade of finding new ways to offend the multicultural communities that used to be persuadable. A decade of assuming the regional and outer-suburban base would stay home no matter what. The base didn’t stick around for the self indulgence and it found another home. The Menzies project rested on a “forgotten people” who could see themselves represented by the Liberal Party. They no longer can. They’re voting One Nation. Labor wins this scenario. But the structural story is on the right of politics. The Coalition is no longer the Opposition. One Nation is. More details on the MRP can be accessed via the link below.

English
12
8
53
9.1K
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
@ljcbell @aaronsmith The last point is the biggest question. Worksafe should go her and the workplace.
English
0
0
1
6
Ljcbell
Ljcbell@ljcbell·
@aaronsmith No hi-vis or steel caps. What is she doing on that forklift? Does she have a license to operate a forklift?
English
1
0
3
88
Aaron Smith
Aaron Smith@aaronsmith·
Jessanomics: reduce debt via tax breaks for Airbnb landlords and $15k a year elite private schools, delivered by driving a forklift illegally ($3k fine for Jess, $100k the employer). Driving the economy like she drives the forklift - unlicensed, inexperienced, and into a wall.
English
136
193
757
47.1K
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
@philmupp1 @aaronsmith 100% It's an appalling lack of judgement by her, but equally what workplace allowed this?
English
0
0
2
16
Phillip Riley
Phillip Riley@philmupp1·
@aaronsmith Surely this is a workplace safety issue. Unless she actually has a ticket to drive forklifts the company could face hefty fines.
English
4
2
24
253
MelB retweetledi
Toilet Paper Australia
Toilet Paper Australia@toiletpaperaus1·
You want to know why Newscorp is so against the Government’s CGT and Negative Gearing reforms? 65% of their entire market value is held in their ownership of REA Group: a global online real estate company. Newscorp isn’t just a media empire. It’s a real estate company.
Toilet Paper Australia tweet media
English
6
54
81
1K
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
@lesstenny Any messaging problem that exists is the one perpetuated by media grubs like Natalie Barr who are wilfully spreading and enabling the misinformation campaign
English
0
3
9
160
MelB retweetledi
Robyn
Robyn@robynbryant33·
Angus Taylor just said he’s not going to be lectured to by Paul Keating. Oh Angus, Angus, Angus. Don’t take on Paul Keating. It can only end in tears (yours). 🤣🤣🤣🤣
English
128
318
1.9K
13.8K
MelB
MelB@MKB27·
@PaulineHansonOz @au_energy_prod Today I spoke at a conference that Gina got me invited to so I could read from a speech written by Gina....would be a more honest post.
English
0
4
13
224
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺@PaulineHansonOz·
Today I announced One Nation's policy to get Australians a better return on the Commonwealth's gas and oil, our natural resources at @au_energy_prod We want more gas extracted and more money given back to Australian's future wealth. One Nation would partner with the oil and gas industry rather than treating it as an enemy, with the aim of increasing exploration, development and production of oil and gas Under the policy, the party would introduce a 30 per cent rebate for genuine oil and gas exploration in Commonwealth waters, while giving the Commonwealth Government the option to take up to a 30 per cent equity stake in any production licence. This would mean real ownership of Australia's natural resources by the Australian people. Rather than acquiring ownership by force, the government would pay its share of costs as a joint venture partner and receive a corresponding share of production. To manage these interests, One Nation would establish a special investment vehicle called the Australian National Wealth Investment Corporation (ANWIC), which would hold the government’s resource stakes and be tasked with making decisions for the greatest benefit of Australians. Government would receive their proportion of oil and gas which could then be directed to the domestic market, used to support critical industries such as fertiliser, energy and smelting, or sold into export markets to help reduce government debt. ANWIC would be overseen by a board made up of people with proven oil and gas industry experience, rather than career bureaucrats, and the Commonwealth would remain a non-operating partner while private-sector experts continued to run projects. The policy would also allow ANWIC to invest in existing projects, but only on commercial, arm’s-length terms, with the government paying its way as in investment rather than taking over projects. In return, the Commonwealth could choose to receive either its share of profits or physical gas supply, giving it the flexibility to support domestic manufacturing when needed or benefit from selling at high international prices. One Nation argues this approach is even better than a domestic gas reservation policy, which can be blunt and inefficient. We also reject proposals for a 25 per cent gas export tax, because this measure is purposely designed to kill the gas industry. Alongside these structural changes, One Nation would cut “red, green and black tape” to speed up project development and set a target of deciding on projects within six months. We would abolish net-zero policies and the Safeguard Mechanism, while also having government help fund gas exploration. In taxation, the party would replace the failed Petroleum Resource Rent Tax (PRRT) for offshore gas with a simpler Commonwealth royalty based on wellhead values. This new royalty system would apply only to future projects, with existing PRRT arrangements grandfathered. Overall, One Nation's policy is designed to deliver greater returns to Australians, encourage oil and gas production, strengthen fuel security, lower power prices, reduce government debt and give Australians real ownership of our natural resources.
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺 tweet mediaPauline Hanson 🇦🇺 tweet mediaPauline Hanson 🇦🇺 tweet media
English
410
773
5.4K
87.2K