Saturday, January 24, 2026

In which the bromancer and the dog botherer emerge from a dismal weekend reptile pack ...

 

Okay, that got boring fast, the lettuce won, and now it's just a matter of observing the funeral rites, always a tedious business, especially given the way the likely chief mourners are the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way and the hastie pastie, plotting to take over the corpse's job.

The reptiles were well into it in a bigly way ...



... but the pond was bored, compounded by the usual reptile carry on about invasion day.

The reptiles dressed up simpleton Simon's 12 minute rant - 12 bloody minutes - with a hideous uncredited graphic featuring some kind of moving aura ...



Off to the intermittent archive with him ...

‘Existential moment’: How a catastrophic split threatens the Liberal Party’s future
An existential crisis and palpable despair: inside a conservative implosion
No one appears to have asked the question: How do three competing parties on the right all survive? The answer is they can’t.

Simplistic Simon seemed only dimly aware that the reptiles had played a key role in bringing on the implosion courtesy their latest jihad, a confused and incoherent cry for the suppression of free speech, followed by an incessant yammering about the need for free speech.

Also off to the archive with the bouffant one ...

Poll pain for Albanese, partisan gain as Coalition implodes
Chaos has engulfed Canberra as the domestic terror crisis exposes Anthony Albanese’s leadership failures and a fractured opposition falls apart.
By Dennis Shanahan
National Editor

The bouffant one managed an astonishing 8 minute read, which for him is Herculean, putting him almost in nodding off nattering "Ned" territory.

The sublime incomprehension of the way that the reptiles contributed to this current folly continued apace in his extended musing.

Meanwhile, the reptiles carried on the jihad ...

Collectivist thinking is eroding our way of life
Modern antisemitism dispenses with Jews as individuals, blames ‘Zionists’ for everything from global conflict to domestic upheaval
Anti-Zionism fuels Western moral decline, replacing individual responsibility with grievance-based politics.
By Jeremy Leibler

Collectivist thinking is the problem? 

Tell that to your local kibbutz (that's collective agricultural settlements) and to your moshavs (cooperative villages) and then go off and read The Collectivist Core of Israel’s Social Fabric.

Here's what's fuelling Western moral decline - the observing of a slow motion genocide and ethnic cleansing and the establishment of a Board of Peace to which the likes of Putin the Sociopath have been invited, alongside the likes of Belarus, Uzbekistan and Hungary...an international body in service to one man’s ego.

Dame Slap didn't provide an alternative. 

She was busy blathering away in her court of Dame Slap opinion ... 

Who holds the public prosecutors to account to protect the public?
The Dowling saga: who holds prosecutors to account in order to protect us?
The explosive clash between NSW’s top prosecutor Sally Dowling and District Court Judge Penelope Wass has exposed a disturbing truth: Australia has no meaningful mechanism to hold prosecutors accountable for misconduct.
By Janet Albrechtsen
Columnist

Who holds the MAGA cap-donning Dame Slap to account in order to protect innocent stray readers?

No one, but at least she can be despatched to the intermittent archive.

But that left the pond with an ever diminishing circle of choices.

The pond holds Brendan in such contempt that not even his feeble attempt to do an Our Henry in his header could make the pond interested.

Radical chic mob discovers its inner John Stuart Mill
The left ignores censorship and cancel culture — until antisemitic slogans face restriction. Its sudden love of free speech reveals not principle, but a moral double standard.
By Brendan O'Neill
Columnist

Oh FFS, is this the same Brendan that scribbled ...

I’m glad sections of the left find the free-speech crisis so funny. Or ‘free-speech crisis’, as they always put it, those sarky quote marks signalling their scepticism towards the idea that there’s a censorship problem on campus and elsewhere in society. ‘Freeze peach!’, they cry at anyone who thinks it is a bad thing that people can be No Platformed, threatened with death or sacked from their jobs for expressing the ‘wrong’ opinion. Hilarious, isn’t it?

Is this the same loon who turned up at Oxford posing as a free speech fundamentalist, and inspiring this piece in the Oxford Student ...

In a speech in Sydney in 2015, he argued that feminism in its current form amounted to a “war on women”. He criticises the idea that street harassment is widespread: “… there’s catcalling, wolf-whistling, people who might start a conversation with you. And women can’t cope with that, apparently.

Go wolf-whistle yourself into the void ...

Just when are the lizards of Oz going to stop importing these dangerously radicalised Poms intent on radicalising the populace? Isn't there some way to stop these mad furriners from infesting the country? Isn't enough that we have wild-eyed third rate sociology students ranting at us?

Can't Brendan be sent to somewhere else to see where his ranting about freedumb might get him?



Speaking of those disunited states, luckily the bromancer was to hand with a bigly 10 minute read about King Donald ...



The header: A tale of two Trumps: good, bad and bluster; The US President seems to value NATO’s vast security network at nothing. That’s not only insulting, it’s untrue.

There was an actual credit for the artwork, when AI should have copped the blame: Donald Trump, Artwork: Emilia Tortorella

The bromancer continued with his weird Manichaean heresy that there's a good King Donald residing in the same body as the the bad King Donald, when in reality, there's just one barking mad demented narcissistic authoritarian wreaking havoc on the world and on his country.

The best the bromancer could manage was to sound confused ...

It’s official. Donald Trump will not, after all, use the massive military might of the US to invade, defeat and occupy Greenland, a big territory that belongs to Denmark but has a tiny population of about 57,000. Nor will he transfer its sovereignty from Copenhagen to Washington DC, or impose punitive tariffs on European nations, especially NATO members, that formally opposed his Greenland threats.
The Greenland crisis is over. Phew! Trump, after negotiating with his good friend, NATO secretary-general Mark Rutte, says he’s got an “eternal” deal, or “framework” that gives America “everything we want”.
This is confusing. Trump claimed previously that total US ownership of Greenland was necessary for US and world security. Rutte said sovereignty didn’t come up.
Trump’s reckless threat to attack a NATO ally has damaged NATO. The US and Denmark, under article five of NATO, are committed to come to each other’s defence should one be attacked. The idea of one attacking the other is bizarre, horrific, unbelievable.
Trump’s verbal trashing of NATO, which he continued in his truculent, rambling 72-minute speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, is like a bruise in the soft tissue of an athlete’s arm. It will heal eventually. But if Trump keeps punching the same soft tissue, forever aggravating the bruise, the damage will be permanent. In the politics of every NATO ally, the constituency that thinks the Americans unreliable, bad partners is energised. That damages the whole US alliance system, on which Australia’s security is incidentally dependent.

The reptiles immediately introduced an AV distraction, featuring King Donald with angelic halo ...

US President Donald Trump boasted America was going to build the "Golden Dome" defence system with technology that is "second to none". The president came during an interview with Fox News' Maria Bartiromo. Trump said the system would work better if the US had "access" to Greenland, claiming it was "important strategically". When pressed on whether part of the "Golden Dome" will be on Greenland, the president said a "very important part" would reside there. Trump's comments come as he rolled back his aggressive rhetoric on the acquisition of Greenland.




At least that gave the pond a chance to slip in a 'toon ...




The bromancer began the next gobbet with a compleat furphy ...

Yet Trump has also rightly drawn the world’s attention to Greenland’s increasing strategic significance. He continues to goad Europeans into doing more to secure their own defence.

Really? If King Donald wanted to do down the sociopathic Vlad the Impaler, all he needed to do was give Ukraine a helping hand. 

Instead, for reasons not clear but clearly sinsister, he's in thrall to the invader, an inspiration for King Donald's own lust for territorial expansion.

At least the bromancer had the grace to slip in a billy goat butt in the form of an "however":

However, the cost is considerable. This Greenland whiplash represents one of the two faces of Trump. There is another Trump. Last year, Trump took action previous presidents threatened but never seriously looked like carrying out. He ordered the bombing of Iran’s nuclear facilities with the world’s most powerful non-nuclear bombs. This strike, following a sustained Israeli air campaign, gravely damaged Iran’s nuclear program. Trump has also applied sustained tough sanctions on Iran. Preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons is a signal contribution to global security.
It would take a Dickens to do justice to the Janus-faced Trump. Perhaps A Tale of Two Presidents, beginning: He was the best of presidents, he was the worst of presidents, a president of wisdom, a president of foolishness, a leader of Light, a leader of Darkness … you get the drift.
Iran Trump vs Greenland Trump
Over the past few weeks as Iranian authorities murdered thousands of their own citizens, Trump supported the protesters. This was moral leadership. He promised support in terms of military action. Urged by US Arab allies not to strike now, Trump elicited a promise from Tehran not to execute protesters. Now he’s moving a US aircraft carrier battle group to the Middle East. This provides a wider range of more powerful military options.

Moral leadership? Call them out into the streets, and then retreat and watch them butchered?

That's a deeply weird form of moral leadership, and pace Iraq and Afghanistan, we've got plenty of examples of how US moral leadership ends up.

At this point the reptiles revived an old tic which the pond thought it had seen the last of some time ago ...

Don't ask the pond what it means, that'd be like asking the bromancer for sensible insights ...

So, which is the real president, Iran Trump or Greenland Trump? In truth, you never really know which face he’s wearing. Iran Trump is historically consequential, Greenland Trump is bluff, bluster and often irrational blather. This always has to be taken seriously, however, because a US president is so powerful. Yet sometimes it’s weird beyond measure. Channelling his inner Joe Biden, the soon-to-be 80-year-old Trump in his Davos speech repeatedly called Greenland Iceland and made numerous other preposterous statements (such as China has no wind farms).
Sometimes Trump creates negotiating leverage with bluff and bluster, but he devalues his own credibility.
Trump has given up the demand for total sovereignty over Greenland but will get a renegotiation of the 1951 treaty between the US and Denmark.

Ah yes, the old 'concept for a plan' routine, with more details in two weeks, as the reptiles slipped in an entirely meaningless Nat Geo style snap, The red rock mountains of Vikinge Bay, Scoresby Sund, in Greenland.



Hang on, hang on, why did they slip that poley bear into the foreground? 

And why didn't the reptiles mention the bear? 

