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Article written by tigtog

tigtog (aka Viv) is the founder of this blog. She lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves. You can read more about Viv on her bio page.

10 responses to “What do I want from #respill today? Another hung parliament, please”

  1. Mindy

    Well Gillard is back with a vengeance. Lets see if Rudd will keep his promises. I hope now that she can be the PM she has been for the last couple of days. I really liked that one.

    I do hope that you are correct TT, if we do end up with an Abbott lead government it would be nice if it were a minority one. I would like to see him forced to negotiate to get what he wants. I think it would be good for him and the country.

  2. I have strong doubts as to whether Tony Abbott could manage to negotiate convincingly enough to be able to form a minority government. The man gives a very strong impression of being unwilling, or possibly unable, to compromise on any issue, no matter how small or minor. Heck, look at his behaviour when attempting to negotiate with the Greens and the Independents back in the middle of 2010 – the minute he didn’t get exactly what he wanted out of the process, he lapsed into behaviour a tantrum-throwing two-year-old would have been ashamed to own.

    If we’re going to see a minority Liberal government, I’d look for Malcolm Turnbull (or his equivalent) as leader, since he’s much more willing and able to understand the process of compromise and negotiation.

    It’s interesting, really, given the Liberals have effectively been governing as a minority government most of the times they’ve been in office – the ALP, when they’re in power, is generally in power because they’ve held the majority of the seats in the house of Representatives, while the Liberals have very rarely had a straight majority off their own bat – instead, they’ve had to be in coalition with the Nationals to achieve government. But somewhere along the line, the Liberal party nation-wide has begun to expect the National party to just fall into line as junior coalition partners, and stopped giving a damn. This may well backfire against them.

    Here in Western Australia, there were definite attempts made by the state ALP to court the WA National Party members in our lower house (Legislative Assembly) in the aftermath of the previous state election. Nothing came of it that time, but I’d be willing to bet there were a lot of people watching, both locally and nationally, for signs of where a wedge could be inserted to split the Nats off from the Libs and make it a lot harder for the Liberal party to achieve government.

  3. blue milk

    Good argument tigtog, there’s a lot to be said for this hung parliament situation .

  4. TimT

    In the case of the current hung parliament, I fear that the ‘negotiation’ that has been taking place has generally ended up with the seats the independents represent getting a crapload of money with little examination, and the largest governing party – the ALP – being forced to defend the indefensible (Craig Thomson) .

    It doesn’t have to be this way with hung parliaments – some seem to work well. The current Victorian parliament could be far worse, and the situation in which Steve Bracks became Premier of Victoria seems to have been remarkably unremarkable.

    But the current situation in Australia’s federal parliament is far from satisfactory and I hope that it will be resolved one way or the other next term.

  5. Chris

    I prefer minority government. If nothing else, it increase more public debate of proposed legislation as governments need to negotiate with independents. For the same reason I like that its not just the Greens that have the balance of power in the lower house, but also independents. I think it works well in the senate when we have that situation too.

    However, I think the last election result was a bit of a fluke and I don’t think it will happen in the future. For example, a pure Green/ALP combination in the lower and upper house isn’t really any better than just the Greens having balance of power in the senate.

    I too vote strategically in the hope of a hung parliament – having either the ALP or the Libs have a majority in both houses would be a disaster. But that does mean, especially in the lower house sometimes preferencing the liberals ahead of the ALP to try to ensure that the ALP does not have a clear majority. And risks an Liberal government if you guess wrong in a marginal seat.

  6. Feminist Avatar

    I think this too, but it can go disasterously wrong as it has in the UK, where the Conservatives (our right party) made a coalition with the LibDems (our centre-right party), and instead of the LibDems acting as moderating force, they rolled over and now do whatever their told, which included breaking some of their main election promises. This made a lot of people very angry (incl members of their own party) as the LibDem had been a fairly small third party, but made huge gains in the last election due to disenfranchised Labour (centre-left) voters. What they failed to get was that no voter who moved to LibDem from Labour will forgive them for putting the opposition in power. And because they made everyone so angry, I think they are now hanging in there against the odds in the hope they find a way of coming out looking shiny.

    And more frustratingly it hasn’t led to better politics as the lack of compromise is still there.

  7. Medivh

    @TimT:

    It doesn’t have to be this way with hung parliaments – some seem to work well. The current Victorian parliament could be far worse

    I’m not sure how. Ted Bailieu is an outright failure as a premier who’s intent on spending no money. The trains, the roads, the schools and now the hospitals are all going to shit because Ted’s unwilling to write cheques.

    I mean, I suppose he could be actively working to harm Victorians instead of leaving us in near-total neglect. But the political backlash from that would be spectacular and leave him out of a job fairly quickly.

    To be honest, I’m pretty sure that the Vic Libs have completely lost their way since Jeff got the boot. Not that that’s a bad thing considering Jeff’s way was to sell off anything he could lay hand to.

  8. Mary

    As a child of the Harradine era I have to confess to some wariness of hung parliaments and minority governments*: it all depends on who has the balance of power! Just as a majority government depends on who has the majority.

    * I realise that this was a Senate balance of power issue, so not normally what “hung parliament” or “minority government” typically refers to. Even so.

  9. TimT

    I was thinking that the Victorian Parliament seems almost entirely absent of the sort of shenanigans happening in the Federal Parliament… but I don’t entirely disapprove of the fiscal restraint displayed by the Baillieu government either.

    I mean the previous Labor government over-committed itself in several areas, in some cases signing contracts worth many millions of dollars without properly considering the likely results, or the alternatives.

    The most public example of this was Myki. There are several others.

    As a result many many millions of taxpayer dollars were wasted (which could have been otherwise spent on hospitals and schools bla bla bla.)

    In the circumstances I think a little restraint and circumspection on the part of Baillieu government is warranted. (And I’m not sure on this, but hasn’t the Coalition government in NSW been criticised for similar reasons?)

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