Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

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jserraglio
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Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

Post by jserraglio » Thu May 19, 2022 3:11 pm

NEW YORK TIMES
Image

SYDNEY, Australia — On a cool morning at 5:50 a.m., Allegra Spender prepared to dive into the surf alongside dozens of ocean swimmers at Bondi Beach. She was there not just for exercise. She was there to meet voters.

Her name was all over volunteers’ teal T-shirts and swim caps, identifying her as an independent candidate for the Australian federal Parliament.

“Takes a lot of courage, what you’re doing,” said Jason Carr, 50, a security consultant, who came over to pledge his vote. “Good luck shaking things up.”

Ms. Spender, 44, looked down and laughed.

A first-time candidate, she said she still found the attention that comes with politics embarrassing. But that has not stopped her from shaking the political establishment — she is part of a movement of around 25 independents, nearly all of them women with successful careers, who are aiming to do nothing less than rejuvenate Australian democracy by saving it from the creep of corruption, right-wing populism and misogyny.
“I’m angry, I mean, really angry that the moderates of the coalition and even the Labor Party are not taking enough action [on climate change] right now and that other people have to stand up in their stead,” Ms. Spender said.
The so-called teal independents, who tend to share the campaign colors of a Pacific wave, offer a sharp rebuke to Australia’s rigid party system. Recruited by energetic community groups that have formed only in the past few years, they are the public face of a fresh approach to politics that hopes to pull Australia back to the middle with a focus on climate change solutions, integrity and values like kindness.

The “teals” could have a profound impact on Saturday’s election. Prime Minister Scott Morrison, the leader of the conservative Liberal Party, has warned of a “cavalcade of chaos” should too many independents win. But if the vote is close, as expected, and if neither the Liberal coalition nor the opposition Labor Party wins a majority, this group of loosely organized women who share common goals of making government more responsive and productive could decide who leads the next Australian Parliament.

The gray-haired men fighting for power in the world’s third-largest exporter of fossil fuels — where sexual harassment in politics has long been ignored, where money pours in and out of government without oversight, where conservatives promoting populism make bans on transgender athletes a campaign plank — could soon find themselves forced to negotiate with independent working mothers demanding change, backed by mobilized constituents.

“It’s a rebellion from the sensible center,” said Ms. Spender, who is challenging a Liberal incumbent in a district her father once represented in Parliament as a Liberal, in the days when the party was more center-right.

“No, rebellion is the wrong word,” she added. “It’s a move by people who feel that they are not represented, and have had enough, and are hoping things will change.”

The Indie From Indi

Australia’s major parties are gatekeepers with old operating systems. There are no primaries, and dark money pays a lot of the bills. The parties decide who runs, and those who win rarely break ranks, because a single breach can end a political career.

In many districts, there has long been a sense that political ambition and party loyalty matter more than local interests. And while some of that discontent has flowed to minor parties like the Greens on the left and One Nation on the far right, what’s happening now with independents is more focused on how to improve representation rather than channeling frustration into one partisan wing or another.

It began far from the cities, with a no-nonsense leader. Her name is Cathy McGowan.

A sheep farmer and former president of Australian Women in Agriculture, she reached Parliament in 2013 as an independent from Indi, a rural area northwest of Melbourne. She defeated the Liberal incumbent. And the way she got there was even more groundbreaking than the victory itself.

The process started before her candidacy with a group of local residents — Voices for Indi — gathering to discuss what they loved about their community and what they wanted to see changed. More than 400 people participated in 55 conversations around kitchen tables, over coffee or a beer, after a class or while camping.

Those casual chats led to a thoughtful report that listed concerns from poor mobile phone reception to climate change. It also sought to define good political representation with phrases pulled from the conversations like “walk the talk” and “asks the community what it needs and is willing to listen.”

Voices for Indi was the catalyst for Ms. McGowan’s campaign. When she won, Australians around the country started calling and emailing.