Did the creature remind them of their climate science denialism, what with things getting warm around here, not to mention there?

Greenland’s importance
So what is Greenland, why is it suddenly so important and what does Trump want with it? Greenland is the world’s biggest island, a landmass roughly a quarter the size of continental US. It sits to the northeast of Canada, mostly covered in ice and mostly all but uninhabitable.
The Inuit and related people have been there, with some gaps, for thousands of years. Europeans – Danes and Norwegians – have also been there for 1000 years, also with some gaps. If you enjoyed the Vikings TV series you would have seen them establish Greenland’s first European settlement.
Eighty per cent of Greenland sits above the Arctic line. Melting ice has opened up greater sea travel possibilities in Arctic waters. The most strategically important such waters is the Bering Strait between Russia and Alaska, to the northwest of the US and Canada. The US and Russia, across the Bering Strait, are only 85km apart. The Bering Strait figured in many Cold War novels and movies.
The waters around Greenland are not as important as that but they are hugely important. Looking at two-dimensional maps can obscure the world’s spherical geography. In the age of fast jets, missiles and satellites, the US faces potentially as big a threat from across the North Pole as from east or west. Russian and Chinese ships have appeared increasingly in Arctic waters.

Phew, no mention of the way that climate change is loosening up Arctic waters and denuding Arctic lands of ice. Instead have another Nat Geo snap ...Nuuk, Greenland.




The bromancer carried on with his lecture ...

In World War II, when Denmark was occupied by Nazi Germany, the US took Greenland to make sure the Germans couldn’t use it, perhaps to attack the US. Washington took Greenland well before it entered World War II, a prudent move.
After the war, in 1946, the legendary president Harry Truman tried unsuccessfully to buy Greenland from Denmark, the offer made and rejected in secret.
But the Danes were happy for the US to have a military presence, and Truman, though more polite than Trump, was not inclined to take no for an answer on military access. In 1951 the US and Denmark signed a treaty for military co-operation on Greenland. The US built a number of military bases. At one stage it had 17 facilities there. After the Cold War, Washington ran down its presence and now has just one base in Greenland.
When Colin Powell was secretary of state, in 2004, the treaty was updated so Washington could expand its military presence only if Denmark and Greenland agreed. Greenland is a self-governing region but still officially part of Denmark, with Copenhagen control­ling defence and foreign relations.
One irony of the present kerfuffle is that, outside Britain and Poland, Denmark is the most solidly pro-US nation in Europe, providing military support to virtually every campaign or war the US has led. There was never any prospect Denmark would prevent Washington expanding militarily in Greenland.
Trump’s deal, or framework, provides for an expanded US presence and with US bases to be treated as sovereign US territory. Such an arrangement is not as unusual as it sounds and resembles Britain’s deal with Cyprus.
Trump’s Golden Dome
Trump has said he wants to use Greenland as part of his Golden Dome project. The Golden Dome is a hugely ambitious effort to provide a comprehensive, layered, missile-defence system for the whole of the US. Many boffins are sceptical this could ever be achieved. But missile defence is real. The model is Israel’s Iron Dome.

Highly ambitious?

Well that's one way of putting it ...

The boffins may scoff now but if ever a single offensive missile is stopped from hitting the US or, worse, gets through, Trump’s foresight will be regarded as genius.
Greenland is rich in rare earths and other minerals. But this is a minor factor. It’s extremely difficult to mine in Greenland. There are only two active mines now. It’s too cold, the ice cover too thick, there are no roads, it’s inaccessible, it’s remote.
Trump’s new agreement will involve greater NATO effort generally on Arctic security. Trump was wildly exaggerating when he claimed Russia or China would take Greenland if the US didn’t. This is one of Trump’s most fantastic inventions. Chinese and Russian missile, satellite, submarine and surveillance capabilities are all big factors. But the idea either would directly attack a NATO nation, on the US doorstep, is far-fetched. Nonetheless, it will be a good thing for Greenland, Denmark, NATO, the US and indeed for global security for the US to have a more formidable military presence.
Trump’s speech at Davos repeated his desire to take full control of Greenland even as he was withdrawing his threats. It was needlessly insulting and hostile. Most US presidents stroke allies and speak hard truths bluntly to adversaries. Trump’s brain seems to have got scrambled. He strokes adversaries such as Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping, and abuses allies.

Then came a snap of the King with the NATO sell-out man, operating under the delusion that he's a Donald whisperer, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte speaks with Trump during a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos this week.



Nothing like a NATO clown thinking he can speak for Denmark and Greenlanders, and speaking of clowns ...



Oh come on Horsey, there's good in the clown, you just need a bromancer to find it ...

Trump’s spoke like a mafioso making an offer you can’t refuse. All we’re asking for is Greenland, Trump said, which is very little compared with what we’ve given. If you say yes we’ll be very grateful, if you say no we’ll remember.
Similarly: “The problem with NATO is I’m sure we’d be there for them, 100 per cent, but I’m not sure they’d be there for us.”
That’s not only insulting, it’s untrue. Denmark and other NATO members followed the US into Afghanistan, a campaign entirely in response to the 9/11 terror attacks, and later into Iraq. To claim Britain, Poland or Denmark wouldn’t help America if needed is unhistorical, inaccurate, insulting and the surest way to undermine the alliance.
NATO’s contested value
Possibly Trump displayed such bad grace about his climb down because he was genuinely forced into it. If he had tried military action against Greenland there would have been uproar in the US. Even supine congressional Republicans would rebel against attacking a NATO ally.
Further, when Trump was threatening military action in Greenland and punitive tariffs on Europe, stock and bond markets headed south. The bond markets, like the Chinese supply of rare earths, have disclosed themselves before as factors that can force a Trump backdown.

Even Pope Leo has lamented Trump’s trashing of the NATO alliance. The chief arbiter of human morality sees the historic US-Europe alliance as a force for good in the world.

    Trump seems to be ignorant or disregarding of the military value NATO adds to the US. 

Eek, not the Pope? Will the bromancer have to start trashing this bloody American Pope for not falling in line with Pellism?

On the pond trudged ...

The US contributes far more militarily to NATO than the reverse. Trump is both right and to be praised for forcing Europeans to do more on defence. And they are doing more (much more than Australia, incidentally). But the vast network of NATO bases, satellite capabilities, listening stations, military forces, British and French nuclear weapons and nuclear submarines, all the NATO air forces, the joint planning, the battle preparedness, the hundreds of billions of dollars worth of US defence equipment NATO buys – Trump seems to value all that at nothing. It’s analytically mistaken, morally obtuse and strategically ridiculous.
Nobody’s asking Trump to speak like Ronald Reagan or John F. Kennedy, but he could surely do a bit better than this.
As this column has noted before, it’s impossible for the US to lead the creation of an allied economic and supply chain alternative to China if the President spends so much time insulting and belittling US allies.
Another feature of Trump’s obsession with Greenland is that it seems to reflect his relatively new obsession with focusing US foreign and defence policy on the US’s direct region. This could be a disastrous invitation to see the world as three great powers with natural spheres of influence – the US in the Americas, China in the Indo-Pacific and Russia in eastern and central Europe and Eurasia more widely.
Foreign Affairs recently published a piece outlining a strategy for the US eventually, peacefully to draw Greenland into some intimate sovereignty association. Essentially it would be by an excess of economic kindness, supply chain substitution and cultivation of the substantial independence sentiment in Greenland.

Then came a sub-heading that for some reason the pond found peculiarly, hilariously funny ...

Lessons from the Vikings

Surely King Donald has learned more than enough from the Vikings, with a pillaging here and a pillaging there.

The reptiles, and so perforce the pond, have already been down this path, and now must go there again ...

Australian Strategic Policy Institute senior fellow and polar geopolitics expert Elizabeth Buchanan in her absorbing book, So You Want to Own Greenland? Lessons from the Vikings to Trump, outlines a range of constitutional paths Greenland could take and charts the importance of pro-independence sentiment.
Trump touts both the Monroe Doctrine and the Roosevelt Corollary to this doctrine, and now wants a Trump corollary as well, the Donroe Doctrine. Trump loves the 19th century but seems to misunderstand it a bit. President James Monroe authored his doctrine way back in 1823. It was simple enough: European colonial powers had to recognise the US interest in Latin America.
The greatest practitioner of the Monroe Doctrine was Teddy Roosevelt, president from 1901 to 1909. Roosevelt, for my money the most extraordinary and engaging of all US presidents, announced in 1904 an expansion of the Monroe Doctrine such that the US would reserve the right, open to no European power, to intervene in the internal affairs of any Latin American country guilty of sustained wrongdoing.
TR was the most subtle and ambitious strategic thinker ever to occupy the White House. Far from being a narrow regionalist, he was the first president to conceive of his country as a great global power.
In explaining the Roosevelt Corollary to congress, TR stressed that the US had no “land hunger”. This was not designed to secure any extra territory for the US. Washington would only interfere if a nation’s misdeeds were so gross that they “invited foreign aggression to the detriment of the entire body of American nations”.
Nonetheless, the US acquired a huge amount of territory in the 19th century, with the Louisiana purchase from France, the Alaska purchase from Russia, the establishment of sovereignty over Hawaii, the acquisition after the Spanish-American war of 1898 of Spanish colonies such as Puerto Rico and The Philippines, though the US always understood it would lead The Philippines to independence in due course.
But these methods are simply not applicable in the 21st century. A subtle, clever Washington could one day perhaps see Greenlanders decide by referendum to join a compact of free association with the US or become a US overseas territory. If it happened democratically, no one could object.
But the US doesn’t need sovereignty over Greenland for security purposes. And it can’t proceed undemocratically. Trump’s threats to Greenland have helped Moscow and Beijing as they associate the US with destabilisation. It’s good reality TV. It’s bad statecraft. Greenland Trump should go into hibernation in an Arctic winter. Iran Trump should re-emerge.

So we can have another Iraq war?

Or so he can make vague promises of help, invite people out into the streets and then watch them be butchered, and then do his usual TACO while boasting about how many he'd saved from execution?

