We got a bit of rain overnight, but it looks like the low pressure system bringing this is concentrated north of Sydney. Towns a couple of hundred kilometres north of us got almost 300 mm yesterday and there is widespread flooding. Today eased off a bit, but there’s more very heavy rain coming, and Sydney will catch the edge of it over the next few days.
Most of the day here was dry. The main exception was when I took Scully for a morning walk. Just a short 20-minute walk around the block. But halfway around the rain came down heavily, and I hadn’t expected it at all, so didn’t have an umbrella. We just had to get wet as we made our way home. Where I had to change my clothes and lay the wet ones out to dry.
In the morning I write my next ethics class, on the topic of “Perfection”. I have a good amount of questions and I think this could be another very interesting topic for the kids, like last week’s “Socialisation”. Then I took Scully for a lunchtime walk, and bought some Turkish bread and hummus to use for lunch.
Big news in Australia today was the break-up of the Coalition between the Liberal and National Parties. The Coalition, as a composite entity, has been the major conservative/right power in Australian politics for over 100 years, holding government more times than the progressive/left Labor Party. But the Coalition lost the last election two weeks ago dramatically, losing 13 seats in Parliament, handing the incumbent Labor Party a huge victory. The Coalition suffered from losing relevance to traditional inner city conservatives, promoting a nuclear power policy, and embracing some aspects of Donald Trump’s policies in the US. The Australian public rejected them soundly.
In the aftermath, the dominant Coalition partner Liberal Party replaced its leader Peter Dutton with Sussan Ley, who in the few days she’s been in charge moved away from right-wing policies and more towards the centre in an attempt to rebuild support. But this sat badly with the Nationals, who are further right. Sussan Ley has committed her Liberal Party to a net zero carbon emissions policy, which the Nationals have been fighting against (being interested in supporting the coal and petroleum gas mining industries), holding the prior Coalition back on this policy. Ley’s stance has so angered the Nationals that today they formally withdrew from the Coalition agreement.
This leaves Australia’s major right party, the Liberals, essentially incapable of winning government in the foreseeable future, as they relied on Nationals seats in rural areas to make up majority numbers in Parliament. So this is a major shake-up in the political landscape in Australia. We have up to three years to the next election, so things may change and it’s possible the Coalition will re-form if the parties can agree on a combined policy, but it will be interesting to see how things develop before the next election.
I know very little about Australian politics, but a right-wing party going more left sounds like a good thing. I have the impression that usually left-wing parties decide to veer to the right, to get more voters.