“I was quite surprised by the response,” Ms. McGowan said. “There was huge interest.”

To share what she had learned, she hosted small events in 2014 and 2017.

After another voices group in Sydney helped an independent candidate, Zali Steggall, unseat former Prime Minister Tony Abbott in 2019, the movement suddenly went viral.

Ms. McGowan, who left Parliament that year, passing the seat to another independent, Helen Haines, wrote a book in 2020 that told her personal story. She also started leading conferences over Zoom during the pandemic, connecting hundreds of people with similar inclinations.

Each voices group that emerged embarked on a listening tour and ended up with its own list of concerns. The groups also hosted virtual events with policy experts.

“Political parties have become disconnected from any kind of local membership,” said John Daley, a professor at the University of Melbourne Law School who wrote a major report about disengagement and gridlock last year. “The independent playbook goes precisely in the other direction — it goes back to the original idea of representative democracy.”

The strongest efforts seem to have sprung up in areas with conservative roots, professional families and intense frustration with the tilt away from the political middle by the Liberal-led governing coalition.

Most of the contenders are pro-business, pro-innovation (especially on energy) and proudly pro-equality (on both race and gender).

Their campaigns have been bolstered by money from a group called Climate 200, which has collected more than 12 million Australian dollars, or about $8.5 million, from 12,000 donors to go to 22 independent candidates.

That has led critics to claim they are not really independent. But Ms. McGowan and others, including Simon Holmes à Court, a founder of Climate 200, say the traditional major parties just don’t get that they’ve been disrupted.

The independents and their supporters describe what’s happening as a 21st-century movement, organized on Slack and Zoom, crowd-funded, decentralized and committed to pragmatism.

“Whatever the issue may be,” Ms. McGowan said, “what they want is action.”

Fun … and Climate Change

For first-timers like Ms. Spender, who has worked in education and renewable energy and for the fashion company founded by her mother, Carla Zampatti, campaigning with new community groups often feels like her swim toward a distant buoy with energetic neighbors — exhausting, a little scary, but also rewarding.

After her ocean jaunt in Bondi, she walked to a nearby cafe with all the others. Waiting in line for coffee, Ms. Spender warmed up near other swimmers and a few dogs wearing Allegra scarves. For the next hour, she did less talking than her volunteers.

“This is the alternative to a career politician,” said Jonathan Potts, 51, who said he spends five hours a day volunteering to get Ms. Spender elected. “It’s a different philosophy — we want to look after long-term interests rather than party interests.”

In interviews, many of the independents said they were initially reluctant to run, but had been surprised by how fun it had been to work with an ideas-first, community-driven approach.

Zoe Daniel, a former foreign correspondent for Australia’s national broadcaster who is an independent candidate in Melbourne’s bayside suburbs, said she had been amazed to see young schoolgirls stopping outside her campaign office, taking selfies. There is even a choir that sings songs with “Zoe-ified lyrics.”

“All of us feel that we’ve made lifelong friends with like-minded people through this,” she said.

Dr. Monique Ryan, a pediatric neurologist who is challenging Josh Frydenberg, the national treasurer, said the local support pointed to the power of “small ‘l’ liberal values.”

In her district, 2,000 volunteers have come out, including several hundred with Voices of Kooyong, who signed up before she was their candidate. They’ve knocked on around 50,000 doors — almost every single household in the electorate.

“We offer something that’s not the normal partisan politics,” she said. “We also offer something that’s very values based. For me, it’s about integrity and transparency and action on climate, which a lot of people feel deep anxiety about. It’s about gender equity, it’s about a more cohesive society.”

Polls show close contests for Ms. Daniel, Ms. Spender and Dr. Ryan. Incumbent independents, including Andrew Wilkie in Tasmania and Ms. Steggall in Sydney, also appear to be in strong positions. The fortunes of some other independents are harder to gauge, but the momentum has clearly set conservative politicians on edge.