Sheesh ... but at least the pond got the chance to slip in a few cartoons, especially as the bromancer forgot about King Donald's ongoing desire to take over Canada ...



Elbows up Canada ...how you must envy our AUKUS wheelbarrow.

And now as it's the weekend, the pond feels obligated to offer a bonus, even if it's the lowest form of trash retrieved from the hive mind bin.

Before going there, the pond wants to remind correspondents of a note by the keen Keane in Crikey ...

The Coalition, egged on by the media, gets what they deserve from exploiting Bondi (sorry, that's a paywall)
When the Coalition and the media used Bondi to attack Anthony Albanese, it meant opening up issues that were always going to risk tearing the Coalition up. And they have.

The keen Keane went on at some length, but opened this way ...

When Sussan Ley chose to politicise the Bondi atrocity to damage Anthony Albanese’s political dominance, and News Corp and the Nine newspapers egged her on in the hope of either doing the same or achieving some form of regime change, some outcomes could have been predicted.
The first was that tighter gun laws would outrage the Nationals and require either urban Liberal MPs to oppose such laws — which have strong support in the community — or risk splitting the Coalition.
The second was that any tightening of hate speech laws, despite the Coalition’s reflexive support for Israel and incessant attempts to brand Labor as the party of antisemitism over the past two years, risked revisiting a deeply divisive issue that the Liberals themselves have struggled with for over a decade: the protection of free speech and religious groups.
The third was that so weak is Ley’s hold on her own partyroom, let alone the Coalition, that any internal divisions would immediately feed into leadership tensions.
By demanding the immediate recall of parliament to rush through tighter laws and implement “in full” antisemitism envoy Jillian Segal’s bizarre set of unlawful and unconstitutional recommendations, including muzzling the press and stronger laws against hate speech, the Coalition was carefully putting in place a series of land mines — not for Anthony Albanese but for itself. And journalists, under the same delusion that this would destabilise Albanese, cheered them on as they did so.

Well yes, and the reptiles of Oz and their endless crusading should take a major share of the blame.

Now watch as the dog botherer tries to wriggle off that Keane hook, by attempting to blame the ABC ...



The header:  Politicians, incurious media have failed the terror test; Instead of holding Labor to account for its culpability over Bondi, Coalition parties made themselves the issue. They, and an incurious media have failed the terror test.

The caption for another of those hideous uncredited lizard Oz collages: The Coalition split has seen Sussan Ley, left, and David Littleproud, right take centre stage, allowing Anthony Albanese, centre, to escape proper scrutiny. Pictures: News Corp

The pond doesn't have much to say about the dog botherer's offering. He's always been a contemptible loon, with a second rate fundamentalist one-eyed ideological approach to the world, and nothing herein changes the pond's mind ...

At a time of unprecedented national trauma and vulnerability, Australians have been let down by an indolent government and a dysfunctional opposition. That our entire political class could be so negligent is deeply worrying, especially given that with a largely complicit media we are left with no functioning means of accountability.
Federal and state governments, law enforcement agencies and most media could not have moved on more quickly from their culpability over the Islamist terror attack at Bondi Beach that killed 15 people at a Jewish Hanukkah event last month. Rather than examine their failings, they have busied themselves with communal mourning and cloaking themselves in the stories of Bondi’s heroes.
Despite more than two years of warnings about rising levels of antisemitism and Islamist extremism, and constant pleas for more decisive action, Anthony Albanese not only did the minimum possible to stand up against this hatred but, encouraged by the ABC and others, he fanned the flames by demonising Israel. Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong even tried to assuage Hamas by recognising the non-existent state of Palestine, a dangerous move that rewarded terrorism and therefore could only encourage extremists.

You see? The relentless reptile jihad forced precipitate action, and now here we are, with the reptiles and the one time coalition in a sorry mess, and the lettuce triumphant ...

Cue an interruption ...Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks during the Light Will Win memorial service at the Sydney Opera House in Sydney on January 22. Picture: AFP




The dog botherer maintained his rage, invoking fellow crow eater Lord Downer  ...

This is the most shameful dereliction of duty in national security and social cohesion in our nation’s history, and as our longest serving foreign minister, Alexander Downer, has said, the worst foreign policy shift of the post-war era. Thanks to a divided and confused opposition there has been no public reckoning, and we are left to hope the royal commission properly examines these issues.
Instead of holding the government to account and providing a template for stronger action, the Coalition parties have taken a blunderbuss to their own feet as parliament considered hate speech laws this week. Whatever their differences and the complexities involved, they needed to be united and focused.
The Liberals and Nationals have made themselves the issue, thereby absolving the government of scrutiny. It seems unlikely the Coalition will be re-formed until the Liberals install a new leader.

The pond hates to bring up this interruption, but the reptiles keep bringing it up ...




Why? What's it mean? The pond hasn't held a hard copy the rag in its hands for years, not since they gave it away at airports.

So why put this nonsense in the web version? Have they worked out how to put a URL in a hard copy newspaper?

Never mind, it's more amusing as a mystery than the dog botherer's tiresome musings...

The fact the opposition pushed for a return to parliament shows a lack of political judgment and real-world awareness. It wasn’t a lack of legislation that led to the Bondi terror attack, it was two years of unchecked public hatred, antisemitism and Islamist extremism.
The opposition should have been busy prosecuting Labor’s failures in the public debate rather than pushing for a return to the ALP’s home ground of Parliament House in Canberra, where it has the numbers on the floor and the press gallery running protection in the corridors. The opposition did well to force Albanese’s backflip on a royal commission, then lost sight of what mattered.
The pivotal lines and the arguments had been laid out for the opposition by former deputy Liberal leader Josh Frydenberg when he paid his respects at Bondi last month.
“We, as a Jewish community, have been abandoned, and left alone by our government. Our governments have failed every Australian when it comes to fighting hate and antisemitism,” Frydenberg said. “Our Prime Minister … has allowed Australia to be radicalised on his watch.”
The former treasurer rattled off a list of threats and escalations over two years. “We have seen the doxxing of Jewish creators, the cancelling of Jewish artists, the boycotting of Jewish businesses, the graffiti at our schools, the harassment, the intimidation of Jewish students and staff on our university campuses and, of course, the firebombing of our synagogues and daycare centres, and daily protests of hate in this, the lucky country, which is lucky no more,” he said. “And for 2½ years, as the Australian Jewish community and others have raised the alarm bells, they were told by people who should know better that this was not as significant as they had said.”

Perhaps it's best not to go to Haaretz, and be reminded.

Oh why not ...Olga Cherevko Showed the World What's Happening in Gaza. Israel Won't Let Her Return. (sorry, possible paywall)

Inter alia:




And again...



Back to the lizard Oz, as the reptiles slipped in a snap of domestic suffering ...Liberal leader, Sussan Ley, and Nationals leader, David Littleproud have allowed their own parties’ issues to let Albanese off the hook. Picture: John Feder/The Australian.




And then it was on with the job of pinning it all on the ABC, in a way to be expected of a columnist for the Australian Daily Zionist News ...

That is it – that is the undeniable indictment of the Albanese government that should have been the mantra of the opposition. Yet instead of prosecuting this case about the lack of moral leadership, the reckless ignoring of warnings and threats, the opposition followed Labor’s cue and pretended that new laws were needed.
This foolish strategy not only delivered unnecessary laws that are bound to have unintended consequences, it also implicitly excused the government of blame because it suggests the missing element here was not leadership and resolve but legislation.
If an identical series of events had unfolded under a Coalition prime minister there is little doubt he or she would have been pushed close to resignation by now. Labor and its media mates, quite rightly, would have piled on the pressure over warnings ignored and pleas denied. Remember Scott Morrison was scarified by Labor and the media for making the obvious point that he could not physically extinguish bushfires: “I don’t hold a hose, mate.” Yet Albanese spent 26 months resisting demands for action against rising levels of antisemitism and Islamist extremism before the Bondi Beach massacre finally jolted him into some sense of urgency.
Here was a study in denial, a tin ear turned to legitimate concerns and a community endangered because a Prime Minister averted his eyes. In the history of our nation no leader has so actively and comprehensively failed their prime duty to protect their citizens – he still struggles to mouth the words “Islamist extremism”.
Complicit journalists’ failures
The reason journalists are not clamouring for Albanese’s scalp is because they have been just as delinquent on Israel and antisemitism. The publicly funded media in particular has spent the past two years demonising Israel, regurgitating Hamas propaganda, underplaying the atrocities of October 7 and downplaying the scourges of antisemitism and Islamist extremism.
If the bloodshed at Bondi exposed the recklessness, misjudgements and indolence of Albanese, it did the same for much of the media. They have spent the past two years running wild and erroneous claims against Israel, censoring the Islamist and extremist elements of endless pro-Palestinian protests and talking down the threat of antisemitism.

Inevitably Josh wangled his way in, what with his desire to wangle his way back into parliament, Former Treasurer Josh Frydenberg reacts at the memorial at Bondi Pavilion for the victims of Sunday's terror attack. Picture: Sky News




What a pity he lacked the ticker ... as the dog botherer ranted on ...

In June 2024 the ABC’s Media Watch host Paul Barry admonished me for focusing too heavily on the “rise of antisemitism” in Australia on my Sky News program. “On our count, it’s around the 30th time it’s been discussed on Kenny’s show since the war began,” sneered Barry. By the time of the Bondi terror attack I would have raised it 200 times; in fact on what was supposed to be my last program for the year, three days before Bondi, I said antisemitism and the government’s lack of action were the greatest challenges confronting the country. With 15 people buried, including a 10-year-old girl, and dozens injured, I wonder how long it will be before the ABC gets back to scoffing at claims of antisemitism.
Among the biased and incorrect reports run by the ABC was the false claim early in the war that Israel had fired a missile on Gaza’s Al-Ahli Arab Hospital killing 500 people. (In fact, the rocket came from Palestinian Islamic Jihad and killed a fraction of that number.) The ABC constantly reported Hamas claims and statistics as fact, usually ascribing them to the “Gaza health ministry” or some other source that sounded reliable, and among its many deceptions were reports of the absurdly erroneous claim in May last year that 14,000 babies would die in Gaza within 48 hours.
This is the same public broadcaster whose global affairs editor, Laura Tingle, insists the Bondi Islamist terrorist attack had “nothing to do with religion”. Tingle and other ABC staff, including David Marr and Louise Milligan, joined a boycott of the Adelaide Writers Week in solidarity with Randa Abdel-Fattah, who publicly celebrated the slaughter of Israelis in the October 7 atrocities.

