Newspoll: 50-50 (open thread)

Both leaders down on net approval in the latest Newspoll, the Coalition only slightly favoured over Labor on inflation, and little change on voting intention.

The Australian reports that Newspoll has a tied result on two-party preferred, unchanged on three weeks ago. The primary votes are Labor 32% (steady), Coalition 38% (down one), Greens 12% (steady) and One Nation 7% (up one). Anthony Albanese is down two on approval to 41% and up three on disapproval to 54%, his equal worst net result as Prime Minister, while Peter Dutton is down one to 39% and up two to 52%. Albanese’s lead as preferred prime minister shifts from 46-39 to 45-37. The poll also finds “only a quarter” connsider inflation would be lower under the Coalition, with 18% believing it would be higher and 41% opting for neither. The poll was conducted Monday to Friday from a sample of 1263.

Author: William Bowe

William Bowe is a Perth-based election analyst and occasional teacher of political science. His blog, The Poll Bludger, has existed in one form or another since 2004, and is one of the most heavily trafficked websites on Australian politics.

798 comments on “Newspoll: 50-50 (open thread)”

Comments Page 2 of 16
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  1. Melbourne property prices are now third lowest in Australia overtaken by Perth And Adelaide says Corelogic today.

    Greens policies on property adopted in part by state Labor government has driven investors to sell and massive amount of props for sale in Victoria now.

    Chalmers me sees blaming reserve bank for terrible economic growth figures out this week.Reserve bank is looking at raising rates not cutting due to inflation way above where it should be.Mass import of people by Federal labor government has caused this mess they are driving demand as well as NDISblowout under labor.

  2. Jim Chalmers has declared the ­Reserve Bank is “smashing the economy” with its aggressive run of rate hikes in comments that shift blame on to the central bank governor, Michele Bullock, ahead of data expected to show growth slowing to a crawl.
    With increased government spending holding up an economy saddled with anaemic household consumption, faltering business investment and a decline in home building, GDP figures to be ­released on Wednesday are expected to show the Australian economy expanded by a meagre 0.2 per cent in the June quarter.
    This would slash annual economic growth from 1.1 per cent in March to just 0.9 per cent for the last financial year – the weakest annual GDP result since the end of the early 1990s recession outside of the coronavirus pandemic.
    GDP per capita is also tipped to slump, marking the sixth consecutive quarter where an increase in the population has outstripped economic growth.
    “With all this global uncertainty on top of the impact of rate rises, which are smashing the economy, it would be no surprise at all if the national accounts on Wednesday show growth is soft and subdued,” the Treasurer said. “We anticipated a soft economy at budget time and that’s what most economists now expect to see in these new numbers for the June quarter.”
    Dr Chalmers said the government strategy was to strike a balance between taming inflation and providing cost-of-living relief “in an economy already being hammered by higher interest rates and global volatility.”
    https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/reserve-bank-smashing-the-economy-via-rate-hikes-jim-chalmers-declares/news-story/02573246b837b85594a0b2c7cab36a26?amp

  3. From the SMH Letters to the Editor page:

    There has been an odd shift in Australian politics. We have the Nationals being aggressive and combative with the Liberals and we have the Greens behaving the same way with Labor. The Greens seem hell-bent on destroying Labor, the only electable party they have a hope of working with. Over-promising because you will never have to deliver is a dangerous game for a political party. Adam Bandt can let loose a stream of promises knowing he will never be held accountable to deliver on them. Politics is the art of compromise. Not everyone can have everything they want. The Greens need to go back to art school. Australia has drifted into an adversarial and aggressive form of politics that’s more about the personal and less about policy and the long-term vision of what is good for the country. Dutton’s negativity, Bandt’s aggression and Albanese’s meekness are not doing anyone any favours. David Troughton, Camperdown

    Same same with aggressively advocating for Independents by relentlessly denigrating Labor, very often unrealistically.

    To which I can only make one real world observation. The Greens better be careful what they aggressively wish for. In our Ward, in the Council elections in which I am a candidate for Labor, there are NO Greens candidates for the first time since The Greens were formed by Bob Brown. And this in an area where the environment is of paramount concern for the electorate. Food for thought.

