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Greens snub could cost preferences in Melbourne by-election PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Written by Herald Sun | Ashley Gardiner   
Friday, 20 July 2012 09:21

The Greens could lose their bid for the seat of Melbourne because of a history of snubbing the Sex Party.

Preferences will be crucial in determining Saturday's by-election result, and the Sex Party will direct its preferences to Labor.

Sex Party candidate Fiona Patten said she was concerned by the "anti-sex feminist" element in the Greens.

A poll conducted this week by ReachTEL found that Ms Patten was attracting 6.1 per cent support, putting her in third place.

Greens candidate Cathy Oke was leading on 38.1 per cent, marginally ahead of Labor's Jennifer Kanis on 36.5 per cent.

This would mean the outcome would be decided by the preferences of those who vote for Ms Patten and other minor candidates.

This week's poll found that one in four voters would support a candidate other than Dr Oke or Ms Kanis.

More than 10,000 votes that went to the Liberals in Melbourne at the 2010 election are up for grabs after the party's decision not to stand.

Ms Patten said the stand-offish attitude from the Greens dates back to the 2010 election, and the influence of a moralist element in the party.

"We have been concerned about this Left-wing anti-sex feminist position," Ms Patten said.

Read more... [Greens snub could cost preferences in Melbourne by-election]
 
NSW Members Meeting 01/08/2012 PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Written by ASP   
Wednesday, 18 July 2012 13:33

For the information of Australian Sex Party Members

Please join us for a NSW Sex Party members meeting on:

Wednesday 1st August 2012
@ The Local Taphouse
Level 1, 122 Flinders St Darlinghurst (5 mins walk from Taylor Sq)
From 6:45pm.

This is a members only meeting. Please This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it if you are able to join us.

We hope to see you there.

 
By-election not the shoo-in minor party has predicted PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Written by The Australian | John Ferguson   
Wednesday, 18 July 2012 11:49

Voters in the Melbourne by-election have been found to be deeply divided about the Gillard government's performance and the Greens face a much tougher battle to secure the seat than the minor party has claimed.

Pollster ReachTEL has unearthed deep dissatisfaction with the Gillard government among many voters in the inner-city state seat, with more than a third of those surveyed revealing they were less likely to vote Labor at Saturday's by-election based on federal factors.

But the same number of voters declared they were more likely to stick with Labor on the back of Canberra's efforts, suggesting the rusted-on ALP vote may be holding up in the electorate.

The Brisbane-based pollster found that 70 per cent of voters would be influenced, negatively or positively, by the Gillard government's performance, despite the fact it is a state by-election.

This means that, regardless of the result, the fallout from the by-election will be felt nationally as well as in Victoria.

The ReachTEL findings come after The Australian revealed last week that internal Victorian Labor polling suggested three times as many people cited the performance of the federal government, rather than that of the state government, as the reason they would not vote for Labor.

The survey of more than 400 voters on Monday night reported the Greens candidate Cathy Oke securing 38.1 per cent of the first preference vote with Labor's Jennifer Kanis on 36.5 per cent, pointing to a knife-edge result that will be decided by preferences from the other 14 candidates.

Independents and other candidates do not appear to be polling strongly, with the Australian Sex Party's Fiona Patten the third-most popular candidate, securing just 6.1 per cent of the vote, followed by suburban councillor Stephen Mayne on 4.3 per cent. Family First's Ashley Fenn was lagging on 3.8 per cent. The Liberal Party is not running a candidate.

Read more... [By-election not the shoo-in minor party has predicted]
 
Jon Faine under fire over election-eve panel PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Written by Crikey | Andrew Crook   
Tuesday, 17 July 2012 14:43

Melbourne poll … from robocalls to biased Faine to The Oz hit squad

With just three days to go in Melbourne’s bellwether byelection pitting the ALP’s Jennifer Kanis against the Greens’ Cathy Oke (and Crikey founder Stephen Mayne), it’s time to cast an eye over the situation on the ground as Julia Gillard hopes to dodge a grenade from what was once Labor’s impregnable heartland.

Jon Faine under fire over election-eve panel

Fringe candidates have rounded on ABC Mornings presenter Jon Faine for failing to include them on his election-eve panel at the Queen Victoria Market on Friday. The three-person panel includes the two major candidates — Jennifer Kanis and Cathy Oke — but just one third candidate, Stephen Mayne.

Independents lined up to sledge the veteran broadcaster, saying they were more popular than Mayne and deserved to have their voices heard.

Family First candidate Ashley Fenn told Crikey his omission was because of Faine’s “left-leaning political views”.

S-x Party candidate Fiona Patten claimed Greens volunteers were handing out Mayne how-to-vote cards — “It’s like having two Greens and Labor there … and no independents. “Faine has shown his colours that he is a Greens supporter … and he is being biased. “I’m going to give him a call now,” she added. “I would love to be on that panel … we polled over 8% at the last byelection in Victoria.”

A spokesman for Independent African community candidate Berhan Ahmed, Ken Betts (a former Liberal candidate in Footscray interestingly) said Faine was “disgraceful”. “Where’s the equal time? It’s all about Greens and Labor,” he said. “They’re [voters] are coming our way, he’s getting the Vietnamese vote because my wife is Vietnamese and I’m on a number of Vietnamese committees, the Africans are supporting him, the Chinese are supporting him … he’s going to out-poll Stephen, that’s for sure.”

Read more... [Jon Faine under fire over election-eve panel]
 
Melbourne byelection: Q&A with Fiona Patten PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Written by Melbourne Times Weekly   
Tuesday, 17 July 2012 10:30

FIONA PATTEN, AUSTRALIAN SEX PARTY

What are the top three issues facing Melbourne residents and how would you address them?

Drugs, transport and policing. We want decriminalisation of recreational drugs, and drug administration within the health rather than the criminal justice portfolio.

Public transport in the city has to run 24 hours on Fridays and Saturdays to allow people from the suburbs, who come in for a night on the town, to get home and go to sleep – $50 cab fares are not affordable for many. Trapped in the city, people can become anti-social and violent.

More than 50 per cent of violent crime happens in people’s homes in the suburbs. Only 2 per cent of violent crime happens in the city. So where are all the police? In the city, of course.

What is your vision to help the homeless, mentally ill and dispossessed?

A large percentage of people with mental illness also use drugs. Decriminalise drug use and people are way more likely to report themselves with a health problem before it gets out of hand. If we treat drug use as a health issue rather than a criminal one, we will have better resources to deal with people affected by drugs and people with mental illnesses.

Not all homeless people want a ‘‘home’’ to live in. This has to be respected and tolerated and adequate facilities provided.

We need to establish specialized emergency facilities for the mentally ill. Police are being forced to drop mentally ill people at emergency rooms. Obviously this is not the answer!

Read more... [Melbourne byelection: Q&A; with Fiona Patten]
 
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