Wayne?? What happened? No News?

kosar

Centrist
Forum Member
Nov 27, 1999
11,112
55
0
ft myers, fl
Wayne,

Usually you are all over these foreign elections when you deem that they are moving right. I guess you missed this one. :rolleyes: Your conclusions about those other elections were silly at best and laughable at worst. However, if you want to make a definitive statement that because Germanys/Frances etc... elections were won by the more conservative party in support of our foreign policy or just being pro-America in general, then what do you make of this?

Spin away.



Rudd Wins Australian Election on Climate, Troops Vows

By Gemma Daley

Nov. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Kevin Rudd's Labor Party won Australia's election, ending John Howard's 11-year rule after promising to tackle climate change, restore workers' bargaining power and withdraw Australian troops from Iraq.

Labor won 83 of the 150 seats in the House of Representatives, gaining 23 seats from 2004, according to the Australian Election Commission. The Liberal-National coalition has 56 seats, with two independents and nine undecided, the commission said on its Web site.

``I will always govern in the national interest,'' Rudd said in a press conference in Brisbane today, adding ``we will not breach the trust'' of the Australian public, he said.

Rudd, 50, a former diplomat, takes control of an economy that has grown for 16 years. In an election campaign dominated by debate on interest rates and promises of big income tax cuts, Rudd kept his spending pledges to less than Howard to convince voters he was better-equipped to keep down borrowing costs at a time the central bank is battling accelerating inflation.

``Rudd has convinced people there is nothing to fear from a switch to Labor,'' said Clive Hamilton, director of Canberra- based think tank the Australia Institute. ``His promise to ease labor laws and tackle climate change resonated with voters and he is seen as a safe pair of hands.''

Winners, Losers

Foreign Minster Alexander Downer, Environment Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Health Minister Tony Abbott kept their seats, while Indigenous Affairs Minister Mal Brough and Special Minister of State Gary Nairn were casualties.

Labor winners included high profile ex-union leaders Greg Combet, formerly Australian Council of Trade Unions secretary, and Bill Shorten, Australian Workers Union secretary until earlier this year. Shorten made headlines in April as miners in Tasmania state worked for 14 days to free two of his members trapped underground by a rock slide.

Labor won't hold a majority of seats in the Senate, unlike Howard during his last term. The Liberal-National coalition has 37 seats against Labor's 32, according to the ABC.

The balance of power will be held by five Greens senators, the sole Family First representative and anti-gambling independent Nick Xenophon.

A fluent Mandarin speaker, Rudd has promised closer ties with Asia and to pull Australian troops out of Iraq. Some 64 percent of voters opposed the nation's 1,600 soldiers serving in Iraq, according to a Newspoll survey on Oct. 3. Rudd will keep the 900 personnel in Afghanistan.

Costello Decision

Howard, 68, said he is unlikely to retain his seat, becoming the first Australian leader to be voted out of parliament since 1929. He accepted responsibility for the defeat and anointed his deputy, Treasurer Peter Costello, as his successor. Costello said today that he would not contest the position, but that he will serve in his seat.

``I will not seek or accept the Liberal leadership,'' Costello told reporters in Melbourne. ``I will be looking at building a career post politics.''

Australia's second-longest serving leader, Howard was one of the first allies of U.S. President George W. Bush to send troops to Iraq.

Howard's bid for a fifth term faltered when his claim to be a better economic manager than Rudd -- one of the central planks of his campaign -- was undermined by the first interest rate increase during an election campaign.

Interest Rates

The quarter-point increase lifted the Reserve Bank's benchmark rate to an 11-year high 6.75 percent, and was the sixth since Howard was returned to power in 2004 election on a promise to keep mortgage rates low.

Chinese President Hu Jintao invited Rudd to visit Beijing for the 2008 Olympic Games when they met in September. Rudd also met Bush when the two leaders were in Sydney for the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in September.

Rudd said today that he told Bush, who had called with congratulations yesterday, that he would like to visit the U.S. next year. He declined to say if they discussed Iraq. Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono also called Rudd and invited him to visit Bali for a climate change conference next month.

Rudd will ratify the Kyoto Protocol, the multination accord to counter climate change with mandatory greenhouse-gas reductions, something that Howard, along with Bush, has refused to do. The environment was also a topic discussed with U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown yesterday, Rudd said.

Share Cropper's Son

The son of a share cropper in Queensland, Rudd attended Australian National University before becoming a diplomat in Stockholm and Beijing between 1981 and 1988. He worked for the Queensland state Labor Party before entering parliament in 1998.

Voters were attracted to his pledge to abolish the government's workplace laws, which prompted 500,000 people to march in protest in 2005. The reform eliminated unfair dismissal rules and made it harder for workers to strike.

Labor has promised a package named ``Forward With Fairness,'' which allows workers to bargain as a group and has a ``safety net'' to safeguard wages and conditions.

Labor will also build a national high-speed Internet network, boost funding for traineeships, and matched the government's promised income tax cuts.

Labor's victory won't have much impact on the share market, according to analysts, including Adnan Kucukalic, director of Australian equities research at Credit Suisse Group in Sydney.

``Both parties are so close on everything that the outcome is not going to be the be all and end all of the market,'' he said.

``History has shown there's usually little impact from elections,'' said Richard Wallace, who helps manage the equivalent of $138 million at Wallace Funds Management.