  4. Late Riser,
    I was thinking of you when I read this dissertation on Substack. I thought you might appreciate it 🙂

    Content moderation on social media platforms, a term that reactionaries have sought to make synonymous with “censorship,” is a broad practice that covers everything from disrupting terrorists to dealing with trolls. It often involves making hard choices about online speech to shape platform norms and conduct that enable the platform to deliver a certain experience to users. It does at times veer into bad calls that stifle free expression—but the other side of the equation involves tackling actual crimes.

    https://www.theunpopulist.net/p/platforms-like-telegram-accused-of

  5. U.S. officials said President Joe Biden’s months-long push for a cease-fire and hostage-release deal faced renewed urgency on Sunday after Israeli forces recovered the bodies of six hostages, including Israeli American Hersh Goldberg-Polin.
    The United States has been talking to Egypt and Qatar about the contours of a final “take it or leave it” deal that it plans to present to the parties in the coming weeks — one that if the two sides fail to accept could mark the end of the American-led negotiations, according to a senior administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private and sensitive deliberations. Biden officials said it was not immediately clear whether the discovery of the six hostages would make it more or less likely that Israel and Hamas could come to an agreement in the coming weeks.
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/09/01/biden-israel-gaza-ceasefire-deal/

  6. Good morning all. I note that BK has sent his winds over our way.

    I notice that there has been a fair bit of psephing on the Newspoll.

    ALL the changes and non-changes in the numbers are well within the MOE.

    As you were.

    Bludger track has the extreme right (Coal + PHON) up by 4.6%. Most of that increase is from cannibalizing other Right and Indies but 1.1% has been captured from Labor.

    Despite all the hand-wringing moral panic and uproar, Labor’s 2PP decline has been at a fairly static state for some time.

    The Greens right now are up by .4%. The Greens were up by as high as .6% and then up by .5%. They are now up to .4%. The trend over the past few months is not the Greens friend. I will leave it up to the Greens to Greensplain away reality.

    It is worth noting that these are national figures and that it is highly likely that there are strong seat/regional variations at play. I suggest that most of the Coalition increase is in its heartland seats and that the Greens increase is concentrated in inner urbs wealthy suburbs. There would likely be some mirror imaging of Labor’s 2PP losses.

    In terms of the real world rather than the MSM/Bludger culture wars uproar world, voters have done quite well in the past fortnight from reduced inflation, tax cuts, energy bill offsets and three hundred medicines for which there can now be extended prescriptions.

    Quite unnoticed is that another of Labor’s major reforms, to the AAT, is progressing extremely well. Completely ignored by those who love bashing Labor is that this is an honest government.

    As noted previously it will be hip pocket nerve that decides the outcome of the next election.

  7. “Famously, Howard was in much worse positions mid-term but, even in his first term (his weakest until Rudd became Opposition Leader), he still had a vision – a conservative vision that most here would not agree with – but a vision nonetheless and, with that, an identity. I can’t see that with Albanese.”

    @Wat Tyler

    Meh. I’ve heard this argument before Labor doesn’t stand for anything. Let’s be honest do the Liberals? For all the bravado of small government, limited government, and paying back debt. They left a debt five times the amount of Labor’s and pushed the national debt out to a trillion. They still managed to hold on to three terms.

    I think you are giving way too much credit to Howard. Howard main aim was cling on to power at any cost he even threw away bigger surpluses to just buy votes through middle class welfare.

  8. There is a noisy and seemingly influential cohort in the economics community in Australia that is full of inconsistency and hypocrisy. The latest incarnation of this is the role of government policy in managing the economy. One of the cheerleading groups of this potpourri economics is the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA). It has struggled for consistency in its analysis of recent government policy.
    The RBA is being egged on by a range of economists who have never been within cooee of economic policy, and who have objectives other than the well-being of the Australian population. On the one hand, the RBA and its senior staff have been saying strong growth in public spending is boosting demand in the economy, and this is a factor why it is forecasting inflation to take so long to return to the middle of its 2 to 3 per cent target band.
    The RBA assessment is that government demand is actually adding to inflation and this is why interest rates cannot be cut and why they could even be hiked.
    In effect, the RBA is saying that strong demand in the economy is driven by the government building productivity-boosting infrastructure, and employing workers in education or aged and health care.
    These areas unambiguously have a positive effect on productivity and keep the economy near full employment when the private sector is in retreat.
    On the other hand, the RBA says government decisions that cut inflation will be overlooked when it comes to interest rates, as they have only a minimal effect on its trimmed mean inflation hobbyhorse.
    https://au.finance.yahoo.com/news/hypocritical-rba-overlooking-key-factor-to-cut-interest-rates-obvious-211128561.html

  9. Political Nightwatchman says:

    I’ve heard this argument before Labor doesn’t stand for anything.
    ———————
    This is a big fat lie. My suggestion is that you do a Goebbels and keep repeating this big fat lie. It worked for him. Until it didn’t.

