Category: Bob Brown

24 May

Comments Off on Thin edge of the wedge: Economic nationalism & the skilled migration ‘debate’

Thin edge of the wedge: Economic nationalism & the skilled migration ‘debate’

by

To his credit Bob Brown was one of the clearest opponents of Pauline Hanson when she rose to infamy in the 1990s, not something the major party leaders could have been accused of at the time. But more recently he has pushed both population limits arguments and a line against skilled migration. Yet Hanson used […]

09 May

Comments Off on The balance of forces

The balance of forces

by

> by Dr_Tad and liz_beths Since the NSW election discussion among many readers of Left Flank has been dominated by the battle over Marrickville Council’s BDS policy. The Left inside the party has just had to face down the combined forces of the Murdoch media, Barry O’Farrell, Kevin Rudd, various sections of the pro-Israel lobby, and the party’s own national […]

Filed under: Bob Brown, Greens, NSW, Palestine

04 Mar

Comments Off on Drugs! Drugs! Drugs!

Drugs! Drugs! Drugs!

by

As the state election skulks closer, it seems clear the NSW Greens will not be actively campaigning on their Drugs and Harm Minimisation policy in the community or the media. Their silence makes obvious that they have determined to stay mum on the question, despite the policy being one democratically endorsed by the membership after […]

20 Feb

Comments Off on Have the Australian Greens become Julia Gillard’s ‘useful idiots’?

Have the Australian Greens become Julia Gillard’s ‘useful idiots’?

by

Since the dust from the August election settled, something strange has been going on in the Australian Greens camp. I think it’s probably a conscious “strategy,” but I’m not privy to the discussions in the party room, so I can’t be sure. But here is my stab at it, and why it worries me deeply. […]

03 Feb

Comments Off on The Egyptian revolution: Liberal democracy as the enemy of freedom

The Egyptian revolution: Liberal democracy as the enemy of freedom

by

In February 2003 I was part of the 400,000-strong rally in Sydney opposing the impending US-British-Australian invasion of Iraq. It seemed for a moment that we were going to disrupt the plans of the self-styled Coalition Of The Willing by sheer force of numbers, part of probably the largest coordinated protest in Australian and world […]

18 Dec

4 Comments

Which side are you on?

by

The horrifying deaths of refugees near Christmas Island this week produced two notable responses. The first, recycled endlessly in recent times, was the call for people to not use the tragedy to gain political advantage, a ridiculous idea given that Australia’s current refugee policy has few reasons for existing except in the service of politics. As Left Flank […]

21 Sep

Comments Off on We will decide which people we will kill, and the circumstances under which we kill them*

We will decide which people we will kill, and the circumstances under which we kill them*

by

While John Paul Young’s euphoric pop-disco classic “Love Is In The Air” could’ve been the theme song for the Greens’ election night success, it seems that the Liberals and the right-wing media have latched onto Bob Brown’s push to allow the territories to legalise euthanasia as a reason to suggest the party would prefer the […]

14 Sep

8 Comments

Legitimacy, mandates and the media

by

There has been much discussion in the left-leaning blogosphere about the stridency of the Murdoch media campaign against the “legitimacy” of the Gillard minority government. As Left Flank noted on the weekend, The Australian has editorialised that it is committed to having the Greens “destroyed at the ballot box”. In the AFR on Friday (paywalled, […]

22 Aug

Comments Off on Welcome to another edition of Thunderdome?

Welcome to another edition of Thunderdome?

by

When we started this blog in July, we addressed the “democratic deficit” in Australian society. Yesterday’s result, of a likely hung parliament, is a reflection of the inability of the main parties to even create the illusion they have won a mandate to govern. The election was a disaster for the ALP. Having killed the […]

12 Aug

2 Comments

Greens economics (1): Venturing inside the black box of capitalism

by

In recent weeks many political commentators have argued that what is missing in the current, dispiriting campaign is a serious debate on economic policy. But it is hard to see what real debate can be had given that both major parties share a near-identical obeisance to neoliberal orthodoxy: low taxes, balanced Budgets with an aversion […]