I’ve been really concerned about this. I know their real power is in the senate but the Greens have done well to pull things to the left in both houses.
How many times will i hear about the evil left if the greens loose their leader
Submitted 1 day ago by Hotstillnasty@lemmy.world to australia@aussie.zone
https://www.abc.net.au/news/elections/federal/2025/guide/melb
Comments
EmilyIsTrans@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
Ilandar@lemm.ee 1 day ago
I wouldn’t stress too much about it, I don’t think this will be a major setback for The Greens as a political movement. They are in a difficult stage of their evolution as a party where they are facing some issues balancing environmental and social issues, older and younger voters, hard left voters that will support them no matter what vs soft left voters who they’ve picked up from Labor over the past couple of decades, etc. Under the past couple of leaders they’ve had a strong desire to grow and become a real progressive force in Australian politics, but that is not necessarily a realistic goal while our system continues to favour the larger centre.
After jumping to 4 MPs in the 2022 election, I think they tried to go too hard, too soon which might have frustrated some of those softer left voters and pushed them back to Labor. Everyone is very focused on Trump’s impact on the right, but if this election was a rejection of culture wars then you have to question whether The Greens have also been caught up in that and were seen as too disruptive and divisive during the last term. I think they actually realised this prior to the election, which is why they tried to pivot to a “keep Dutton out” strategy and back off Labor, but the chaos in the US ultimately made it a difficult perception to dislodge from the minds of some of their softer voters.
Taleya@aussie.zone 11 hours ago
I’d go as far as saying it had next to nothing to do with the greens and it was all about the right.
The shitshow that is the US has absolutely tanked the political right globally, and although we don’t have first past the post, there’s a lot of voter ignorance and people threw themselves behind labor when they might not have done so normally just to keep Dutton out of power.
Salvo@aussie.zone 1 day ago
Their new leader needs to be able to solve environmental problems with holistic solutions.
We need renewable energy, but in order to get there we need a Secondary and Tertiary manufacturing industry.
Someone needs to (responsibly) build the consumer solar panels and batteries for us to install in our Garages and Roofs.
Someone needs to build the equipment for the solar farms, solar ovens, wind farms and hydro batteries (responsibly).
Meanwhile, it is not enough to just ban outdoor industry, the land maintenance that High Country Grazing, Logging and Mining were (or should have been doing) previously needs to continue being performed and funded by someone. Otherwise there will continue to be unfettered Bushfires and Poisoned mining ghost towns.
1luv8008135@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Finally someone says it out loud. It was doing my head in how this was staring at us right in the face as a possibility but got overshadowed by Dutton getting obliterated. I don’t know how, but Labor have someone manage to vaporise not one but two opposing party leaders in a single election. It’s nuts.
Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 day ago
This would just be another parallel between us and Canada. Yes, Pierre Poilievre losing his seat, and Dutton following in his footsteps, has gotten most of the attention. But New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh also lost his seat in Canada.
TassieTosser@aussie.zone 1 day ago
Three if you count Clive “retiring” from politics.
r_deckard@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Clive will be back. He’s like Palpatine.
Somehow, Palmer returned.
Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 day ago
It’s about time the AEC adopts a 3CP count on election night for 3-way seats.
For those unaware, on election night, AEC workers count the 1st preferences of votes, and then conduct a 2CP count to the 2 candidates the Commissioner (or the Division Returning Officer, not sure which…but it’s someone high up in the permanent AEC staff) has decided are most likely to win. This is great in most cases, but if the AEC gets it wrong it can lead to wild results where the person who was believed to have won on the night has actually lost, and either the 2CP loser on the night actually wins, or even the winner can be someone who made no appearance in the 2CP on the night.
I don’t know who the 2CP was between on election night in Melbourne (I was too busy doing that counting in Ryan—ours was between Greens and LNP), but the need to “re-throw” between Labor and Greens implies it was probably Greens/LNP? If so that seems strangely out of alignment with previous results so I don’t understand why they did that. If they did in fact 2CP between Labor and Greens I wonder why the recount would be so far off of what was declared on the night.