The reptiles then selected Tingle for a snap, The ABC’s Laura Tingle claimed the actions of the Bondi terrorists ‘had nothing to do with religion’. Picture: ABC




And yet insofar as the pond understands religion (admittedly not much), butchering a bunch of innocents in a murderous rampage doesn't have much to do with religion, at least if you avoid the carnage of an Old Testament god always up for a genocide, slavery and such like ...

Back to the keen Keane for a few more thoughts ...

None of this would have happened if the Coalition hadn’t been so eager to exploit Bondi and had thought through the consequences of making ridiculous demands, such as implementing the Segal report. Albanese’s conduct following Bondi has hardly been exemplary or politically astute, but ever since the first mutterings of “this is too rushed” began emanating from Coalition ranks, he has looked like a 3D chess player in comparison. He must be unable to believe his luck that he keeps being gifted with such inept opponents.
But Australia is the loser from this emerging Victorianisation of the whole country, in which a poor government can glide through debacle after debacle because its opponents are much, much worse.
The Nationals, at least, can now bring all their forces to bear on trying to fend off a surging One Nation in their heartland. That’s likely to see some pretty ugly politics as the rural party embraces some deeply toxic policies, unhindered by having to keep the Liberals onside. Immigration, the tighter gun laws, climate, environmental and economic regulation, social issues — all are now fair game for the Nats.
For Ley, the universal commentary will be that she’s finished. Most likely she is, but she can now get on with her project of trying to make the Liberals relevant to urban electorates, to the extent that mad right-wingers and ultras like Andrew Hastie will let her.
Right from the moment she became leader, Ley has had to craft a credible opposition from a diminished number of mostly talent-free and selfish MPs and senators. At least she’s no longer lumbered now with a bunch of duds imposed on her by the Coalition agreement. If nothing else, it’s a good time to be a Liberal backbencher — as of this morning, their chances of promotion increased sharply.
As for all the journalists, especially at Nine, who weaponised a terrorist massacre to campaign against Albanese, they might reflect on the fact that in politics, things rarely quite pan out how you expect them to. Or, more simply, be careful what you wish for.

Especially Nine?

Oh fair go, keen Keane, show the reptiles, and especially the dog botherer, some respect.

If you want to look at reptiles weaponising a massacre to campaign against the Labor government, no need to look past the lizard Oz.

Who else could invoke silly Sharri (full disrespect) in support of their current jihad?

Media outlets, especially the ABC, have been bad actors in the Gaza conflict every day since October 7. As such, they too are answerable for the hatred and division that culminated in the bloodied sands of Bondi.
Former ABC director Joe Gersh has spoken out repeatedly about the ABC’s jaundiced coverage of the Middle East and its reluctance to take antisemitism seriously, long before Bondi.
“It is a matter of deep concern to me as a member of the Jewish community, as a former ABC director and as an Australian citizen, that our national broadcaster has not fully understood and dealt with what I believe has reached a crisis proportion, which is antisemitism in this country,” Gersh told Sharri Markson on Sky News in May 2024.
Then, just seven weeks before the Bondi attack, Gersh spoke on my program about concerns the public broadcaster’s biased Middle East coverage was fuelling resentment in Australia: “The manner in which the ABC and other media outlets treat Israel and the war Gaza reflects directly in action in connection with antisemitism here in Australia.”
Back in June 2024, senator James Paterson was critical of the ABC’s “lack of curiosity” about antisemitism. “When we have Holocaust survivors say they’ve never felt less safe in their own country, in Australia, that’s a national disgrace,” he said. “And the fact that a national broadcaster is so uninterested in that is a great shame.”
This gives us a sense of why Albanese has escaped serious media scrutiny over his shameful handling of Middle East diplomacy, and antisemitism and Islamist extremism at home. The distressing reality is that with the Coalition parties split asunder and the Liberals about to endure another round of leadership turmoil, the dangerous indolence of the Albanese government (and the ABC) is set to run unchecked for some time to come.

Phew, the pond is glad that's over, keeping the dog botherer's company is a bit like tending to King Donald ...



Friday, January 23, 2026

Susssan is counting the numbers ... perhaps in a numerological way ...

 

The pond is campaigning for the lettuce and so simply had to go with this offering this day, even if it meant breaking the rule of no late arvo posts.

The splash alone, with its hideous graphic, recommended the yarn to the pond:




The pond couldn't get enough of that weird graphic, which was almost an acid flashback to the time the pond stood on the corner of Haight and Ashbury...



The header: ‘What do you reckon’: How chairman Littleproud runs the Nationals and holds onto his job; Where David Littleproud’s partyroom accepts that his ‘chairman of the board’ approach meant that maybe he didn’t ‘lead’ as much as others, Sussan Ley’s camp increasingly saw it as a striking weakness.

The authors: Sarah Ison and Anthony Galloway

If little to be proud of had nothing to be proud of, then the same could be said for the hideous artwork credited to Frank: David Littleproud. Artwork: Frank Ling

It was just three minutes of celebrating little to be proud of and dumping on Susssan, giving the assault of the lettuce fresh hope:

Nationals leader David Littleproud lets “the will of the party­room” dictate almost everything he does, including now his second historic split with the Liberals.
Every time he opens a meeting of his MPs, he starts the same way: “So, what do we all think?”
It’s a simple way to start, but it’s emblematic of the strategy of a Nationals leader who has kept the loyalty of his MPs, despite his battles with everyone from Sussan Ley to Barnaby Joyce.
“He’s like the chair of a boardroom, not a CEO,” one Nationals MP said, while another noted “he’s the most collaborative leader I’ve ever worked under”.
The front-footedness of so many Nationals on Thursday, who publicly backed Mr Littleproud on every platform they could, suggested he was doing something right.

The reptiles interrupted with an AV distraction showing little to be proud of beside a gesticulating Susssan. 

His dark and brooding image said not so much Heathcliff, as a dark-clouded dumbo, a brooding, festering mess of glum gloom:

Nationals Leader David Littleproud claims some time apart for the Coalition is a “good thing”. “The Liberal Party is still working themselves out, and we’ll let them do that,” Mr Littleproud told Sky News Australia. “I believe in a Coalition, but not at any cost, not without respect, not without understanding. “That’s not how you operate, that’s not the Coalition I’ve been part of for nine years.”



The reptiles quickly moved on, desperate to get to a snap of Bid:

This is despite the obvious trade-off – a leader who won’t “lead” in the same way some have in the past.
“It’s the other side of the coin and you can criticise that, but it’s his style of leadership,” one MP said.
It’s a frustration among ­Liberals, who see the leadership style as a convenient way for Mr Littleproud to throw his hands up in the air when things aren’t going as smoothly as they could and declare “it’s just the will of my partyroom”. But it’s a tried and tested strategy that has worked for Mr Littleproud for some time now.
And yet, a strikingly similar strategy had resulted in an incredibly different outcome.

Cue that snap of Bid, Senator Bridget McKenzie holds a doorstop press conference at Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman



Then came notes on hapless Susssan's style, no doubt stimulated by a plethora of 's's", which, as everybody knows, guarantees an exciting life, even though Susssan has since tried to walk back that story that appeared in the lizard Oz way back in 2015 and luckily was saved to the archive:

...At the age of 10 she went to a boarding school in Sussex, south of London, hoping for a St Trinian’s romp. Her father had promised horse-riding lessons if she won a scholarship. “I thought it would be very jolly – in fact it was a bit grim,” she says. We’re talking at her Albury electorate office in between meeting and greeting doctors. She describes herself as a “skinny, plain, gawky girl” who found it difficult making friends. “Boarding school taught me a great ­lesson in resilience. I can remember thinking, ‘Well, I don’t have to like it but I have to be able to cope, to manage it’.”
When I ask whom she most takes after, she nominates her father. “He and I share a great love of horses,” she says. Her mother Angela suggests father and daughter also enjoy a keen intelligence. The family’s peripatetic existence is a constant pattern in their lives. After migrating to Australia in 1974 they settled briefly in Toowoomba, where Edgar farmed and Angela worked at the local hospital, then moved to Canberra when Edgar joined the Federal Police. They kept horses on a small hobby farm in nearby Murrumbateman.
“She was always ahead academically,” Angela says of her daughter. “She was clever but it was very difficult to say what she was going to do.” The punk-rock phase was fleeting. “I remember that, definitely,” her mother stiffens. When I ask why she chose the spelling Sussan for her ­daughter, she says: “I didn’t”.
After leaving school, Ley spent six months on the dole until she joined the public service. Bureaucracy scared the hell out of her. “I got this panicked feeling when I thought, ‘Is this it?’ ” She survived the boredom by planning an overland trail ride, possibly inspired by Robyn Davidson’s camel journey through Central Australia in 1977. Persuading a friend to come along, she trained a packhorse to carry their supplies and set out in the summer of 1980 to ride from Canberra to Adelaide via ­Victoria. The odyssey ended traumatically in Gippsland near Ninety Mile Beach when Ley’s dog was run over in an accident, his traumatised yelp scaring the pack horse who fell, crushing the saddle bags, billy cans and all.
Desk jockeys back at the Department of Capital Territories admired her spunk. “I hated her from the moment I heard of this legendary woman,” jokes her then co-worker, Sarah ­Engledow. “I wanted to be the star of the office.” The two shared a love of pranks and often amused each other by ringing departmental employees who had “funny” surnames.
Around this time Ley changed the spelling of her first name. “I read about this numerology theory that if you add the numbers that match the letters in your name you can change your personality. I worked out that if you added an “s” I would have an incredibly exciting, interesting life and nothing would ever be boring. It’s that simple,” she says, chuckling. “And once I’d added the “s” it was really hard to take it away.”

Sorry that was then, is is now.