Rudd, Labor's fourth leader since Paul Keating lost the 1996 election to Howard, becomes Australia's 30th prime minister. Labor's victory is only the seventh time voters have ousted their government since the beginning of World War II.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gemma Daley in Sydney at gdaley@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: November 24, 2007 22:45 EST

Email this article Printer friendly format
 

kosar

Centrist
Forum Member
Nov 27, 1999
11,112
55
0
ft myers, fl
By ROHAN SULLIVAN - Associated Press Writer
Edition Date: 11/25/07


Newly elected leader Kevin Rudd moved quickly Sunday to bring Australia into international talks on fighting global warming, and to head off potentially thorny relations with the United States and key Asian neighbors.
The emphatic victory for Rudd's Labor Party swings Australia toward the political left after almost 12 years of conservative rule, and puts it at odds with key security ally Washington on two crucial policy issues - Iraq and global warming.

The day after sweeping to power in general elections, Rudd went straight into work mode, holding meetings with government officials about the mechanics of signing the Kyoto Protocol on cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

He also took phone calls from foreign leaders highly relevant to Australia.

Britain, New Zealand and Indonesia noted that Rudd's election would boost international efforts to address climate change - ousted Prime Minister John Howard had refused to sign the Kyoto pact.

Malaysia's leader said Rudd's plan to pull Australia's 550 combat troops from Iraq would also improve the country's international standing, the Malaysian national news agency Bernama reported.

Rudd spoke by phone with President Bush late Saturday. Rudd declined to give details of the conversation, but said he plans to visit Washington next year.

The leaders agreed during the call that they looked forward to working together, said White House National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe.

Rudd, a Chinese-speaking former diplomat, also talked with Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, accepting his invitation to attend a December U.N. meeting in Bali to map out the world's next steps against climate change.

On Sunday, at his first news conference, Rudd promised "action, and action now" on climate change and nominated education, health and a high-speed Internet network as other top priorities of his government. He said Labor lawmakers were due to meet on Thursday, and he hoped his Cabinet would be sworn in soon after that.

Rudd's election brought a sharp and mortifying end to the 11-year rule of Howard, Australia's second-longest serving leader and a strong ally of Bush. Howard also faces the possible embarrassment of losing his own district seat in Parliament - a fate suffered only once before by a sitting prime minister in 106 years of federal government.

Howard, who reshaped Australia's image abroad with his unwavering support for the U.S. war on terrorism and in Iraq, failed to read the signs that voters had grown tired of his rule.

But aside from Iraq and Kyoto, the bulk of Australia's foreign, trade and economic policies are not expected to change much under Rudd.

"The Australian people have decided that we as a nation will move forward," Rudd said in a victory speech late Saturday. "To embrace the future and together as Australians to unite and write a new page in our nation's history."

With 75 percent of the more than 13.5 million ballots counted, Labor had won more than 53 percent of the vote and a clear majority of at least 83 places in Parliament's 150-seat lower house, official Australian Electoral Commission results showed.

Howard's Liberal-National coalition had 46.6 percent of the vote, and 47 parliamentary seats. Howard's district of Bennelong hung in the balance, with the final outcome to be decided by postal votes to be counted in the next few days.

Howard had campaigned on his economic management, arguing that Rudd could not be trusted to continue Australia's 17 years of unbroken economic growth, fueled by China's and India's hunger for Australian coal and other minerals.

Rudd, 50, had argued that Howard, at 68, was out of ideas.
 

AR182

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 9, 2000
18,654
87
0
Scottsdale,AZ
didn't even know that howard was running for re-election but am surprised by the results...always thought that he was popular....
 

DOGS THAT BARK

Registered User
Forum Member
Jul 13, 1999
19,489
168
63
Bowling Green Ky
Didn't know there was election either till I read results--I have to admit Matt I find it very amazing people hould ax a leader who pulled a country that was head over heels in debt and economy reeling to debt free and prosperity--over a man made global warming hypothosis--but then again Hilliary has good shot at winning here and her husband being our "man of character" ambassador to the world--so maybe not so strange--I see free riders in France are on Sarkozy and striking/rioting for trying to take away their free chesse also.
Wonder how things turn out there. Would guess same element may have had more to do with Howards demise than let on--he made some tough decisions on getting Aussies economy in shape--I'll see what I can sniff out.
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
Dogs

I used to dismiss it when kosar said you always always work Slick Willy into your paragraphs.

But I will be damned I have noticed it alot and have to say ..... boolah boolah !

And I hate the Clintons as much as anyone.

But Geez Louise. Give it a rest.

Republican first debate on cnn youtube Wednesday.

Hope I find someone I like.

Someone told me I should look at Huckulberry closely .
 

djv

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 4, 2000
13,817
17
0
I would think with CNN you should have some good questions asked. At least not the soft ball ones you have on the rebuplican network fox. Or like the ones Dem's get from MSNBC.
 

smurphy

cartographer
Forum Member
Jul 31, 2004
19,910
135
63
16
L.A.
didn't even know that howard was running for re-election but am surprised by the results...always thought that he was popular....

I had no idea you had your finger on the pulse of the Austrian populous. ...Perhaps that OPEC meeting a couple months ago made the difference.
 

Jabberwocky

Registered User
Forum Member
Mar 3, 2006
3,491
29
0
Jacksonville, FL
you be surprised what i have my finger on...

Al, you won't be offended if I use this for a tagline will you?

As for Howard, it seems his tough labor stance and pro-Bush position cost him in the land down under. He obviously did alot of great things for Australia and I don't know that he got what he deserved.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top