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James Franco Flirt GIF


I think this is what they used to call a 'paid endorsement'.
Norman...the highly paid Saudi apologist who answered a question about human rights and Kashoggi with "everyone makes mistakes"
 
Haha - Labor might've got away with the 'broken promise' on the Stage 3 Tax Cuts, but even a Peter Dutton could lead the Coalition to victory if they reneged on this one, as per this speculation:

Push to delay stage 3 tax cuts​

Sticking to the planned rollout of the Albanese government’s stage three tax cuts risks further fuelling inflation, making the RBA’s job more difficult, and their delay should be considered, leading economists have cautioned.

Amid resurgent price pressures, Labor’s tax cuts which commence on July 1 will pump billions of dollars of additional spending into the economy by providing households with a cumulative $20bn over the next financial year.

Speaking on Wednesday, Impact Economics and Policy lead economist Angela Jackson said while the Albanese government’s fiscal policy to date had avoided adding to demand, the forthcoming stage three tax cuts posed a “real challenge” to inflation.

“Would you be calling for the stage three tax cuts right now if they weren’t in the budget? Absolutely, no way,” Dr Jackson told the National Press Club.

Full Article
 

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Haha - Labor might've got away with the 'broken promise' on the Stage 3 Tax Cuts, but even a Peter Dutton could lead the Coalition to victory if they reneged on this one, as per this speculation:

Push to delay stage 3 tax cuts​

Sticking to the planned rollout of the Albanese government’s stage three tax cuts risks further fuelling inflation, making the RBA’s job more difficult, and their delay should be considered, leading economists have cautioned.

Amid resurgent price pressures, Labor’s tax cuts which commence on July 1 will pump billions of dollars of additional spending into the economy by providing households with a cumulative $20bn over the next financial year.

Speaking on Wednesday, Impact Economics and Policy lead economist Angela Jackson said while the Albanese government’s fiscal policy to date had avoided adding to demand, the forthcoming stage three tax cuts posed a “real challenge” to inflation.

“Would you be calling for the stage three tax cuts right now if they weren’t in the budget? Absolutely, no way,” Dr Jackson told the National Press Club.

Full Article
That's not a push, that's a whingeing economist who might make a dollar or two if the RBA increases interest rates by 0.25% earlier than expected or delays dropping them by 0.25% by a few months.
 
SA Liberals have called for the SA Electoral Commission to change the boundaries of marginal seats in their favour to promote a “more vibrant” state election in 2026, while Labor argues there’s no urgent need for change.


I agree SA electors need a 'more vibrant' set of choices at the next SA election - but not from rigging electoral boundaries to suit politicians but from getting offering 'more vibrant' policy choices between the parties.

Malinauskas is looking way too comfortable as Premier for my liking and is resorting to the old trick of using taxpayers money to buy big events and feel good short term announcements rather than sustainable policies that make a difference for those doing it tough. Of course he sees there's no need for change - he is running rings around the Libs atm.

The time is ripe for a 'vibrant' opposition leader who not only holds Mali to account but offers something different and a bold vision for change. David Spiers, who has spent his whole working life as an SA public servant, political adviser and politician, is not that leader.
 

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