Eh, I reckon the more you pay them, the more selfish people you'll get wanting to become pollies. It should be a job you do because it means a lot to you. Can't pay them too little, though, or they'll be too receptive to corruption.Enteebee said:I think they should be paid more and I think if you paid them more you'd attract better people and our parliament would likely be better. As for the whole idea that it's a stupid public who picks stupid politicians, tbqh the public only gets to pick from the talent pools of 2 (maybe soon 3?) parties.
BTW as for nurses, they actually get paid plenty imo, it's more just that the work sucks... that's why you have a hard time getting people. I'd say the money could be better spent making sure that there is more staff to lessen the burden on those already there.
more money into research and science to prevent people getting sick in the first placeEnteebee said:I think they should be paid more and I think if you paid them more you'd attract better people and our parliament would likely be better. As for the whole idea that it's a stupid public who picks stupid politicians, tbqh the public only gets to pick from the talent pools of 2 (maybe soon 3?) parties.
BTW as for nurses, they actually get paid plenty imo, it's more just that the work sucks... that's why you have a hard time getting people. I'd say the money could be better spent making sure that there is more staff to lessen the burden on those already there.
Yeah. I agree, that politicians need to have a passion for change too, but I also think that having a lower (in comparison to other professions such as law) pay doesn't necessarily ensure this. The biggest motivation for many is still power and prestige, rather than the desire to actually change things. (E.g. maybe Kevin Rudd and Malcolm Turnbull - certainly, it's not money.)Trefoil said:Eh, I reckon the more you pay them, the more selfish people you'll get wanting to become pollies. It should be a job you do because it means a lot to you. Can't pay them too little, though, or they'll be too receptive to corruption.
As for the last part, I agree entirely.Trefoil said:That, and it's no more worthy a career than teaching or nursing. They might be few in number, but they are not terribly rare.
And yeah, staff cuts in hospitals is one of the biggest problems nurses face these days.
I don't think that they're stupid either and I agree that a more educated populace means that they don't get away with as much.Will Shakespear said:i don't think the politicians are stupid
i just think that a more educated populace would mean they couldn't get away with as much as they do now
Will Shakespear said:i don't think the politicians are stupid
i just think that a more educated populace would mean they couldn't get away with as much as they do now
Um, wot?zstar said:Politicians are not geniuses at all.
They don't know anymore than you do that's a fact.
If everybody where that educated I think we'd be in gridlock because everybody would see something wrong with something.Will Shakespear said:i don't think the politicians are stupid
i just think that a more educated populace would mean they couldn't get away with as much as they do now
no matter what happens, in the forseeable future anyway, we're stuck with a choice between 2 major parties to form government, plus a few other options to pick up seats in the senatealexdore993 said:I don't think that they're stupid either and I agree that a more educated populace means that they don't get away with as much.
At the same time, more competition to become a federal minister means there is greater scrutiny and pressure on federal ministers to act appropriately or be replaced by others of equal skill. So increased incentive also results in increased efficiency, I think.
What limited talent pool?zimmerman8k said:Parliamentary pensions are the most moronic policy. They remove incentives to do the job well because even if you're only elected for one term and you fuck up, you still end up set for life.
NTB makes a good point about the limited talent pool. Imo this is another reason why we need proportional representation to erode the dominance of the major parties.
That's plurality voting. IRV is preferential and offers third parties far more chance to gain representation.zimmerman8k said:When you vote in the lower house, you are essentially forced to choose between two parties although you may want to vote for a minor party.
Now compare that with what it would be like under plurality voting.So although only about 43% a people voted for Labor in the 2007 Federal election they control 53% of the seats.
The Nationals get like 8% and have like an 8% amount of control in parliament, so it's not unprecedented. The Greens have had House seats before, from memory.If we had proportional representation, minor parties like the Greens would have 8% control of the parliament, as opposed to zero.
It's skewed on purpose, but not heavily so.Another systemic flaw in our system is that where we do have proportional representation is the senate it is heavily skewed towards the minor states.
I don't mind. They deserve equal access to government, and in the end they are still Australians. Anyway, the number of senators per state has little to do with the type of vote allocation system used.Imo it is absurd that NSW with its 7 million people has the same number of senators as Tasmania with only 0.5 million.