Tuesday, October 12, 2004



Spectre of arrogance haunts Liberal chiefs
West Australian, 11/10/2004
Ben Ruse and Karen Middleton write about the Liberal Party needing to avoid appearing `arrogant` having defeated the Labor Party in the federal election, and not make the same mistake as former Labor prime minister Paul Keating by trying to pass legislation that is not supported by the community.

We're not going to allow this to go to our heads. We're not going to start proposing things that are disruptive but we certainly will press ahead very strongly with things that we've believed in for a long time, particularly in the area of industrial relations.
-John Howard 11 October 20004; after the metaphorical game of two-ups

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Eye on Politics & Second Longest Serving PM: Time to Say Good Night to Election Counterspin
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Rates bell rang: The Phar Lap with two hearts versus The Lightning Horse with two heads [Australia's wonder horse. Phar Lap triumphed during the Great Depression of the early 1930s, when a hero was most needed by the people of Australia. Phar Lap's name was derived from the Thai word for lightning rather than train wreckChris Sheil: Backpages Confessin' the blues; Tim Dunlop: Road to Surfdom Reaching Out In A Big (And Highly Visible) Way ; Hugh Mackay: It is not what happens during campaigns that determines what voters will do]
• · Peter Hartcher: A leader of rare power, with an unczeched mandate for change John Howard said the election was about trust, and Australians responded by giving him more trust than we have extended to any prime minister in a generation
• · · The furiously contested 2004 election has had an unexpected artistic bonus: more political songs than any election since the dawn of rock 'n' roll, and more openly partisan songs than anyone might expect. Return Of The Protest Song ; [Scientists imagine Lennon at 64 ]
• · · · Cross-media and foreign ownership: Election a turn-off for TV viewers
• · · · · Election opens way for media bidding frenzy