September 26, 2005
Queensland "Coalition" better on inspection, but not good
The Liberal Party should have gone into the coalition negotiations determined to ensure that whatever happened they had the run of the metropolitan areas, the National Party the bush, and they shared the regional areas between them. Queensland politics will be out of joint until the non-Labor side of politics is run by the major non-Labor metropolitan party.
That hasn't happened, and in the process the Liberal Party have shown the habitual inability to negotiate hard which the National Party would have expected all along, and traded on.
However, the Liberals did have some wins, from what I can find out, so here is the dot-point highlights as they are to hand:
The joint preselection process is bizarre. It entails each party pre-selecting a candidate and then each pre-selected candidate fronting a combined preselection council made up of equal numbers of Liberals and Nationals. If the combined pre-selection council comes to a draw, a preselection council constituted of the party leadership convenes, and if it still comes to a draw, then there will be a three-cornered contest.
Posted by Graham at September 26, 2005 09:37 PM | TrackBackThat joint preselection process IS bizarre. I have never seen anything like it. As if either party is going to choose someone weak enough to cross the floor. What a joke.
Posted by: R at October 4, 2005 09:56 AM