Yes, higher educated people (university degrees) tend to vote more Labor side (or Greens of politics). It is the uneducated, more redneck that tend to vote liberals/Pauline Hanson etc.
I disagree here. The Liberal policy (or lack of) is a sham that can't last. They will soon realize they cannot win by having no alternative, credible policy on climate change and a leader who is quoted as saying "climate change is crap".
Sam as any day. No matter who the government is, Liberals, Labor or Greens, it will continue to function, just perhaps not to everyones ideals given we all think differently.
Race is clearly a biological difference as there is physicals a difference in genetics.
Let me guess Blastus, you don't believe in modern biology and evolution and think we were created through Intelligent Design or Creationism?
'Almost' - after a first term sitting prime minister was replaced and the bad (leaks, carbon tax etc) campaign Labor had. Abbott will never have a better opportunity than he had at the last election.
If Gillard was to lose the next election, in all likelihood she would step down as leader. Kevin Rudd would probably win such a leadership vote then. Shorten wouldn't have the numbers. Albanese is of the left and wouldn't have the numbers. Only other possibility would be Stephen Smith.
The Liberal party has had 4 leaders in 3 years or so though remember also. Howard, the doctor guy whose name I can't remember, Turnbull and Abbott. Abbott will probably also be replaced soon enough as well, probably by Turnbull again.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/former-pm-kevin-rudd-is-out-on-the-campaign-trail/story-e6freuy9-1226036099568
Thoughts on this?
I personally think Kevin Rudd will again lead the Labor party in 2011. The only real question is whether this is leading them to an election, or whether it is...
That seems pretty inaccurate. Sure, if you have 10+ years experience, maybe. For a graduate though it will be somewhere between 50K and 60K or so, maybe a bit more in a few years time (inflation etc).