Mr. Frydenberg, who has been talked about as a potential prime minister, recently admitted he was facing “the fight of my political life.”

Ms. Spender, at a recent climate event with two other independents — Georgia Steele, a lawyer, and Kylea Tink, a businesswoman — said they were trying to fill a national void.

“I’m angry, I mean, really angry that the moderates of the coalition and even the Labor Party are not taking enough action right now and that other people have to stand up in their stead,” Ms. Spender said.

“This is a national transformation,” she added. “It’s not one business, it’s not one community. It’s all.”

Belle
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Re: Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

Post by Belle » Thu May 19, 2022 5:07 pm

That headline could read "American pacifists demand their country stop dragging its feet and end the manufacturing of armaments for other countries to kill each other".

In Australia, we call these virtue-signalling bien pensants "post-materialists"; they have everything they need and want in the world and now have set themselves the task of saving the world's climate. They're gulls and fools, no better than those from the working class who fall for the myths and conspiracies pedalled by that cohort over the decades and which I'm finding out about whilst on the ground during this election campaign.

All the while, people are so obsessed with being saviours (note, once again, the religious trope) that they couldn't care less about whether the poor can afford to share their luxury beliefs. It doesn't interest them one bit. But the coup de grace; they're being funded by one of Australia's biggest billionaires who is fielding candidates who can make sure his renewable investments make good. Just as in the case of our former Prime Minister Turnbull. AKA 'conflict of interest'. They're just silly people and extremists - useful idiots - with too much time on their hands, thinking Australia can save the world. They sure didn't have much influence when the Cold War threatened nuclear destruction of the planet in the 1950s - and neither did their kids, who were not encouraged or instructed to take to the streets to stop it!! You just didn't terrify children that way back then. Consequently, there wasn't the fear, suicide, depression, anxiety, self-harm and suicide amongst children as there is epic proportions now!! That's something adults once did.

And, of course, if our number two billionaire Gina Rinehart was fielding candidates in key seats who were going to influence mining exports there'd be hell to pay. But the Left media isn't interested in their own hypocrisy. If they didn't have hypocrisy they'd have nothing else.

The direct message in this headline is, of course, "Australia should stop exporting coal because it's making them rich". IT SURE IS. And it will continue to do so.

jserraglio
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Re: Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

Post by jserraglio » Thu May 19, 2022 5:39 pm

Belle wrote:
Thu May 19, 2022 5:07 pm
That headline could read "American pacifists demand their country stop dragging its feet and end the manufacturing of armaments for other countries to kill each other".
Well, just ask the Ukrainians what they think about American armaments. Last time I checked, Milady, you were still huddling beneath the USA’s nuclear umbrella.

It is in your personal economic interest to be a climate change denier. Australia cannot be the third largest exporter of coal and gas in the world and simultaneously claim, as you do repeatedly, that Australia’s effect on climate change is negligible. You could knit a warm blanket with that wooly logic.
Last edited by jserraglio on Thu May 19, 2022 6:36 pm, edited 2 times in total.

Belle
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Re: Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

Post by Belle » Thu May 19, 2022 5:47 pm

"Denier". Another religious word. They just keep coming...

When is your nation going to stop producing deadly armaments; that's more of an existential threat than climate!! It's another 'inconvenient truth'.

Here's a (predictably) funny comment from our current Deputy PM about the "teal independents" who are ensuring Holmes a Court makes good on his renewable investments:

Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce has taken aim at the Climate 200 funded teal independents who are looking likely to take a few seats off the Liberals this election – telling Australians, "they think they're special....these teal people, they think they're special. They've got a special car, they've got a special house, they've got a special job and they've got a special form of politics which means they're neither here nor there," Mr Joyce told Sky News.