  10. Protesters blocked the entrance to Jerusalem Sunday evening as others marched through the streets of Tel Aviv carrying coffins, protesting the abandonment of the hostages after the IDF confirmed that the bodies of six hostages had been retrieved from Gaza. The protesting mass has since shifted from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv, with police managing to clear the entrance to Jerusalem after more than two hours of blockages.
    According to the Hostage Family Forum, three hundred thousand people have gathered in Tel Aviv in mass protest, demanding an immediate hostage deal before more hostages are killed by Hamas.
    Fifteen protesters have since been arrested by police, N12 reported.

  11. Only a matter of time now before we return to the natural order.
    Coalition in government doing nothing. Labor all warm and cozy on the opposition benches and the Greens somewhere down the back garden.
    Not long now.

  12. EF, the greens are likely doing what they have for the last few elections; targeting specific seats where their policies are finding alot of support.

    Antony Green did alot ofnwork in his seat by seat breakdown during 2022 to highlight where the greens s would likely continue to find support (that’s why I picked albos seat at my black horse because it’s on the list, but likely after albos gone).

    Again, broad appeal spread out does nothing for your numbers, and i suspect that the relative stability (12 to 13 with some bounces to 15) next election will have the greens closer to striking distance in the left/progressive leaning seats;

    it’s also why you can set your watch to Josh Burns and others like him coming out against Labor policy the moment it shifts to the right (gas, the census questions etc), because his seat is one of those that is likely a lot tighter then we suspect

    I would be curious to see a continuation of that anu study that was linked last week post next election to see how the voter share went as well, since the greens were the only party to see growth in all 4 generations.

    Again, as noted by a few posters from all other thr spectrum here, the next election is going to come down to some tight fights jn certain seats, and wether duttons numbers are simply popularity in fortress qld, or if he has broken into Labor territory.

    Likewise, the greens will be successful not with broad appeal, but if they can continue to take inner city seats or at the very least reinforce what they have.

    What I think the last few weeks have shown is that you arnt going to lose skin for standing by policy or positions that the mainstream media finds distasteful (but we have known that since Abbott)

  13. C@tmomma @ #56 Monday, September 2nd, 2024 – 7:56 am

    Late Riser,
    I was thinking of you when I read this dissertation on Substack. I thought you might appreciate it 🙂

    Content moderation on social media platforms, a term that reactionaries have sought to make synonymous with “censorship,” is a broad practice that covers everything from disrupting terrorists to dealing with trolls. It often involves making hard choices about online speech to shape platform norms and conduct that enable the platform to deliver a certain experience to users. It does at times veer into bad calls that stifle free expression—but the other side of the equation involves tackling actual crimes.

    https://www.theunpopulist.net/p/platforms-like-telegram-accused-of

    Yeah. It’s nice to see this point being made. If you’re *willing* to profit from a thing, then you condone it, and arguably, you also promote it. You cannot escape sharing the responsibility for that thing. Musk and his brothers in tech know this, and don’t care. (I’m heartened by X being banned in Brazil.)

  14. “Only a matter of time now before we return to the natural order.
    Coalition in government doing nothing. ”

    @Mundo

    As I said the Liberals aim is to cling on to power at any cost and get into power at any cost. This is why the talk that unlike Labor they have vision is bullshit.

    Tony Abbott blocking everything and carping on about debt only to wrack up more debt in less then one term then both Rudd and Gillard governments combined being case point. Also doesn’t hurt Newscorp is humming along from the same script to give the Liberals a boost.

  15. Labor does have one huge advantage over the coalition. Labor is in power. Inflation will continue to come down. Lower interest rates will follow.

    That is all that counts. The only game in town and labor will benefit.

    Everything else is just noise.

    Not a bad Newspoll for a government that ( according to the MSM and others ) has had a bad week.

    Cost of living number one issue. Nothing else within daylight.

    Those posters howling at the moon over issues that do not rate should relax and come to terms with reality. Great for your health.

    Cheers and a great day to all.

