this post was submitted on 07 May 2025
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Australian Politics

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Since the recent election there's a lot of commentary saying the Liberal party needs to reconsider its policies and re-align with its core values which, when enumerated sound very centrist.

I just watched ABC's q&a, there was a few interesting points. There was a strong consensus that Trump style culture wars are toxic in Australian politics, and that it's unlikely future candidates would take that route.

I don't want to gloat infront of the seppos, but I think what's happening during this aftermath is very salient for all of those "both sides are bad" Americans.

In October last year there seemed to be a lot of users saying that they didn't want to reward the dems with their vote, and that the only way to communicate with the party was to withhold their vote.

I think what's happening right now in Australia demonstrates the importance of voting.

Labor might not be left enough for you personally, but each time the libs are defeated they need to move to the left to be viable, and Labor will have to move further left to differentiate themselves. That is to say, the spectrum of acceptable opinions is moving to the left in an observable manner, right now.

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[–] null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

The rest of the article you quoted discusses the need for liberals to become more moderate.

These are the two paragraphs following yours:

Charlotte Mortlock, a former journalist and Liberal staffer, is the founder of Hilma’s Network, an organisation designed to encourage greater participation of women in the Liberal Party. She told Crikey the moderate wing of the party needed to be “more vocal than ever”.

“Pandering to the base of the party hasn’t worked for them,” she said. “The broader public need to see them being vocal and overt in their demands for reform and if they’re not, then they can’t blame the public for not knowing they exist.”