Mr. Joyce may not be Deputy PM after the weekend but he tells the truth in his down-home way which many Australians like because of our (once) earthy and candid sense of humour!!

jserraglio
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Re: Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

Post by jserraglio » Thu May 19, 2022 5:51 pm

Belle wrote:
Thu May 19, 2022 5:47 pm
"Denier". Another religious word.
Indeed, your conception of the sacred encompasses many things but logic is not one of them.

Whataboutism resorted to when you feel cornered is one of them. American weapons have nothing to do with Australia’s irresponsible climate policy.

But if American weaponry so offends your tender, delicate sensibilities, why do you not advocate that Australia end its dependence on America to shield it from ‘existential threats’ from the likes of Russia or from your best coal customer, China?

You can’t have it both ways, Belle.
Last edited by jserraglio on Fri May 20, 2022 6:55 am, edited 2 times in total.

Belle
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Re: Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

Post by Belle » Thu May 19, 2022 6:03 pm

This is how virtuous bien pensants/entrepreneurs who want to ensure their investments make good at the ballot box behave during a general election; they get nasty when they're called out!! Always reach for the courts when you're being found out!!

Election 2022: Simon Holmes a Court’s apologises for poll booth spat with Liberal Senator Jane Hume

"The AUSTRALIAN"

Billionaire political activist Simon Holmes a Court has apologised to a female government minister after confronting her at a polling station, sparking allegations of bullying as bewildered voters looked on.

Kooyong candidate Monique Ryan on Thursday distanced herself from her well-heeled climate donor, declaring his spat with Superannuation Minister Jane Hume had nothing to do with her campaign.

Ms Ryan spent an awkward day after Mr Holmes a Court ­reacted on Wednesday after being accused of bad taste and anti-Semitism over a tweet attacking former prime minister John Howard as the “angel of death” over his record on climate change.

Mr Holmes a Court was videoed confronting Senator Hume outside the polling station in Melbourne’s inner east, refusing to end the clash and later being ­described by an onlooker as a bully. “Bullying, bullying,” the woman can be heard to say on the video, which was released by the Liberal Party.

Mr Holmes a Court said in a statement that the footpath outside the Hawthorn polling booth was not the place to confront Senator Hume.

“Senator Hume has repeatedly used her position to spread lies and misinformation about me for several years,’’ he said. “Despite ­remaining calm throughout the conversation, it is clear that a public space was not the forum to ask her to retract her lies, and for that, I apologise to Senator Hume.”

The confrontation featured prominently on commercial TV on Thursday night and angered Ms Ryan’s campaign, with Friday being the last formal day before voting.

Liberal Party dominance in the blue-ribbon federation seat, held by former leaders Robert Menzies and Andrew Peacock, has eroded at recent elections as support shifts to the Greens and climate ­candidates. Voters in affluent suburbs around Kew, which has median house prices of more than $2.55m, swung against Josh Frydenberg (pictured above left) at the 2019 election. With Climate 200 backing independent candidate Monique Ryan (pictured above right) and the Greens ramping up their focus on Kooyong, Frydenberg will be forced to fight hard while selling the government’s economic pitch. The Treasurer, who carried almost 50 per cent of the primary vote at the last election, has a big enough advantage to keep his nose in front but swings are expected and Liberal HQ is throwing considerable resources into the seat.

Mr Holmes a Court has previously accused Senator Hume of lying about his political motives and the power he has over candidates as a major donor via Climate 200 to a series of independents. He has also been incensed by claims the tweet about Mr Howard was anti-Semitic, threatening to sue some media outlets.

He used the term “angel of death” while commenting on a visit Mr Howard was making to campaign in Melbourne.

“Angel of death” is commonly used to refer to Nazi mass murderer Josef Mengele but Mr Holmes a Court stridently rejects that he was referring to the Auschwitz physician and was merely ­repeating a benign, anonymous line in a newspaper article that was unrelated to the Holocaust.

Ms Ryan, a teal independent, on Thursday refused to publicly address the issue of the roadside skirmish, refusing media interviews as thousands filed past her and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg in the final hours of the campaign.