  16. Did not lose power but was woken at 3:30 by an almighty gust of wind, making the prospect of walking outside a dangerous prospect.

    Melbourne real estate prices third lowest in the country would be in part due to land taxes biting.

    People are selling rental properties in their investment portfolio, off loading 3 properties to reduce land tax from $70,000 to $40,000. Other people are complaining about the land tax on their holiday home, 1970s timber house sitting on a wooded acre of waterfront in fashionable area = $40,000 land tax per annum

    I noticed the Greens candidate for Macnamara Sonya Semmens tweet below

    ———————————
    Sonya Semmens@SonyaSemmens

    Today I helped two girls move this desk down some stairs onto their nature strip.

    They’d been given a 64% rent hike. They can’t afford it.

    I asked where they’re moving to… Nowhere. They’re couch surfing, joining 400 other people made homeless this week.

    Rent freeze now.
    ———————————

    In Victoria rents can rise by 5% or 10% per annum, must make a case to VCAT for larger rent rise. SO those tenants can go to VCAT to reduce rent rise

    If the Greens are campaigning on rental protections they shouldn’t tell lies, they should bone up on rent law

  17. Hmmm Australia is part of a global economy rate cuts everywhere around the world soon in the USA.That will stimulate demand Australia is an export economy will create inflationary pressures in Australia.

    Just assuming inflation is coming down and interest rates will is ignoring we are part of a global economy that will pick up pace with interest rate cuts that are already happening.

    All sorts of trends that are not fed labors friend.

  18. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-02/greens-call-for-landlord-watchdog/104296918

    The Greens have added a ‘landlord watchdog’ to a growing housing policy wish list

    An expansion on existing rental protection frameworks with increased penalties for landlords doing a piss poor jobs, because lets be frank; if you claim being a landlord is a job, then it should be like any other job in the country; accreditation, standards, and penalties.

    Also billie, I would put money down that someone did try to hike their rent; theres a pretty sad lack of understanding of rights (especially for the youngsters) regarding being a renter; I know a few years ago someone tried the same game with a grandchild (30 percent and a water leak that had been reported turning into a flooding event). The kid thought they were liable, which they certainly weren’t…

  19. The rise of the extreme Right in especially Germany & elsewhere is concerning. I imagine FUBAR’s salivating.

    [‘Berlin: The Alternative for Germany was on track to become the first far-right party to win a regional election in Germany since World War II, projections showed, giving it unprecedented power even if other parties are sure to exclude it from office.

    The AfD was set to win 33.2 per cent of the vote in the state of Thuringia, comfortably ahead of the conservatives’ 23.6 per cent, broadcaster ZDF’s projection showed on Sunday, a vote share that, depending on final seat allocations, could let it block decisions requiring a two-thirds majority.

    The appointment of judges or top security officials are among such decisions. If the AfD, led in Thuringia by Bjoern Hoecke – its most extreme and controversial figure – decides to block them, it could weaken an apparatus, built up painstakingly over decades, designed to police and disrupt far-right forces.

    In neighbouring Saxony, projections put the conservatives, who have run the state since 1990, on 31.5 per cent, just 1.1 percentage points ahead of the AfD.

    Conservative state premier Michael Kretschmer, who hailed the result as a success and a mandate to form a new government, blamed the strength of the far right on Social Democrat Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s fractious coalition in Berlin.

    “There is a huge lack of trust in politics that has to end,” he said. “We need another political style in Berlin.”]

    https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/germany-s-far-right-on-track-for-first-regional-win-since-nazi-era-20240902-p5k70r.html

  20. “UK Voting Intention:
    LAB: 30% (-3)
    CON: 26% (+2)
    RFM: 19% (+1)
    LDM: 11% (-1)
    GRN: 7% (-1)”

    So the right-wing parties have a combined vote of 86%, and the sole moderate left party has 7%. Not looking good for the UK.

  21. Mavis

    FUBAR’s comments may display that he’s a military expeditionist (not a word) who favours a ‘strong leader’™️, who supports a command economy such as in intervening in the energy market regarding nuclear power, a strong believer in traditional ‘Judeo-Christian’ family values, an adherent to might-makes-right white blindfold colonialism, who purports to value honour and brotherhood (in arms), but surely, surely, you’re not suggesting that he might be fascist adjacent.

    That would be offensive.

  22. This is next level posting from Secretary Pete Buttigieg.
    ____________________________________
    “We’re working on the future of America’s passenger rail system—funding high-speed rail projects in the West and expanding service for communities across the country. Get your ticket to ride!”

