Archive for April, 2009

Tasmanian upper house 2009

Three of Tasmania’s fifteen Legislative Council electorate go to the polls on Saturday. Tasmania’s Legislative Council members serve six year terms, with their terms gradualy expiring over a six-year cycle. These are the first elections sinc e Legislative Council boundaries were redrawn last year.

I won’t try and cover them in detail, as there are detailed guides to each race both at Poll Bludger and the Tasmanian Politics blog. My contribution is in map form, as you can download a Google Earth map of Tasmanian state electoral boundaries over at my maps page.

South Africa votes

South Africa’s voters are now going to the polls in their fourth post-apartheid election. I’ve previously blogged about the campaign, and will just post here an article of mine published in today’s Crikey Daily Mail:

South Africa’s voters go to the polls today to vote in their fourth post-apartheid election. While the ruling African National Congress looks set to continue its domination of South African politics, the country’s opposition is taking a tentative step towards becoming a credible alternative to the ANC.

The ANC has easily won every election in the country since the first multi-racial election in 1994. Nelson Mandela led the ANC into the first election, before being succeeded by Thabo Mbeki, who led the party to bigger victories in 1999 and 2004. The party’s vote rose from 62% in 1994 to almost 70% in 2004, giving the ANC the two-thirds majority necessary to make constitutional changes without the support of any other party.

South Africa uses a very proportional electoral system, with 400 members of the National Assembly. 200 are elected on a national basis, while the other 200 are elected off provincial party lists. Today’s election also sees South Africans elect the legislatures in the nine provinces.

While Mbeki was dominant over all other parties in the Assembly, the challenge to his authority came from within his party, with left-leaning elements of the party putting up Jacob Zuma for the party’s Presidency in 2007. Zuma defeated Mbeki, putting himself in a position to lead the party into the next election.

Jacob Zuma’s support base included the South African trade union movement and the South African Communist Party, as well as his supporters in the Zulu community. Zuma has faced numerous accusations of corruption, with charges being brought against him in 2005, when he was Deputy President, and in 2007 shortly after he was elected ANC President. The charges were dropped on 6 April, but that hasn’t stopped the opposition parties from questioning Zuma’s integrity.

After corruption charges were dropped in September 2008, the Zuma-dominated ANC pressured Mbeki into resigning as President, and, as Zuma is not a sitting MP, the ANC’s Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe succeeded Mbeki. Motlanthe will step down after the election.

The ousting of Mbeki saw the departure of some Mbeki loyalists from the ANC, founding a new opposition party, the Congress of the People. The party is seen to sit to the right economically to Zuma’s ANC, with Cope supporting Mbeki’s neoliberal policy agenda. The other main opposition party is the Democratic Alliance, the successor to the white, liberal, anti-apartheid parties of the Apartheid era.

Facing the opposition of both DA and Cope, the ANC campaign has become fiercer in the last few days. ANC Youth League president Julius Malema made controversial comments against the DA’s leader, Cape Town Mayor Helen Zille, saying “Helen Zille is racist and fake, even her face is not original. Her real face is ugly, that is why she had plastic surgery. DA’s policies are just as fake as her,” while saying of Cope that “Come Wednesday, we will be burying Cope. After April 22 some among them who have weak hearts will get heart attacks and for those who have diabetes, it will be high.”

The party has also brought out the big guns, with former President and ANC leader Nelson Mandela appearing at a rally with Zuma. In contrast, Archbishop Desmond Tutu has attacked Zuma, calling him unfit for office.

The Democratic Alliance has focused on a “stop Zuma” campaign, drawing attention to the possibility of a two-thirds ANC majority, allowing the party to change the constitution on their own. Zille has raised the prospect of South Africa falling into the same economic and dictatorial trap as Zimbabwe, becoming a “failed state”.

There hasn’t been much in the way of polling of the election, but it seems clear that Zuma is headed for a slightly reduced majority, which may remove the ability of the ANC to change the constitution. The electoral commission is expecting high turnout in what has been the most interesting election in South Africa’s short history of multiracial democracy.

It’s unclear how DA and COPE will perform, and how that will shape future anti-ANC politics in South Africa, but DA leader Helen Zille may well be on track to be Premier of Western Cape, a province with high support for the DA. This may well give her a platform to present a genuine alternative to the ANC in the future, which is essential if South Africa is to be a functioning democracy in years to come.

Moyes goes it alone

Every left-winger’s favourite religious right politician, Gordon Moyes MLC, looks set to finally break his ties with Fred Nile’s Christian Democratic Party, with Nile moving to expel Moyes after a recent falling-out between the two.

Moyes joined the Legislative Council in 2002 when Fred Nile’s wife Elaine retired, and Moyes was re-elected in 2003. He faces election in March 2011, while Nile’s current term finishes in March 2015.

The two fell out over the last few months, with Moyes challenging Nile’s focus on anti-gay and anti-muslim policies as the central agenda of the Christian Democratic Party. It appears that the two have been functioning as independent MLCs for months now, with the two trading insults a few months back. It appears now that the division has been cemented, with Moyes moving towards joining Family First, in a move that could destroy Nile’s own CDP.

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Zuma headed for landslide

South Africa heads to the polls on Wednesday for their fourth post-apartheid election, and it seems clear that Jacob Zuma will lead the African National Congress to its fourth consecutive landslide victory.

