Monday, 17 September 2012

Australia's voting intentions polled between 10-16 September 2012


Click on graphs to enlarge

The Australian 17 September 2012:

According to the latest Newspoll survey, taken exclusively for The Australian on the weekend, the ALP's primary support went up three percentage points to 36 per cent as the Coalition's crashed five points to 41 per cent - its lowest since March last year.
On a two-party-preferred basis, calculated on preference flows at the 2010 election, Labor and the Coalition are even on 50 per cent each. At the 2010 election, in which Labor lost its parliamentary majority, the two-party-preferred vote was 49.9 per cent for the Coalition and 50.1 per cent for the ALP, with the Greens on a primary vote of 11.8 per cent.

The Age 17 September 2012:

*PREFERENCES FOR AREA AND AGE WERE ALLOCATED BY HOW PREFERENCES FLOWED NATIONALLY AND BY STATE IN 2010 ELECTION. ALL FIGURES ARE IN PERCENTAGES. THE ACNIELSEN/AGE POLL IS CONDUCTED ON THE TELEPHONE NATIONWIDE. INTERVIEWS WERE CONDUCTED ON SEPTEMBER 13 - 15 WITH 1400 ELECTORS. THE MAXIMUM MARGIN OF ERROR TO APPLY TO THIS SAMPLE IS APPROXIMATELY 2.6%. UNCOMMITTED VOTERS (4%) WERE REDISTRIBUTED. FIGURES MAY NOT ADD TO 100% DUE TO ROUNDING.

The Essential Report 10 September 2012:

Q. If a Federal Election was held today to which party will you probably give your first preference vote? If not sure, which party are you currently leaning toward?
Q. If don’t know -Well which party are you currently leaning to?
Sample size = 2,077 respondents
First preference/
leaning to
Election
21 Aug 10
4 weeks ago
13/8/12
2 weeks ago
27/8/12
Last week
3/9/12
This week
10 Sept 2012
Liberal
46%
46%
44%
44%
National
3%
3%
3%
3%
Total Lib/Nat
43.6%
49%
49%
48%
47%
Labor
38.0%
32%
32%
34%
34%
Greens
11.8%
10%
10%
9%
9%
Other/Independent
6.6%
8%
9%
9%
9%
NB. The data in the above tables comprise 2-week averages derived from the first preference/leaning to voting questions. Respondents who select ‘don’t know’ are not included in the results. The two-party preferred estimate is calculated by distributing the votes of the other parties according to their preferences at the 2010 election. These estimates have a confidence interval of approx. plus or minus 2-3%.

Cansdellgate: one year down the track and we're still waiting


Yes, one year ago today The Daily Examiner informed its readers their local MP Steve Cansdell was resigning from state parliament.




Ok, so what has happened since? When will someone in a position of authority bite the bullet and have this matter addressed?

Image credit: The Daily Examiner, 17/9/12


David Hill asks politicians: Which part of NO CSG do you not understand ?


Email received on 15 September 2012:

ONLINE PETITION  - Which part of no CSG do you not understand?

David Hill from Southern Cross University has started an online petition in response to the NSW Government's latest cave-in to the CSG industry.  If you are concerned about the refusal of politicians to take seriously community concerns about this industry, consider signing the petition and sending details of it on to others who have similar concerns.

http://www.communityrun.org/petitions/which-part-of-no-csg-do-you-not-understand-politicians

Apologies for cross-postings.

Leonie Blain
Clarence Valley Conservation Coalition Inc.