No mutton Dutton she; she no mutton Dutton:

When Ms Ley took up the helm of the Liberal Party, she promised she was going to be different to Peter Dutton, who the Coalition had spent weeks panning in the aftermath of the election for his iron grip on the shadow cabinet and captain’s calls.
She was going to be different, she would be the chair not the CEO of the board, she would listen.
The difference in leadership style was distinct. In fact even among her greatest critics in the party, it had an impact.

The reptiles then returned to an old routine the pond hasn't seen in some time ...



Who knows what those features are, who knows if they're in this version, all the pond knows is that there was trouble at mill...

While conservatives who voted against her were sullen the day she was elected, within weeks their tune had markedly changed. And it was little wonder, Ms Ley had ­created backbench committees and other processes to bring everyone in, she’d held ministerial and partyroom meetings where she asked people to speak and just listened.
For many, it was the first time they felt heard in a while.
But, as seems to be the trend for Ms Ley of late, the brief win was quickly snatched away.
The thing about making ­captain’s calls and having an iron grip on the party is that people don’t feel as confident about brashly declaring their views to you and the public.
And the thing about being heard and told you’ll always be listened to, is that it gives people permission to talk. A lot.
Somewhere along the way, the sheen of this open, collaborative leadership style wore off. Where Mr Littleproud’s partyroom accepted that his approach meant that maybe he didn’t “lead” as much as others, those in Ms Ley’s camp increasingly saw it as a striking weakness.
It may be that being the chief executive rather than a chair of a boardroom is needed when the board is that big, or it might simply be harder when you’re the first woman to sit as a chair of that board.

Naturally there had to be a contrast between the striking weakness and the striking little to be proud of, Nationals leader David Littleproud and MP Kevin Hogan address the media at a press conference in Brisbane on Thursday. Picture: NewsWire / Sarah Marshall



So it was bad news for Sussssan, and good news for little to be proud of , and exciting times for the lettuce...

Either way, the difference in view among Nationals and Liberal MPs of their leader in the aftermath of the Coalition divorce couldn’t be more obvious.
Almost no National criticised Mr Littleproud on Thursday after the split. Or at least if they did, they said actions like not speaking up more in shadow cabinet or personally attacking Ms Ley after the ­Coalition split were “regrettable”.
And how did the Liberals respond to the chaos between the two parties? They called Ms Ley’s leadership almost “irreparable”, or for those seeking to be unkind, “unsalvageable”.
Compare this to Nationals ­admitting that just maybe “a conversation” would be needed if a new Liberal leader expressed his party’s lingering distrust of Mr Littleproud as a challenge to reforming the Coalition. But this was far from a foregone conclusion.
Some Nationals went so far as to suggest that, faced with this choice from the Liberals, backing Mr Littleproud over bending the knee to their senior Coalition partner would be on the cards.

Does this count as a near-death experience?

During the flight back to Albury the little Cessna lurches through pockets of turbulence. Traffic is heavier in the skies around the airport but Ley pulls off another graceful landing. On the ground Tony Abbott hurtled towards a near-death experience but his newest minister steers clear of hot air and static. The Government should follow her example.

Go lettuce ...



In which the lettuce returns to the fray, wilt gone ...and it's all reptiles on deck, including Lord Downer and the Caterist, not to forget Our Henry entirely ...

 

It's back on ...



Forget King Donald and his obsession with Iceland (Greenland too), at last there's a local ruckus worth following, what with the lettuce recently wilting in the summer sun, but now staging a comeback worthy of a 300 Spartans style movie ...

The bouffant one started proceedings yesterday with ...

Commentary by Dennis Shanahan
Bullied, outfoxed and spooked, Littleproud commits all-time act of political bastardry
David Littleproud’s calculated, idiotic Nationals decision will seal his own political demise
The consequences of the Coalition split are profound: the Nats lose staff and resources; Ley’s leadership is mortally damaged; the Libs can now contest National-held seats; One Nation is boosted and the PM has been handed a get-out-of-jail-free card.

Spoilsport the keen Keane in Crikey  was inclined to blame the reptiles ...

When the Coalition and the media used Bondi to attack Anthony Albanese, it meant opening up issues that were always going to risk tearing the Coalition up. And they have. (sorry, paywall)

Inter alia:

When Sussan Ley chose to politicise the Bondi atrocity to damage Anthony Albanese’s political dominance, and News Corp and the Nine newspapers egged her on in the hope of either doing the same or achieving some form of regime change, some outcomes could have been predicted.
The first was that tighter gun laws would outrage the Nationals and require either urban Liberal MPs to oppose such laws — which have strong support in the community — or risk splitting the Coalition.
The second was that any tightening of hate speech laws, despite the Coalition’s reflexive support for Israel and incessant attempts to brand Labor as the party of antisemitism over the past two years, risked revisiting a deeply divisive issue that the Liberals themselves have struggled with for over a decade: the protection of free speech and religious groups.
The third was that so weak is Ley’s hold on her own partyroom, let alone the Coalition, that any internal divisions would immediately feed into leadership tensions.
By demanding the immediate recall of parliament to rush through tighter laws and implement “in full” antisemitism envoy Jillian Segal’s bizarre set of unlawful and unconstitutional recommendations, including muzzling the press and stronger laws against hate speech, the Coalition was carefully putting in place a series of land mines — not for Anthony Albanese but for itself. And journalists, under the same delusion that this would destabilise Albanese, cheered them on as they did so.

And the cheering continued in full force early this Friday morning in the lizard Oz ...




Say what, Barners as a marriage counsellor?




That was just the start of assorted absurdities.

Sublimely refusing to acknowledge their own role in proceedings, the consensus seemed to be that it was all the fault of little to be proud of's mob of mad misogynistic bushies ...with Tamworth's eternal shame seizing on the moment to verbally assault his one time colleagues ...

There were exceptions to the rule. It was inevitable that dedicated Zionist and bigot Our Henry would stay true to the old jihad ...

The reptiles did him proud with just one snap, which said just about everything ...




The pond sent the old bigot's pompous, self-pitying pedantry off to the intermittent archive ...

The Muslim Voice’s opposition to Australia’s anti-antisemitism bill exposes the limits of free speech absolutism and the Coalition’s dangerous confusion over protecting citizens.
By Henry Ergas
Columnist

The pond, as it has done in recent hole in bucket repair outings, will simply note that the pompous pedant was in fine form, with a flurry of arcane references...

The opening flourish set the scene ...

“There are moments,” Oliver Wendell Holmes once wrote, “when education in the obvious is more important than investigation of the obscure.” The Muslim Voice’s submission opposing the combating antisemitism bill – framed as a staunch defence of free expression yet bearing the signatures of Hizb ut-Tahrir and other proponents of sharia law, under which apostasy and heresy are punishable by death – shows that we have reached such a moment.

From there, the aged obscurantist cranked it up to eleven ...

...From its earliest articulation, freedom of expression has been defended through a rhetoric of moral absolutism that has always sat uneasily with its stringent conditions, complex justifications and tight limits.
Nothing better illustrates the misunderstandings surrounding the concept than the iconic status accorded to John Milton’s Aeropagitica (1644). Its famous declaration – “Let Truth and Falsehood grapple; who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and open encounter?” – is routinely treated as a foundational defence of free speech.
Yet Milton himself was so doubtful of truth’s capacity to prevail that he thought only books written in Latin should be exempt from prior censorship. Even those works, once published, remained subject, in Milton’s scheme, to the law of seditious libel, under which most dissenting expression was a grave criminal offence.
No less flawed is the belief that John Stuart Mill was an unqualified defender of freedom of expression. In reality, Mill was intensely concerned about inflammatory speech to the point that, on Vincent Blasi’s influential reading, he excluded “improperly motivated speakers” and their “violence-prone and unthinking followers” from the freedom’s protection.
The underlying insight – that speech can cease to be part of deliberation and become a tool of coercive mobilisation – reappears, with even greater strength, throughout contemporary liberal theory, from Jürgen Habermas and Frederick Schauer to John Rawls and Charles Larmore.
Far from being accidental, the ambivalence of Milton, Mill and their successors reflects an awareness of how misleading absolutist claims about free speech can be. For example, the belief that truth will reliably defeat error in a “free and open encounter” is neither logically compelled nor inevitable, as experience readily shows.
Indeed, the serene confidence with which that plainly fallacious proposition is so often asserted may itself be the best evidence of how doubtful it is.

Could the pompous pedant work Burke into it? Why did you doubt?

It is reasonable, in those circumstances, to recall Edmund Burke’s observation that “though no man can draw a stroke between the confines of night and day, still light and darkness are on the whole tolerably distinguishable”. That does not deny the possibility of error or abuse; it means only that the impossibility of perfect line-drawing is no argument for abandoning judgment altogether.

Could he pass up a chance to mention Orwell? Relax, it's under control ...

The difficulty lies in framing a test that captures dangerous cases without generating even more costly unintended consequences. It would be foolish to deny that this is a real concern. But it would be more foolish still to claim that any such test must set us on the slippery slope to George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. The Nordic democracies may have their flaws; it is nonetheless utterly implausible to suggest that their strict hate speech laws have transformed them into authoritarian dystopias.

There was the usual smiting and smoting, but Our Henry's ending was classic ...

None of this is to imagine that laws can cure hatred. Samuel Johnson had it right:

“How small, of all that human hearts endure,
The part which laws or kings can cause or cure.”

But Johnson’s point cuts only one way: that law cannot remedy every ill is no licence to deny that limits must still be set. When the denial of limits is dressed up as devotion to liberty, and exploited for political advantage, as it is in the Coalition, the moment Holmes speaks of has come: a moment for confronting the obvious and acting on it without posturing, evasion or apology.

The pond regrets that Our Henry's Zionism prevented the pond from relishing the full text, but it's there in the intermittent archive who want the full experience.

As Gramsci is reputed to have said, though possibly he didn't have the current ethnic cleansing being conducted by the government of Israel in mind: “If the old is dying and the new is not yet born, then you live in a time of monsters.”

Meanwhile, the reptiles wheeled in the big guns.