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An alcopops-fueled election?

The federal government announced earlier this week that they will bring back legislation for a 70% tax increase on pre-mixed alcoholic drinks. The legislation was first defeated a month ago when the government refused to agree to Steven Fielding’s demand for a ban on alcohol advertising during daytime sporting events. The legislation had the support of Senator Xenophon and the Greens after they won smaller concessions.

Media coverage has focused on the possibility for the legislation to be a trigger for a double dissolution election. Is that so?

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The new wiki

I have now installed a complete wiki as part of the Tally Room. You can access it at www.tallyroom.com.au/wiki, and I plan to start by including a federal pendulum for the next election, as well as corresponding pages for all 150 electorates. If you wanna go and register to play around, go ahead.

Update: The Wiki is now up-and-running. I have set up links on the front page to the beginnings of election guides for the Fremantle by-election, the Western Australian daylight saving referendum and the next Australian federal election. I haven’t had a chance to start the guides, so if you’re interested feel free to start pages and begin adding information. I think it’s best if we leave it as free as possible until we begin to develop a little bit.

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Greens kick off Senate preselection

In the last few days, the Greens in Australia’s two largest states have closed nominations for their Senate preselections. In both NSW and Victoria, the process will be decided by a ballot of all members, although processes may vary in some ways. The Victorian Greens will have the process concluded by the end of May, while the Greens NSW will conclude the Senate ticket at the 11 July State Council meeting. I’m not going to get into commentary about candidates, but I will post the list of names with a brief description of who they are.

Update (again): So it turns out that nominations have not been officially announced in Victoria and there are more names to come. This should be resolved over the course of the next week.

In New South Wales

  • Ted Bassingthwaighte
  • Adam Butler – Inner West Greens
  • Cate Faehrmann – Director of the Nature Conservation Council of NSW since 2004, previously SA lead Senate candidate in 2001.
  • Keith McIlroy – Lane Cove councillor since 2008
  • Lee Rhiannon – Sitting Member of the Legislative Council since 1999.

In Victoria

  • Jennifer Alden – Lead candidate for Northern Victoria, 2006 state election
  • Peter Campbell – Candidate for Kooyong in 2001, 2004 and 2007, amongst other elections.
  • Richard di Natale – Lead Senate candidate in 2007, candidate for state seat of Melbourne 2002, 2006.
  • Jim Reiher – Lead candidate for South-Eastern Metropolitan, 2006 state election
  • Janet Rice – Former Mayor of Maribyrnong and Vice President of the Victorian Local Government Association.
  • David Risstrom – Former Melbourne City Councillor, lead Senate candidate in 2004.
  • Berhan Ahmed – 2009 Victorian of the Year

I have no information yet on when preselections will take place in Queensland, South Australia and the ACT (not WA and Tasmania, where I expect Senators Siewert and Milne to be returned easily).

Update: I have fixed a couple of links and ordered the candidates alphabetically to avoid bias. Apparently the list of Victorian candidates is not a complete list, so watch this space.

Update #2: Oz in comments reports back from a conversation with SA Greens MLC Mark Parnell. Apparently the SA Greens will choose their Legislative Council ticket from July-September and then choose their Senate ticket after that.

Some free advice for Greens candidates

Between March 2010 and March 2011 there will be a federal election and four state elections in Australia, and various Greens state parties are beginning to gear up to preselect candidates for the Senate, Legislative Councils and the occasional winnable lower house seat*.

Among these, five winnable Senate seats, an MLC spot in South Australia, a number of possible MLC spots in Victoria, most of the NSW Legislative Council contingent and a few key seats in inner Sydney and Melbourne will be open preselection contests, with no incumbent running.

Hopefully this will mean that, in 2009, there will be spirited contests that will set much of the Greens direction for the next few years. Most of these races will be conducted as direct ballots of all Greens members in the electorate, giving candidates a first chance to show their campaign skills and begin the general election campaign early.

I have a few pieces of advice to offer to all candidates that should hopefully strengthen all of our candidates and help develop links with the lefty online community, which will be helpful come election time. Scott Ludlam’s excellent work on the internet filter has helped pull much of the online progressive movement away from Kevin07 towards the Greens. By genuinely engaging with twitterers and bloggers, we can then call on them when it comes to the crunch.

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Website update

I haven’t yet managed to install the proper Wiki for this site. I started it over the long weekend but hopefully I can get it working over the next week. In the meantime I have suspended open user registration for this site, as I have seen a few people register who appear to be spammers.

In other news, I’m currently trying to find new ways to support myself while running the blog. My current job, which has given me the time to work on this blog, is finishing in the next few weeks. If you know of any opportunities that relate to this blog, then please let me know, as my employment status may effect my ability to write this blog.

Please click on any ads you see that interest you, as I receive a small sum of money for each click and it doesn’t cost you anything. If you find this blog particularly useful, please donate. I’ve managed to cover the costs of registering and hosting the site, but any extra donations will allow me to devote more time to the blog and the extra features, such as the new wiki and my collection of electoral maps.

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Should we have more federal MPs?

While it’s not the biggest electoral reform issue on the table (I would consider introducing proportional representation to the House of Representatives much more significant), I’ve been thinking for a while that there is a strong argument for increasing the number of Members of Parliament federally, by adding two extra Senators for each state.

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