Tags: centralisation, constitution, election 2013, local councils, referendum, totalitarianism
Tag Archives: referendum
Say NO To These Sneaky, Power-Grubbing BureaucRats
5 Jul- Comments 1 Comment
- Categories Uncategorized
Vote NO To Stop The Bastards … AGAIN
4 JunHere we go again.
I encourage all readers to visit the nopowergrab.com.au website, and learn why you should vote NO to the referendum question that will be included with your ballot papers at the September election.
Has this referendum been proposed before?
Yes. Similar referendums were put by the Whitlam government in 1974 and the Hawke government in 1988. The 1974 referendum lost by 53.15 per cent of the total vote and
was only successful in New South Wales. The 1988 referendum lost with 66.39 per cent of the total vote and lost in all States. At both referenda the Australian people rejected Canberra’s power grab.
The fact that both of the major political parties support this referendum proposal, is yet another reason Why People Of Conscience Cannot Vote For Abbott.
Tags: constitution, election 2013, local government, referendum
- Comments 4 Comments
- Categories Uncategorized
Barnaby Is Wrong
9 MayFrom the Australian:
SENATOR Barnaby Joyce says he will vote in a referendum to recognise local governments in the constitution and allow federal funds to flow directly to them.
But he has slammed the federal government’s timing of the announcement and its failure to say what the exact wording of the referendum will be.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard launched the “yes” campaign for the referendum on Thursday
At the federal election on September 14 voters will be asked to decide whether local councils and shires should be recognised in the Constitution.
Mr Joyce told reporters in Sydney on Thursday he would vote “yes” but questioned why the government had announced the referendum now.
“They’ve announced a dopey wedge that’s actually going to compromise our capacity to get up financial recognition of local government,” he said.
“They’re trying to create a distraction and this is why people don’t like politicians and get so cynical.”
No, people don’t like politicians because we have learned … and they daily continue to prove … that everything they say and do is just a smokescreen.
A smokescreen of words, camouflaging an unrelenting self-interest.
“Financial recognition of local government”, they say?
Bollocks, I say.
This referendum is about nothing more, and nothing less, than enabling the bureaucrats and politicians in Canberra to bypass the State governments.
In other words, to further increase the centralising power of the Federal government –
Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore described the referendum as “necessary” but about a “non-contentious” change.
“This referendum is essential to ensure that the Commonwealth parliament has the power to provide direct financial assistance to local government,” Ms Moore said in a statement.
I say “No” to this referendum proposal.
Indeed, I would generally say “No” on principle to any referendum proposal suggested by politicians and/or bureaucrats.
The only referendum that is likely to be worth even thinking about voting “Yes” to, would be one suggested by the general public.
Which is why I am a supporter of Swiss-style Direct Democracy.
Where the people are recognised in the Constitution, and have the power to force a referendum on the topics that they think are important.
Such as revoking the laws passed by politicians.
UPDATE:
From Quadrant (h/t Twitter follower @HiggsBoson4) –
While, at first reading, this proposal might have a benign appearance, a little thought reveals that the proposal restricts the state governments.
The idea of “democratic recognition” being included in the Constitution has the effect of limiting the power of the state government to fulfil its governmental responsibilities in such way as the state parliament chooses.
The “independent” panel’s discussion paper presents two possible proposals as follows:
Each state shall, and each Territory may, establish and maintain a system of local government bodies directly chosen by the people.
Each state shall, and each Territory may, provide for the establishment and continuance of a system of local government elected in accordance with the laws of the state or Territory.
Each of these proposals is an attack on state sovereignty. If either is appropriate at all, the place for it is the state constitutions, not the Commonwealth Constitution. Inclusion of either in the Commonwealth Constitution would limit the states’ power on how their governmental responsibilities should be administered….
Recognition of local government in the Australian Constitution has been rejected three times. The first was when the Constitution was drawn up, the second was at referendum under a Labor government in 1974 and the third was at a referendum under a Labor government in 1988. There is now an opportunity to appreciate the reasons for the three previous rejections, the reasons for now rejecting the proposal a fourth time and voting “No”.
As I was saying …
Tags: barnaby joyce, Direct Democracy, local government, referendum
- Comments 42 Comments
- Categories Uncategorized
UN UDHR – Article 19
"Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers."
Latest
- Hermetic Magick In Double-Entry Accounting And Finance
- “Carthage must be destroyed”
- It’s Over Here (or, My New Blog)
- Et tu, Barnaby?
- Socialism Is Not The Answer To Capitalism
- AGW: It’s Never Been About Climate
- Government Explained
- BoE Says G20 Nations To Enact Bank Deposits Theft Within 12 Months
- Survey: 87% Of Australians Would Sell Their Children
- IMF Calls For 10% “Tax” On All EU Households With “Positive Wealth”
- Pause ….
- The Difference Between Debt-Free Money And Interest-Free Credit
- Pentagon Warns EU To Expect “Radical” Change In US Government Soon
- Sovereignty Gone: Abbott To Sign Highly Secretive TPP Agreement This Month
- Barnaby Sells Out?
- F*ckwit Fisked
- Not Just The Best … The Coolest Film Ever Made
- At Least He’s Not A Hypocrite … IF He Goes Through With It
- ASIC Begs The Question On RBA Scandal
- RBA “A Culture Of Systemic Lying And Greed”
- “We Exaggerated” – IPCC
- Crooked As A Dog’s Hind Leg
- Nobel Prize-Winning Scientist: “We NEVER Are Right. We Can Only Be Sure We’re Wrong.”
- Dude, Where’s My Consensus?
- Australian Government Steals $331 Million From Savings, Retirement Accounts
- As Predicted, Abbott Looks To Sell Us Out
- Expert Summarises IPCC 5th Summary .. In 55 Words
- We Reckon Scientists Feel 95% Certain, But Don’t Ask Us How
- Syrian Girl: “Top 8 Reasons Why They Hate Us”
- Retired Banker Blows Whistle On “The Greatest Scam On Earth”
Blogroll
- AOFM – Australian Office of Financial Management
- Applied Philosophy
- Barnaby Joyce
- Carbon Trade Watch
- Dept of Finance
- Deror – Free Flowing Currency
- Greg Palast
- Kangaroo Court of Australia
- Macro Business
- RBA Statistics
- Real Currencies
- Renegade Economist
- Rights & Wrong
- Steve Keen's Debtwatch
- Stop These Things
- The Blissful Ignoramus
- UsuryFree Eye Opener
- Zeg Cartoonist
- Zero Hedge


Comments