Lord Downer hovered into view to berate that mob with little to be proud of ...




The header: David Littleproud’s petty power game has betrayed the nation; The repeated break-up of the Coalition leaves Labor largely unchallenged, undermining parliamentary scrutiny and risking complacency in economic policy and public governance.
The caption for that mean man: National Party leader David Littleproud has twice withdrawn from the Coalition, sparking debate about opposition effectiveness. Picture: AAP

His Lordship spent a bigly four minute ranting and raging ...

There are many things that make a country successful, and one of them is to ensure those in power are constantly challenged. Those challenges come from a variety of sources, but one of the most important is the political opposition in parliament.
The break-up of the federal Coalition between the Liberal and the National parties will make it harder for the parliament as a whole to challenge the Labor government and hold it accountable. That will be detrimental to the quality of public policy.
Anthony Albanese and his ministers should always feel nervous about the opposition. It’s not just the challenges to their decisions that matter, but also the thought in the back of their minds that they could lose the next election to the opposition if they don’t perform.
Given the decision by David Littleproud and the National Party to, yet again, break up the Coalition, it’s hard to believe that, at this moment, the Labor Party has any fear of losing the next election. Whatever Littleproud may think of Sussan Ley or, for that matter, some of the moderates in the Liberal Party, to behave like he has is to abrogate his responsibility to the Australian public to provide strong opposition.
Littleproud knew when the National Party met to discuss the Labor Party’s hate crimes bill that, if the National Party shadow cabinet members crossed the floor, they’d have to resign or be sacked by Ley. He knew that given the tradition of collective (shadow) cabinet responsibility, Ley would have no choice. He should have found a way to avoid that catastrophe but instead he marched his whole team out of the Coalition.
If that was his way of getting rid of Ley as the Opposition Leader – and that could be his motive for breaking the Coalition yet again – it was a crude and dangerous strategy.
From time to time Liberal leaders have run into stormy waters but never has the response of the National Party been to storm out of the Coalition.
The Prime Minister and his ministers will be leaning back in their comfortable chairs in their ministerial suites in Parliament House thinking they have at least another five years in office.
This is a dangerous thing. It is inevitably going to lead to complacent policymaking. As the OECD has recently demonstrated, the Australian political class is confronting a significant economic challenge to lift productivity, GDP growth and, ultimately, the living standards of the Australian people over the next few years. That will require creative policymaking, including fiscal restraint, reform of the tax system and significant improvements in the way our industrial relations work.
An opposition should be promoting ideas of that kind, although not the reintroduction of inheritance tax and the abolition of negative gearing on properties, which the OECD recommends!

Such was His Lordship's fury that the reptiles only dared to interrupt with just one snap, showing the face of Satan himself, Labor ministers face reduced scrutiny as opposition cohesion weakens in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman




After old Nick, née Chairman Albo, made his token appearance, it was back to the ranting and raging, and the frothing and the foaming, and all the pond had to do was put another load of popcorn in the saucepan, and stand back to enjoy the spectacle...

In putting forward alternative policies and approaches to economic management, the government will be challenged to improve its own performance, but you can see what’s happening.
A government unchallenged is running up budget deficits year by year, accumulating debt, doing nothing to improve productivity, and allowing living standards to stagnate. But so what? It is not being challenged. It doesn’t feel under pressure to change direction.
In the wake of last year’s catastrophic election loss, the Liberal and National parties need to work together. After all, it is not as though there is a wide philosophical gulf between the Liberal and the National parties. They’re basically united in their belief in individual freedom and their opposition to the corporatist and collectivist model the Labor Party favours.
They’re strongly committed to allowing the millions of decisions made by consumers every day, demonstrating their preferences, to be the driving force of economic activity, not diktats from Canberra, which is the Labor way.
Consistent with that, both the Liberal and National parties want to try to keep taxes down and make sure government programs are funded responsibly. On foreign policy, defence policy and other key elements of government, there is nothing that separates the two parties. What divides them is much more a function of geography and tradition than philosophy.
Of course members of parliament don’t always agree with each other, both within the Liberal Party and also within the National Party. Indeed there are members of the National Party who are social liberals and others who are social conservatives.
There are members of the Liberal Party who are economic rationalists and others who are more interventionist. It’s not the parties that split them between the left and the right. Those divisions exist within both parties. The great drivers of economic rationalism in the lead-up to the election of the Howard government, and throughout the life of that government, included leading figures in the National Party such as Tim Fischer and John Anderson.
Yet Tim Fischer was, on the whole, quite socially liberal, even though some of his colleagues in the National Party would have been more traditional and conservative.
In my years in parliament, all of the federal National Party leaders recognised that either the Liberal and National parties united in a coalition in Canberra, or they would founder. Doug Anthony, Ian Sinclair, Tim Fischer, John Anderson and Mark Vaile were all great leaders of the National Party who understood that truism. Yet, in less than a year, the current leader of the National Party has twice taken the National Party out of the Coalition.
So what now? It is a matter of urgency that the federal Coalition be re-formed. Together the Liberals and Nationals have to develop the courage to confront the Labor government philosophically, to develop new policy directions for the country that will help extricate it from the economic torpor it has slumped into, and to become the flag carriers of our nation’s hard-won traditions, history and symbols.
Without the Coalition being reformed, Littleproud will never have any chance of returning to government. And nor will the rest of his party.

To say that the lettuce had a whale of a with His Lordship's fury is to understate the pleasure of seeing an Adelaide toff in red-faced fury ...

Naturally the cartoonists were cartwheeling with pleasure ...




But wait, there was more, with the Caterist afoot, and offering a three minute shifting of the blame to Susssan's mob...



The header: Coalition implosion shows Libs no longer get mainstream voters; The Coalition’s split exposes its failures on immigration and national security, while One Nation’s rise shows voters no longer trust mainstream parties to keep them safe.
The caption for the hapless Susssan, fingers clenched, face glowering: Leader of the Opposition Sussan Ley in the House of Representatives as it adjourns at Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman

Put it another way:




The desperate Caterist tried to change the matters under review to a rant about immigrants - never mind that the process introduced his poison into the country - but the main lesson to be extracted from the Caterist's raging?

If hard right ratbags have their way, Susssan will be turfed out, and the quicker the better:

Only one conclusion can be drawn from the Coalition’s latest implosion: the political realignment on the right has rendered the Liberal-National partnership unworkable.
One Nation’s surge over Christmas proves voters no longer trust the mainstream parties to protect borders or keep them safe. As the Liberal moderates focus on the teal challenge and the Nationals set their sights on countering One Nation’s rise, the Coalition split has further exposed its failures on immigration.
On Tuesday, Tony Burke opened the debate on gun laws and hate crime. It was an hour and 38 minutes before anyone in the chamber was brave enough to raise the “I” word: immigration.
Why had 15 people been murdered at Bondi? Bob Katter asked rhetorically. “Because the Immigration Department allowed some extremely dangerous people into this country. So, the first people who should be held to account are the immigration authorities.”
The messy debate that drove a wedge through the Coalition this week will have done nothing to redeem the two major parties in the eyes of a dissatisfied electorate.
That is bad news for Labor, which Newspoll found has lost 4 per cent of its primary vote since Bondi. The Coalition slipped 3 per cent, which is devastating, since immigration and national security have traditionally been its strength.
When John Howard came from behind to win the November 2001 election in the wake of the Tampa crisis and 9/11, One Nation’s vote was cut in half. In 2013, when Tony Abbott won a landslide by promising to stop the boats, One Nation looked finished.
This time, however, voters have turned to One Nation and almost no one in the Liberal Party seems to understand why. If they did, they would not have allowed themselves to be drawn into a fatal compromise on hate speech that will impress almost no one north of Moonee Ponds or west or Auburn.

Never mind that cruel and heartless immigration authorities had at some point allowed the Caterist himself into the country to become a relentless sh*t-stirrer and breeder of social ills and discontents. 

The net effect was to send the lettuce into a fit of joyous optimism, and again the reptiles managed only one visual interruption: Ahmed al-Ahmed speaks with One Nation leader Pauline Hanson at the national day of mourning event in Sydney. Picture: Jessica Wang




That sighting of the appalling redhead consorting with Islamics sent the Caterist off the deep end ...

Indeed, it will only strengthen the sentiment that the political class isn’t listening. Few Australians looked at Bondi solely through the framework of antisemitism and Middle Eastern politics. Their reaction is elemental.
Bondi confirms their fears that immigration is out of control. It validates a deep-seated anxiety that there are strangers in our midst who despise our values.
The Liberal Party once understood the political consequences of uncontrolled immigration. Yet our own immigration challenge has substantively changed in the past 12 years. Like generals fighting the last war, the Liberal leadership has failed to recognise that the battle lines have been redrawn.
The challenge now is not holes in border security, but loopholes in our over-complicated, bureaucratised immigration system. The most valuable skill for would-be migrants today is the ability to game the system.
Where immigrants were once selected on their qualifications, skewed heavily to professional occupations, now they gravitate to the service sector. We have entered a phase of hyper-diversity placing strains on the old live-and-live ethos. The countries from which people come have also changed, even within the Islamic world, in a pattern that mirrors the conflicts of the early 21st century.
The combined population of people born in Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Syria and Pakistan in Australia more than doubled to 340,000 between 2011 and 2021. Concerns about the character and intentions of migrants is hardly irrational when we consider, for example, that more than 10,000 people who came from Afghanistan between 2008 and 2013 effectively screened themselves by turning up uninvited by boat.
So here we are in a world that has grown meaner and more dangerous this century locked into a wishy-washy multicultural paradigm that declares diversity to be our strength.
It is little wonder that One Nation’s uncomplicated message on immigration is resonating, nor that it resonates more loudly after the Bondi attack, carried out by a proudly unassimilated permanent resident and his radicalised son.
In the midst of Tuesday’s dismal debate, in which dangerously loose legislation was rushed through to address an irrelevance, there was a brief indication that at least one person in the Liberal Party gets it. Melissa McIntosh is the member for Lindsay, a seat centred on Penrith in western Sydney, where roughly seven out of 10 voters were born in Australia, roughly the same proportion as in the nation as a whole.
In a survey late last year, 90 per cent of voters in her Penrith-based electorate said the level of immigration should be reduced.
It wasn’t just the pressure it put on housing and roads, McIntosh told the House. “Migration concerns are also about the safety of our citizens,” she said. “Australians should not be asked to accept a system that allows dangerous individuals to enter and remain in our country … This means enabling the immigration minister to deal with Islamic extremists, who we want to stop coming into this country.”
As Sussan Ley reflects on her testing week, she could do worse than revisit McIntosh's contribution, and reflect on the wisdom of following Labor down the rabbit hole. Policing our vocabulary, for whatever reason, is something Liberals should never do lightly. Certainly, it should never be done in a rush.
One thing is clear: had Ley adopted McIntosh's tone and rejected Labor’s legislation, the Coalition would have ended the week intact. The Coalition must return to the drawing board, recognising multiculturalism is finished as an organising principle.