The incident between Mr Holmes a Court and Senator Hume lasted for about 30 seconds and the businessman then ­approached the Treasurer.

Mr Frydenberg said Senator Hume was “clearly intimidated and quite distressed by his behaviour”. “If this is the standard that the teals want to hold up then they have a lot of questions to answer,” Mr Frydenberg said.

Ms Ryan said through a spokesman: “We have no comment. Questions should be referred to Mr Holmes a Court and this has nothing to do with us.”

During the polling booth spat, Senator Hume said: “Just leave me alone, Simon. Please leave me alone. You are suing me for defamation, Simon. I don’t want to talk to you.’’

Mr Holmes a Court has said he is not suing Senator Hume.

Ms Ryan is relying heavily on the female vote to bolster her chances of winning the seat on Saturday amid grumpiness with Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Female voters are in the majority in the electorate.

Kooyong is held by Mr Frydenberg with a margin of 6.4 per cent. Liberal strategists believe he will hold the seat, but Ms Ryan has had strong support in the ­electorate.

When The Australian ­contacted Mr Holmes a Court, he declined to be interviewed. “Nice to meet you,” he said as he shut his front door.

He spent part of Thursday on Twitter, retweeting content. He appears to have deleted the original tweet referring to the “angel of death”.

jserraglio
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Re: Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

Post by jserraglio » Thu May 19, 2022 6:09 pm

Belle wrote:
Thu May 19, 2022 6:03 pm
This is how virtuous bien pensants/entrepreneurs who want to ensure their investments make good at the ballot box behave during a general election; they get nasty when they're called out!! Always reach for the courts when you're being found out!!
I note that you recently demanded hapless ScoMo’s political scalp.

So now your diversionary tactics sprinkled with vacuous catchphrases like virtue-signalling bien pensants are hardly an effective response to the Liberal failures you yourself highlighted for us.

By your own admission your party is likely to find itself on the short end in the upcoming election.

If it happens, that would be a very good thing for the rest of the world. If not, and ScoMo wins, I imagine we will then hear you crow about what a great Liberal comeback it was.

Pusillanimous hypocrisy.
Last edited by jserraglio on Fri May 20, 2022 8:55 am, edited 1 time in total.

Rach3
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Re: Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

Post by Rach3 » Fri May 20, 2022 8:55 am

From Guardian Australia vis NYT today:


GUEST ESSAY
Australia’s Prime Minister Ignored the Climate. Voters Could Make Him Pay.
May 19, 2022

By Van Badham
Ms. Badham is an Australian journalist and the author of “QAnon and On: A Short and Shocking History of Internet Conspiracy Cults”

Australia is a land of portent for the many dangers posed by climate change. The fires, storms, heat waves and other catastrophes that climatologists predict for the planet are already routine here. They also loom over national elections on May 21.

Not for the first time. Two of the country’s last three elections hinged in some measure on the climate-versus-jobs debate, with Mother Nature losing out. But recently the political temperature has changed. The rising toll exacted by extreme weather — particularly mega-fires in 2019 and 2020 — is resonating with the public.

That’s bad news for Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Climate inaction helped to propel Mr. Morrison to the leadership of the conservative Liberal-National coalition in 2018, but he’s in a tough fight now. Polls this week showed the opposition Labor Party with 51 percent of votes, to 49 percent for the coalition. If that bears out, Australia may serve not merely as a preview of climate peril, but of the risks faced by politicians who shrug it off.

Ignoring climate concerns wasn’t always a weak point for Mr. Morrison. The coalition government that he now leads was first elected in 2013 in part on a promise to rescind attempts at carbon pricing by the previous Labor government. This policy won support from the mining lobby and voters who were fed fearful rhetoric about environmentalism’s relentless creep on local industry and jobs. It was an effective strategy in a country that is a major exporter of fossil fuels and home of the world’s largest coal port. A belt of parliamentary seats runs through communities where well-paid jobs in mines represent rare and precious economic opportunity and carry enough weight to influence elections.