  23. Thank you Lordbain for your take on where the Greens sit right now. Not much I would argue with. The focus on appealing to inner city seat dwellers and wearing the MSM flak over some of their more questionable antics to win or retain those seats is a pretty astute observation but you can go too far and alienate some of your base. Let’s see how it pans out but I’m thinking Greens holding all 4 and a very realistic chance of snaffling up Wills in 2025. Cheers.

  24. NP EF; I think there is a risk in their tactics, and their assumption (which I agree with) that neither of the big 2 are going to have an outright majority in the house (let alone control the senate) could indeed change (i doubt it but it could).

    The current slow and steady approach in the House and consolidation in the Senate means that Labor has 2 choices; either work with the Greens, or work with the Coalition (or if next election theres a big enough cross bench to allow for being picky)

    The risk for Labor is that Labor is not making gains on this approach (they havnt won points for policy put forward with the support of the Coalition) so such an approach appears to be self destructive at this point (of course, there is all the possibility the same polling result occurs when Labor works with the Greens, but this would indicate Labor is fucked either way ), so by positioning themselves as a slowly growing power block in a system where majorities dont happen, the Greens continue to increase the chance of influencing policy.

    And of course theres the Senate… slow and steady in a period of decline for the major parties appears to be working out quite nicely

  25. ‘Sohar says:
    Monday, September 2, 2024 at 9:55 am

    Someone pointed out…’
    —————-
    Just another blindfolded sucker.

    Get back to me when Leunig toons the genocidal aspirations of Iran, Heshbollah, Hamas, the Houthis and various Iranian-backed militias in Syria and Iraq

  26. When Adelaide’s median house sales price is higher than Melbourne something odd is happening in the housing market. Adelaide isn’t exactly a booming State economy so… Gotta go. Have a good day PBers.

  27. UK Cartoons and other miscellany

    Morten Morland

    Patrick Blower

    Guy Venables

    Nick Newman

    Nicola Jennings

    Mac

    ==========================================
    Stolen from the internet

  28. I just think it is weak. It is not perfect. It is not even good.

    If the Greens are going to drive private capital out of the housing market and drive investment overseas with a 40% company tax (why stick around for the highest company tax in the world) they should do it properly.

    Adding a layer of red tape laden bureaucratism does nothing but decrease the amount of money that will go into housing supply. Delays simply add to the cost without adding to the supply of housing. The Greens don’t get time, of course.

    Enough with the Greens gutless virtue signalling! Time for some real policy guts from the Greens!

    Eliminate the landlord class now!

    Do it once. Do it properly.

  29. Someone pointed out…’
    —————-
    Just another blindfolded sucker.

    Get back to me when Leunig toons the genocidal aspirations of Iran, Heshbollah, Hamas, the Houthis and various Iranian-backed militias in Syria and Iraq

    ___________________________

    Dear friends, calling out one genocide does not mean you condone others.

    I would add victimisation of Australia’s First Nations to your list too though, to be fair.

  30. Thuringia and Saxony election results – AfD did about as well as they expected. BSW seem to sucked up a lot of the Die Left vote. All the governing coalition parties took a battering with the Greens and LDP getting wiped out again in Thuringia.

    SPD did poorly but it has always has in these areas – The contest has primarily been between CDU representing the Right and Die Left as the part of the left ever since the reunification of Germany in 1990. Same story for the Greens.

    There is no way for a government to form in Thuringia without the AFD or BSW which is a bridge too far for the CDU and probably the SPD. Which means the BSW can either decide to get into bed with AfD which will destroy them with a lot of supporters who have come directly from Die Left or there will have to be new elections.

    In Saxony a government can be created with the CDU, SPD and Green coalition (a so called Kenyan Coalition) which existed before the election with the added backing of Die Left. Absolutely nobody is going to like doing, but it is better than the alternative.

    But don’t get too excited about the fall the Germans to the Nazis; Thuringia is a rural area with a small population – 2 million out of 86 million Germans. It is a bit like saying what happens in the ACT is reflective of the whole of Australia. Saxony is a bit bigger – 4 million people so a little more significant but has always been seen as the backwards area of Germany (in part because it was the most isolated during the cold war).

    What it is showing is there is a massive division between the old East Germany and the western part. Berlin doesn’t count as it is not really count as an east German city any more – you are almost more likely to find English being spoken than German due to cosmopolitan nature.