Doing a 3CP count on the night, only in seats where this kind of thing is considered likely, would give a much better indication. Yes, it would be more anticlimactic because you’d lose the ability to confidently declare who did win, but it would at least mean the numbers you’re seeing on the ABC (or your media source of choice) are definitely accurate and unlikely to change by large amounts over the coming week. And you can just make an estimate of how preferences will flow from the 3rd in 3CP to the other two. (Before anyone asks, it would definitely not be viable to do a 3CP and then a 2CP on the night. I didn’t leave the booth until 11:30 pm last night as it was; extending it too much more than that would be unreasonable. Besides, you couldn’t start a 2CP until every booth had done its 3CP, including the postal votes and prepolls. And that’s just not how it works. Each booth does their own thing based on guidance set out ahead of time.)
3CP would actually speed up the result, allowing workers to get home earlier and the media to get reliable answers sooner. Each ballot would take a bit longer to count, but the number of ballots to be counted is absolutely decimated (in the modern, not Roman, sense). Instead of counting nearly 700 2CPs, we’d be counting less than 250 3CPs at my booth. The disadvantage is the potentially higher error rate. (A less important disadvantage is the lack of ability to use the 3CP to find errors in the 1st preference results…but you only lose this ability in the 1 candidate that would have undergone 2CP redistribution but is now part of the 3CP…in my booth our redistribution of the Labor candidate results meant we noticed we had undercounted her 1st preference results initially by 1.)
So in summary:
- 3CP would reduce post-election-night surprises
- 3CP would give the media accurate, if incomplete, results that can be used to make informed speculation about the final result
- 3CP would speed up the count on election night, saving the AEC money, their workers sleep, and giving the media information faster
I don’t know if this would require legislative change, a directive from some Minister, or just an internal AEC policy change. But whatever it is, it needs to happen.
MrAndrewD@aus.social 1 day ago
@Zagorath @Hotstillnasty I think the issue in Melbourne was also caused by the electoral boundaries changing, and some significant booths with very different political leanings changed electorates.
You'd hope redistribution was considered in the calculation of leading candidates, but it's a little opaque?
On top of this, the swings at some booths were wild - with the greens dropping from 64% of primary vote to approx 40% of primary vote in my local booth - something the AEC can't take into account when planning.
anne_twain@theblower.au 1 day ago
@Zagorath @Hotstillnasty I guess this is the reason there are re-counts when the result is close.
Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 day ago
Not exactly. Everything counted on election night gets recounted later. All the counts done on the night are basically unofficial counts for the media and the convenience of the politicians. They’re a little more official than that makes it sounds, but only a little.
maniacalmanicmania@aussie.zone 1 day ago
- The AEC has begun a preference re-throw between Labor and the Greens. At this stage only Postal votes have been thrown and these flow 75.9% to Labor and 24.1% to Greens. Given the high Liberal vote for postal votes, this sample of preferences may be skewed and projects to Labor ahead but Melbourne is being left in doubt until further preference counts are completed.
- Sarah Witty leads by an estimated 2,899 votes.
- Previously held by GRN with margin of 6.5%.
Eyekaytee@aussie.zone 1 day ago
what do you mean? who will be saying evil left?
Hotstillnasty@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Your right. It does not make sense. I’ve changed it
Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 day ago
What did it originally say?
Btw it now says “loose”, when presumably you meant to say “lose”.
Nath@aussie.zone 4 hours ago
Antony Green said on Saturday night that he believed Mr Bandt would end up retaining Melbourne.
Antony Green said 2 hours ago that he believed Mr Bandt would end up retaining Melbourne.
dillekant@slrpnk.net 2 hours ago
It’s still a dangerous spot though. The LNP votes will doubtless (largely) flow through to Labor. If enough people are spooked with the Greens housing policy, then the preference flows might not be as favourable.