Yes, we should deport the Caterist immediately.

Brownie was also on hand to have a few words, declaring poor old Susssan toast, without even an avocado topping ...




The header: Sussan Ley is done, but can Andrew Hastie or Angus Taylor do any better against Labor?Anthony Albanese must feel like he is on a football field playing against a bunch of reserve graders who are unable to make him pay for his mistakes whenever he looks at the Liberals.
The caption for the collage which really should have been credited to AI, so dismal was it: Sussan Ley and David Littleproud. Artwork by Emilia Tortorella.

It was only a three minute outing for Brownie but it left the lettuce panting with pleasure and anticipation ...

Sussan Ley’s days are numbered but there is no guarantee Andrew Hastie or Angus Taylor will be able to reunite a political union that has been the cornerstone of centre-right politics for the past 80 years.
There is also little evidence to date that either Hastie or Taylor has the political abilities to rebuild a Liberal Party facing its biggest ever crisis, with Anthony Albanese somehow finding himself in an even more secure position despite his botched handling of the aftermath of the Bondi Beach terror attack.
The Prime Minister must feel like he is on a football field playing against a bunch of reserve graders who are unable to make him pay for his mistakes.
Most Liberals say Ley has lost the support of the partyroom but there is white hot anger towards David Littleproud for announcing the Nationals would divorce the Liberals on a day of national mourning for the victims of the December 14 massacre.
The main leadership issue for the Liberals is timing, as MPs do not want to appear like they are bowing to Littleproud by immediately rolling Ley.

There came an AV distraction, featuring one of those skewed AI thumbs, showing the pastie Hastie in a weird way, Liberal Party MP Andrew Hastie on why he voted for the bill.




Brownie carried on, downgrading the Nats to a country party ...

Liberals are so incensed with Littleproud that many are saying they do not want the Coalition to reunite unless the Nationals replace their leader, with MPs accusing him of misleading shadow cabinet, having little authority within his partyroom and of being untrustworthy.
But a leadership change within the country party is not on the cards any time soon, ensuring there would be fierce resistance to a new Liberal leader moving to reunite the historically successful political partnership ahead of the next election.
Just consider the optics from the latest Coalition pantomime: at about the same time Littleproud announced the Nationals were leaving the Liberals, the Prime Minister delivered a statement paying tribute to the 15 Australians who were killed in the nation’s biggest ever terror attack.

Always ready to serve up monotonous visuals to the hive mind, the reptiles served up that snap of Susssan ... Sussan Ley in the House of Representatives as it adjourns at Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman




Brownie sniped at little to be proud of ...

While Albanese solemnly declared the day was a chance for the nation to “wrap our arms around the Jewish community”, Littleproud called time on the Coalition agreement and revealed the Nationals would “sit by ourselves” and not consider reuniting with the Liberals while Ley was leader.
Littleproud – a man clearly spooked by the rise of One Nation and the leadership ambitions of Nationals senator Matt Canavan – managed to do something that seemed to confound Labor strategists since December 14: he made Albanese look like a statesman.
The Liberals and Nationals have brought the focus of the political debate back on to their own dysfunction, just a fortnight after Albanese’s leadership was under pressure after being forced into an embarrassing about-face on holding a royal commission into antisemitism.

Inevitably the reptiles featured a snap of the beefy boofhead from down Goulburn way, though it was a pity they hadn't produced one of their classic uncredited collages showing him in a forest of whale-killing windmills, Angus Taylor. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman




Brownie gave Susssan little more than a month ...

Ley’s leadership and the optics of the Liberals and Nationals sitting apart are set to dominate parliament when it returns next month, giving the Albanese government a free ride despite its vulnerabilities on fiscal management, the energy transition and national security.
A fearsome debate over policy after the 2022 election was understandable, and in many ways desirable, but the outcome of this week was just pointless self-destruction.
Ley’s culpability in the soap opera is fiercely contested internally, with her supporters arguing that she did little wrong and needed to sack three Nationals frontbenchers for crossing the floor in the Senate on Tuesday night to oppose Labor’s watered-down reforms to the hate group crackdown.
Others say she made strategic mistakes by boxing in the Coalition to quickly negotiate an outcome on antisemitism legislation by calling for parliament to return immediately after the terror attack.
They also criticise Ley for opting against holding a joint Coalition partyroom on Tuesday so concerns could be aired about the legislation, a process that would have given Liberals a better idea on the breadth of opposition within the Nationals.

Cue a snap of a barking mad extremist, of creationist young earth origins: Andrew Hastie. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman




No wonder the lettuce was wildly excited:

Of the two potential future Liberal leaders, Taylor has more support within the dominant right faction but Hastie could have the numbers if he strikes a cross-factional deal with moderates and the centre right.
Lindsay MP Melissa McIntosh, from the centre right, has made no secret of her leadership ambitions and has been floated as a potential deputy for Hastie.
Any cross-factional deal will be resisted from conservative number-crunchers, who are pushing for Taylor and Hastie to come to an agreement so there is relative consensus on Ley’s replacement.
It would take a metamorphosis for Hastie or Taylor become a leader able to drag the Liberal Party into a competitive position at the next election, even if they did manage to reunite the Coalition.
Both men had key portfolios in the last term of parliament, Taylor as opposition Treasury spokesman and Hastie as defence spokesman, and neither of them landed any major blows against an Albanese government that was vulnerable on both issues.

As a final reminder, the reptiles wrapped up Brownie's rant with a snap of the man with little to be proud of: Nationals leader David Littleproud. Picture: NewsWire / Sarah Marshall




The cruellest news came in a reptile EXCLUSIVE ...




The caption: Gina Rinehart brokers Trump lunch for $300,000 One Nation donation deal; Australia’s richest person, Gina Rinehart, has agreed to take three former Liberal Party-donating fund managers to dinner with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago, in exchange for them donating $100,000 each to Pauline Hanson’s One Nation.
The authors of the EXCLUSIVE: Matthew Cranston and Elizabeth Pike
The caption for the happy snap: From left, Doug Tynan, Ben Cleary, Pauline Hanson, Gina Rinehart, Jane Cleary and Charlie Tynan with the auctioned ‘Trump’ handbag.

It was only a three minute read, but it set the lettuce to dancing in delight, while reptiles trembled in fear at the betrayal:

A trio of former Liberal-donating fund managers have given $100,000 each to Pauline Hanson’s One Nation, after Australia’s richest person, Gina Rinehart, agreed to take them to dinner with Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.
In a move that reflects a broader push from former Liberal Party donors to steer the Coalition to a more conservative footing, the three money managers – GCQ Funds Management’s Douglas Tynan, Tribeca Investment Partners’ Ben Cleary and Aitken Mount Capital Partners’ Angus Aitken – confirmed to The Australian that they had agreed to the fresh funding for Senator Hanson.
The switch-up in donations was in part an outcome of building frustrations with the flailing federal Liberal Party reflected by a multitude of former donors including Earl Evans, chief executive of stockbroking firm Shaw and Partners, who said he was expecting further donors to abandon the party and consider One Nation.
The splitting of the Coalition for the second time in less than a year has left both the Liberals and Nationals in tatters, with Sussan Ley’s leadership hanging by a thread and polling showing One Nation now ahead of the Coalition in voting support for the first time.

There came yet another reminder of the unhappy situation, and the odd couple, deep into a marital feud and divorce proceedings, The Coalition has split for the second time in less than a year, creating uncertainty for donors and supporters.




Oh the behaviour was shocking to behold ...




Meanwhile, Gina was keen to get into bed with the man who coveted Iceland ...

The dinner with Mrs Rinehart and the US President at Mar-a-Lago is yet to have a date set. It was agreed to between the fund managers, Mrs Rinehart and Senator Hanson at a lunch in Brisbane on December 17 aboard the 644-foot private residential ship The World, on which 165 ultra-wealthy families own apartments and navigate the globe.
The Australian understands Mr Cleary organised the meeting in the days after the Bondi attack, buoyed by a growing admiration for Senator Hanson’s stand against antisemitism.
A Trump handbag, which can be purchased only at Mar-a-Lago, was also auctioned off during the lunch and bought for $20,000 by Charlie Tynan, with the money going to Senator Hanson’s One Nation fund. Mrs Rinehart declined to comment. Her support for One Nation has been no secret and has only served as a catalyst for further funding switches from the Liberal Party.