  31. Rewi:

    Monday, September 2, 2024 at 9:36 am

    [‘Mavis

    [‘… but surely, surely, you’re not suggesting that he might be fascist adjacent.’]

    I wouldn’t take it far but he does display certain traits thereof.

    _______________________________________

    Thanks for the cartoons, D & M. A pal of mine subscribes to the
    “The New Yorker” and he passes it on to me. There are some
    great minimalist cartoons therein. And if Rowe’s cartoons aren’t
    published in the US, they should be – today’s is a corker.

  32. Rewi says:
    Monday, September 2, 2024 at 9:36 am
    Mavis

    FUBAR’s comments may display that he’s a military expeditionist (not a word) who favours a ‘strong leader’™️, who supports a command economy such as in intervening in the energy market regarding nuclear power, a strong believer in traditional ‘Judeo-Christian’ family values, an adherent to might-makes-right white blindfold colonialism, who purports to value honour and brotherhood (in arms), but surely, surely, you’re not suggesting that he might be fascist adjacent.

    That would be offensive.

    Is this a Roast? You guys are hilarious.

  33. There are several factors why Melbourne ppty prices are not increasing. I set out reasons in a post over weekend.

    Which btw is a good thing. Who wants ppty prices to continue growing higher than wages.

  34. This was my post

    Property investors have been investing in other states. QLD, WA and SA were value for money

    The investors swarming to these states have created a bubble of their own.

    Now housing in Perth, Adelaide and Brisbane are getting very pricey. Meanwhile Melbourne prices are stable.

    In part due to the changes in rental laws and land tax. Investors are not keen to afford tenants more rights, and expectations of a liveable place. Go figure.

    My youngest is the last to still get on the property ladder. I’m thinking it’s her time to do so.

    Interest rates will start to come down and the property investors may be at the point of not seeing value anymore elsewhere but right here in Melbourne town.

    My two cents for what it’s worth.

  35. Instead of increasing tax on companies that actually pay tax they should be trying to get tax from companies that shift income, debt and use impairments to avoid paying any tax at all.

  36. https://x.com/kossamaras/status/1830360767973216333, apparent about a quarter can mention something the Aus fed gov from 2022 has done that has impacted them positively[, besides the lastest direction of country having going in right direction at about a third]

    Despite many promises to attend to (https://www.abc.net.au/news/factcheck/promisetracker), the PM is too busy for a wedding, hmmm, doubt the girl’s impressed, how …, what weakness

    So I get it term 1, first of all do no more harm, get foundation in, small target and all that

    Now about that term 2, well may be one of the minor parties/ independents can bring a stick to hold up the PM, actually go focus on the many rather than the few, besides stop being evil, may be have a look at the 2019 platform

  37. ‘Royal Doulton says:
    Monday, September 2, 2024 at 11:12 am

    Instead of increasing tax on companies that actually pay tax they should be trying to get tax from companies that shift income, debt and use impairments to avoid paying any tax at all.’
    ————————
    Exactly what Chalmers is aiming to do.
    But 40% will save all that sort of stuff.
    Investors will not be wanting to pay the highest company tax in the world.
    They will scarper, taking their investment capital with them.
    Which is apparently what the Greens want. They hate capitalism. The solution? Chase capital away.
    Do it once.
    Do it properly.

  38. ‘VCT Et3e says:
    Monday, September 2, 2024 at 11:14 am

    https://x.com/kossamaras/status/1830360767973216333, apparent about a quarter can mention something the Aus fed gov from 2022 has done that has impacted them positively[, besides the lastest direction of country having going in right direction at about a third]

    Despite many promises to attend to (https://www.abc.net.au/news/factcheck/promisetracker), the PM is too busy for a wedding, hmmm, doubt the girl’s impressed, how …, what weakness

    So I get it term 1, first of all do no more harm, get foundation in, small target and all that

    Now about that term 2, well may be one of the minor parties/ independents can bring a stick to hold up the PM, actually go focus on the many rather than the few, besides stop being evil, may be have a look at the 2019 platform’
    ——————
    A series of lies. Big lies. It is the Goebbels thing. Repeat a big lie often. It worked for Goebbels. Until it didn’t.

  39. “And interestingly the highest population growth in Australia is Victoria.”
    Has there been much difference in price behaviour between apartments vs houses?

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