Tony Abbott's character revisited


A SYDNEY barrister, David Patch, has corroborated a woman's claim that Tony Abbott behaved in an intimidatory fashion when she beat him in a vote for Sydney University Student Representative Council president in 1977.
Mr Abbott has denied the account from Barbara Ramjan - published in David Marr's Quarterly Essay, ''Political Animal: The Making of Tony Abbott'' - that he came within an inch of her nose and punched the wall on either side of her head.
But Mr Patch, who won the SRC presidency in 1975, said he had been Ms Ramjan's campaign manager in 1977, and she had told him about the Abbott incident immediately after it happened.
He writes in today's Age: ''I did not see the incident, but I was nearby. The count had just finished. Barbara found me. She is a small woman, and Tony Abbott was (and is) a strong man. She was very shaken, scared and angry. She told me that Tony Abbott had come up to her, put his face in her face, and punched the wall on either side of her head.
''So, I am a witness. Barbara's immediate complaint to me about what Abbott had just done had the absolute ring of truth about it. I believed Barbara at the time, and still do.''…..
The wall-punching event was not an isolated one, he writes. ''As President, Ramjan chaired SRC meetings. She did not want to be called 'Mr Chairman', but preferred 'Chairperson'. But for an entire year Abbott called Ramjan 'Chairthing' whenever he addressed her at SRC meetings.
''The gender-based disrespect for her office and her person is remarkably similar to the disrespectful way that Abbott treats the Prime Minister, and her office, today.''….
Mr Abbott told Marr he had no recollection of the wall punching and said ''it would be profoundly out of character had it occurred''. It was later that he hardened this up to a complete denial. He also denied a claim made this week by a woman who ran against him for the Democrats in 2007 that when she was handing out how-to-vote cards he put his face an inch from hers and grunted…..

Abbott aspires to be Australia's next prime minister. On 30 June 2012 in an Address to the 56th Federal Council of the Liberal Party of Australia he stated:

So ladies and gentlemen, I am not asking the Australian people to take me on trust but on the record of a lifetime and an instinct to serve ingrained long before I became opposition leader: as a student president, trainee priest, Rhodes Scholar, surf life saver, volunteer fire fighter, as well as a member of parliament and as a minister in a government.

I intend to take him at his word and consider his entire life before going into the polling booth.

Sunday, 16 September 2012

Meet the new Mayor of Coffs Harbour City Council


Cr Denise Knight – Mayor of Coffs Harbour City Council, September 2012.
Elected by a margin of 992 votes.

Elected to Council: 2008
Elected Deputy Mayor: 2010

Profile Summary
I have lived in Sawtell with my husband and 3 children Katherine, David and Amy for the past 25 years. I am a Registered Nurse by trade and am currently working at a hospital in Coffs Harbour. I have been actively involved in current health issues, local theatre and many fund raisers for the community. You might say I am a bit of an all rounder: I am interested in sport and promoting tourism in this wonderful area. I would like to work for the community by providing a different dimension to Council. I am keen to get an entertainment centre into the city.

Committee Membership
Represents Council on:
Access Advisory Committee
Australia Day and Special Events Committee
Coffs Harbour Arts & Cultural Development Advisory Committee
Jetty Memorial Theatre Advisory Committee*

*Biographical details from Coffs Harbour City Council website on 13 September 2012

Is Campbell Newman Tony Abbott's illegitimate half-brother?



Newman in the full flight of a political lie during the
Queenland state general election campaign of February-March 2012.
The similarities with Abbott are uncanny.

Culture and arts the focus of a Clarence Valley Council survey - participate now!


This media release is posted at the request of one of North Coast Voices’ regular readers. He would like to see Lower Clarence residents in particular participate.


Culture and arts the focus of council survey

Clarence Valley Council has launched an online survey to allow residents to voice their opinion on where the Valley’s heading on cultural and art issues.
As a part of council’s aim to revise its Cultural Plan, the survey urges communities to voice their opinions about what interests them culturally, and where they would like to see improvements.
Council’s General Manager, Scott Greensill, has urged all Clarence Valley residents to complete the online survey.
“The survey takes less than 10 minutes to complete and is an opportunity for residents to tell council what is important to them when it comes to arts and culture in the Clarence,” Mr Greensill said.
“The survey will be available online until Monday September 24. Hard copies of the survey will also be available at libraries and council customer service centres.”
To access the survey, simply go to the CVC website www.clarence.nsw.gov.au and select the link.
“Council adopted its inaugural Cultural Plan in 2007,” Mr Greensill said. “A review of the current Cultural Plan is underway to assess the progress that has been achieved over the past five years. The revised Cultural Plan will be launched in early 2013 and will cover a period of four years.”

Release ends.
Authorised by: Scott Greensill General Manager 02 6643 0212  
For further information contact:
Des Schroder Deputy General Manager (Environment & Economic) 0447 430 261 or 02 6643 0203

Interested residents can take the survey here.