For no particular reason, the reptiles settled on a no nothing snap ... Gina Rinehart agreed to take the fund managers for a lunch with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago in exchange for donations to Pauline Hanson’s One Nation. Picture: AP




Then came a a final gobbet of treachery, betrayal and demands for the lettuce to win:

Of the three fund managers who agreed to pay the $100,000, Mr Cleary and Mr Tynan declined to comment on the shift away from the Liberal Party, but said they largely supported the sentiment expressed by Mr Aitken, who observed that One Nation was rapidly snatching support away because of its more conservative stance on policies.
“The Liberals are too worried about trying to win back inner-city teal votes with middle-of-the-road policies rather than appealing to hardworking Australians in suburbia who are being totally stuffed over by the current government on everything from housing to energy costs,” Mr Aitken said.
“Hence this is why One Nation is taking a lot of former lifelong Liberal voters as the party of common sense. I have no interest in donating more money to the federal Liberal Party.
“The fact most of them could not even agree to move away from net zero shows me they are absolutely cooked as a party.”
One wealthy Liberal Party donor from the construction industry told The Australian on Thursday he would no longer donate unless there was a change.
“I, and others I know, feel the Liberal Party is continually playing the same hand and expecting a different result,” the donor said. “In order to keep our support, something has to change.”
Mr Evans said he expected donors and supporters will move, but not in the numbers expected.
He compared the saga with the Coalition to the Gillard-Rudd era, noting it will be cyclical.
“There’s definitely going to be an increase in the independent vote and you would put One Nation in that vote,” Mr Evans said.
“Given the poor performance and the shambolicness of the Coalition in the last six months, I think it definitely pushes people toward the independents, teals and One Nation, but I don’t think it will be to the level the polls are showing.”
Advance Australia executive director Matthew Sheahan said the conservative lobby group’s supporters sent more than 250,000 emails to federal politicians “demanding they vote against Labor’s hate speech laws”.
Advance spends the millions of dollars it receives in donations on campaigns against parties and causes it opposes, rather than supporting parties directly.
Mr Sheahan said the group was satisfied the former Coalition was able to get the “worst part” of the hate speech legislation dropped and, at this stage, it would not campaign against the Liberals or Nationals over the issue.

On the upside, at least the pond could slip in a 'toon celebrating the demented narcissistic King whose madness reached a new peak in his Davos speech ...




So desperate were the reptiles that they hied off to old codgers to express disgust at the way that the lettuce had been given a light handicap, while Susssan had been saddled with little to be proud of's mob ...



The header: Nationals looking at an uncertain future as country party veterans feel disgusted by Coalition split; Barry O’Sullivan is old school National Party. The chain of events that blew up the Nationals’ frontbench under David Littleproud and then the coalition itself has left him disgusted and dismayed.
The caption for the old schooler: Former Nationals senator Barry O’Sullivan says the party’s decision to walk away from the Coalition has left him “disgusted and dismayed”. Picture: AAP

The reptiles allotted a full five minutes to the old schooler having a vent ...

Barry O’Sullivan is old school National Party, a former senator from the conservative heartland of rural Queensland who thought he had seen it all in politics. Until now.
The chain of events that blew up the Nationals’ frontbench under David Littleproud and then the Coalition itself has left him disgusted and dismayed.
Disgusted because in one fell swoop the Nationals relieved the pressure that was building on the Labor government over Anthony Albanese’s ham-fisted legislative response to the Bondi Beach ­terrorist attack.
Dismayed because he can’t see a path back for the Coalition after Littleproud and his team called it quits with the Liberal Party, dissolving a partnership that had been a fixture of national politics for eight decades.
“This didn’t need to happen,” said Mr O’Sullivan, a one-time mover and shaker in Queensland’s merged Liberal National Party who served for five years in federal parliament.
“It’s a terrible state of affairs. Just when Labor was about to drive the pointy end of a stick into their own neck, we’ve come and taken it from them and used it on ourselves. It’s as bad as it gets. ­Albanese probably can’t believe his luck.”
To do it on the Day of National Mourning for the 15 victims of the December 14 beachfront atrocity at Bondi spoke volumes about the lack of decorum ­attending this act of epic folly. Neither Mr Littleproud nor Sussan Ley, her leadership perhaps terminally undermined, can take pride in how they conducted themselves.
The question is: where next? With the departure of the ­Nationals’ frontbenchers, the ­opposition will become a one-party show under Ms Ley. Liberals will fill the vacated positions, making any rapprochement all the more vexed.
Given Mr Littleproud’s declaration that his team “cannot be part of a shadow ministry” led by Ms Ley, the only conceivable way forward is for her to go, allowing a new leader to reshuffle the deckchairs yet again and bring the Nats back into the fold.
Don’t hold your breath. One senior Liberal MP, speaking on condition of anonymity, made the point that the colleagues were in no mood to do their ex-Coalition partners any favours.
“What’s gone on over the past 48 hours is going to create a legacy of bitterness, I can assure you of that,” the MP said. “I accept that Sussan didn’t manage things as well as she could have. But the Nats are the ones who brought this to a head. They’re the ones who pulled the pin. They’re going to have to live with it.”

For yet another reminder of the sour lemon that had ruined everything, there came little to be proud of himself, Nationals leader David Littleproud announces the end of the Coalition with the Liberal Party, a move that has triggered turmoil within the opposition. Picture: AAP




How the reptiles hated that daddy had been so cruel to mum:

Nationals MP Anne Webster, who has held the seat of Mallee in regional Victoria since 2019, insisted her partyroom was right to stand on principle and back rebel frontbenchers Bridget McKenzie, Susan McDonald and Ross Cadell, who on Tuesday broke shadow cabinet solidarity and voted in the Senate against the government’s hate laws. Ms Ley accepted their resignations on Wednesday, despite being urged by Mr Littleproud not to.
“This was incredibly difficult,” Ms Webster told the ABC on Thursday, after Mr Littleproud announced the split. “I had tears in my eyes because we want to stand for principles that reflect the ­values of Australians, and we ­represent regional seats.
“I had hundreds of emails … from my own electorate. Not one asked me to support this ­legislation.”
The parties had gone their separate ways twice before, most recently in the wake of last year’s federal election drubbing by Labor, when talks over a new ­Coalition agreement failed and Mr Littleproud walked.
Both sides blinked and the Nationals returned after a week of fraught uncertainty.
The ill-judged 1987 Joh for Canberra push by then Queensland National Party premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen triggered the only other rupture since the Coalition formed under Robert Menzies in 1946, two years after he founded the Liberal Party.
It was the bedrock of Australia’s two-party system of government, today creaking at the seams, with support for both Labor and the conservative parties cratering. The Nationals, especially, have felt the heat from the surge in the published opinion polls by Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party. For the first time this week, One Nation’s primary vote in The Australian’s Newspoll pushed past the Coalition at 22 per cent, up seven points. The Coalition’s primary vote fell three points to a record low of 21 per cent, while Labor dropped four points to 32 per cent.
While One Nation’s vote is volatile, washing in and out from election to election, the Nationals are particularly vulnerable because their home turf in regional Queensland is also Senator Hanson’s happiest hunting ground.
In the 10 federal seats where One Nation does best nationally, six are traditional Nationals’ seats held by the LNP. (MPs and senators elected under the banner of the merged party sat in a designated partyroom in Canberra under the Coalition arrangement, a somewhat clunky departure from the state scene where the LNP governs in its own right under Premier David Crisafulli.)

Even worse there were some bush women who had stood behind their men as they did old Susssan down, Nationals MP Anne Webster says the party was right to stand on principle after backing frontbench colleagues who broke ranks over hate speech laws. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage




The old timer wasn't for turning as Jamie turned to do the numbers in even more depressing detail:

Election analyst Antony Green suggested on Thursday that it was “hard to believe” Mr Littleproud didn’t have one apprehensive eye on Senator Hanson when he dynamited the Coalition. “Perhaps this week is not all about One ­Nation, but what has been building for months is about One ­Nation,” Green blogged, noting the far right party’s rise in the polls.
The Liberals’ crushing election defeat last year at Mr Albanese’s hands, compounded by Ms Ley’s well-documented woes, have masked the Nationals’ own suite of problems. The defection of high-profile senator Nampajinpa Price to the Liberals and of former leader and deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce to One Nation reduced the size of the Nationals’ partyroom to 18 – 14 MPs and four senators, down from 16 MPs and six senators following the 2022 poll. The LNP provided eight of Mr Littleproud’s current team.
Small comfort, then, that the amalgamation of the parties in Queensland, dating back to 2008, will avert potential three-cornered contests between rival Liberal and Nationals candidates if they don’t reconcile before the next federal election. The danger lurking in the Senate vote is acute for the ­Nationals. Then deputy leader Perin Davey lost her NSW Senate spot to Labor in 2025, an outcome she blamed on being placed third on a joint ticket with the Liberals. At the same time, One Nation doubled its numbers in the upper house to four.
Mr Joyce is considered a lock on securing a quota in NSW next time around, when he switches from his seat of New England to the Senate with Team Hanson. If the One Nation surge lasts – a big if – the party will like its chances in Tasmania, Western Australia and of capitalising in Queensland, where Senator Hanson is up for re-election and an outside chance to pull her No. 2 on the ticket through on her coat-tails, potentially at the expense of the LNP.
One veteran Coalition number cruncher wouldn’t be surprised if she fielded a team of eight senators in the next parliament.
Mr O’Sullivan said there was no chance One Nation would break through and win a house seat – in Queensland or anywhere else. “It’s not possible when you do the maths. They can’t get there,” he insisted.
But that didn’t mean their preferences couldn’t hurt the LNP, hitting the Nationals where they were vulnerable in the regional seats eyed by Senator Hanson.
This was rammed home to him recently when he fell into conversation with a member of the work crew renovating his home. Did he have any thoughts on who he would vote for at the next election? The young man didn’t hesitate: Pauline Hanson.
“He’s just over everyone else,” Mr O’Sullivan said.

And yet, after all that fuss, and more not covered by the pond, remember those words of the keen Keane ...

When Sussan Ley chose to politicise the Bondi atrocity to damage Anthony Albanese’s political dominance, and News Corp and the Nine newspapers egged her on in the hope of either doing the same or achieving some form of regime change, some outcomes could have been predicted.
...By demanding the immediate recall of parliament to rush through tighter laws and implement “in full” antisemitism envoy Jillian Segal’s bizarre set of unlawful and unconstitutional recommendations, including muzzling the press and stronger laws against hate speech, the Coalition was carefully putting in place a series of land mines — not for Anthony Albanese but for itself. And journalists, under the same delusion that this would destabilise Albanese, cheered them on as they did so.

Credit where credit is due. It's not just the little to be proud of man who has little to be proud of ...

And so to end with a celebratory immortal Rowe designed to get the lettuce dancing in the street ...




After all that Friday excitement, some might like to down an edible and chill ... (if Krugman can end his posts this way, so can the pond).