Mr. Morrison became prime minister in an internal party coup. The moderate policy ambitions of his more liberal colleague and predecessor Malcolm Turnbull, which included action on climate, fatally alienated him from caucus allies to his right, especially those with links to the fossil fuel lobby. Mr. Morrison stared down pro-climate caucus rivals and vaulted into office.

Australians didn’t know much about Mr. Morrison when he contested his first election as prime minister in May 2019. He’d only been in office nine months. But he had provided ample clues, scolding students who protested his government’s climate inaction to leave it to the grown-ups, suggesting electric vehicles posed a threat to fun weekends, and brandishing a lump of coal in Parliament like a beloved pet rock in 2017 when he was treasurer.

Lagging behind Labor for most of that campaign, Mr. Morrison was saved when an ill-conceived convoy of well-funded environmentalists traveled to mining towns already struggling with high unemployment to campaign against a major coal project. Mr. Morrison reframed anti-climate politics as pro-jobs, won the mining towns and held onto power by one seat.

Politically rewarded, he has relentlessly maintained his anti-climate brand, balking at defining a path toward net-zero targets, and embracing coal mines.

But the great fires that swept across Australia soon after Mr. Morrison’s victory changed the country. From July 2019, dry conditions and high heat — local symptoms of climate change — kindled mega-fires across the island continent. Bone-dry pastures, riverbeds and forests offered no resistance.

Landscapes disappeared under red skies, yellow smoke and a stench of ash that clung to everything. At least 60 million acres — about the size of the United Kingdom — were torched, nearly three billion animals perished or were displaced, and 34 people were killed. Smoke pollution was linked to hundreds more deaths. Damage was estimated at $100 billion.



Turns out, our prime minister had run off already — on a secret family holiday to Hawaii. His office refused to confirm it until pictures surfaced on Instagram showing Mr. Morrison frolicking in Waikiki. Back home, wildlife rescuers uploaded videos of screaming koalas with third-degree burns.

Mr. Morrison acknowledged the “horrendous” toll and conceded that climate change had played a role in the fires, but otherwise deflected responsibility. He cut short his holiday but quipped, “I don’t hold a hose, mate.”

When he visited the scorched town of Cobargo, he was heckled by angry residents.

Today, protesters ambush Mr. Morrison on the campaign trail wearing Hawaiian shirts, the avatar for all of his political failures: a scandal-prone cabinet; the slow pace of the vaccine rollout during the pandemic; a widening gap between inflation and wage growth. Climate change isn’t necessarily the top concern of voters. But it has become a constant source of anxiety as the disasters continue. This year, eastern Australia experienced record rainfall which submerged towns and killed at least 22 people. But hard-hit areas went without adequate relief funds. When government help did not arrive, townships crowd-funded for deliveries by private helicopters. As of last weekend, some towns are underwater for the third time in a year.

Urban voters who once had a home in Mr. Turnbull’s Liberal Party are running angry pro-climate independent campaigns across must-win city seats. Mr. Morrison’s rivals in the center-left Labor Party are playing it safe, voicing qualified support for coal mines while embracing President Biden’s platform of job creation through climate action. Meanwhile, conservative attempts to revive old fears of the net-zero emissions boogeyman are backfiring even in their traditional heartlands.

Yet Mr. Morrison has clung to the old fear-mongering. Australians are learning the hard way, however, that denial offers no protection when floodwaters are rising. In his climate-altered country, Mr. Morrison’s failure to absorb that lesson threatens to sweep him away, too.

jserraglio
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Re: Australia’s teal independents are fed up with the world’s 3rd largest fossil fuel exporter’s foot dragging

Post by jserraglio » Fri May 20, 2022 9:03 am

Never has a land that profited so much given back so little.

But on May 21, there may come a reckoning.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLshVZ6mzqc


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