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Voters see Vic politics as the deeply unpopular versus the untested Polling shows the Liberals’ gamble on knifing their leader and installing Wilson to take on Allan at next year’s election has paid off.

Voters see Vic politics as the deeply unpopular versus the untested - Australian Financial Review/ #Redbridge /Accent Research poll

www.afr.com/politics/vot...

#AUSPOL #Poll #SpringSt #JacintaAllan #JessWilson #PutLNPLast #BradBattin #ALP #Labor #Greens #KosSamaras #Polling #EllenSandell

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Libs’ gala axed after flood of cancellations linked to leadership coup Everything the Liberals do at the moment shows that unity is a huge issue. The post Libs’ gala axed after flood of cancellations linked to leadership coup first appeared on VibeWire Magazine.

Libs’ gala axed after flood of cancellations linked to leadership coup #AustraliaPolitics #BreakingNews #BradBattin #JessWilson #Melbourne

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Original post on rants.au

Jess Wilson has successfully knifed Brad Battin to seize the position of Leader of the Opposition, this driving a knife deeper into the rotting corps of the Liberal Party of Victoria.

Jess Wilson, nepo-baby of former Victorian Liberal MP Ron Wilson, will represent the Neo-Conservative faction […]

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Original post on rants.au

Brad Battin faces spill after group of Victorian Liberal MPs say they have lost confidence in his leadership
www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/nov/...

Brad Battin's job has been on shaky […]

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Victorian Liberal leader Brad Battin facing leadership challenge The opposition leader was informed by a delegation of MPs that he had lost the support of the party room, less than 12 months into his tenure as leader and just over a year out from the state election...

After a decade in the opposition wilderness, the Victorian Liberals just can't get it together, despite all the hideous failings of the "Communist Labor Party of #Victoria".

If #JessWilson, as expected, replaces #BradBattin next week and the Libs don't beat Labor next November, the party is F***ed.

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🇦🇺 #LNPVIC #LNP #LPA #BradBattin #VICpol
#AUSpol 🦘

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Fury over forced entry proposal By PHILIP HOPKINS   LEGISLATION has passed in State Parliament that threatens farmers with fines if they do not allow access for transmission projects, just as an official report shows those transmission links are blowing out in cost and could feed into higher energy prices. The legislation passed through the House of Assembly on Thursday (July 31) and will now be debated in the Legislative Council. The Nationals reiterated their opposition to the new legislation proposed by the state Labor government, which would allow government officials and transmission companies to enter private farmland without consent and fine landholders who object. The Victorian Farmers Federation has also strongly opposed the legislation. The Nationals’ Member for Morwell, Martin Cameron, said the National Electricity (Victoria) Amendment (VicGrid Stage 2 Reform) Bill would hand sweeping powers to VicGrid and authorised officers, allowing them to forcibly access private property, cut locks, break gates, and issue penalties for resistance. Under the Bill, landholders who obstruct access to authorised officers could face fines up to $12,210. Refusing to provide identification or proof of ownership may attract penalties over $4000. Interfering with notices of entry could incur fines of more than $1200. Corporations face even higher fines, reaching nearly $49,000. “This is an outrageous overreach from a government that has lost control of its energy rollout, and once again it’s hardworking farmers and regional families who will bear the brunt of these reckless decisions,” the Member for Morwell said. “Under this bill, authorised officers can cut locks, break gates, and force their way onto your property – all in the name of building transmission lines for Labor’s chaotic renewables plan.” Mr Cameron said the government was prioritising energy companies over property rights, biosecurity and liability concerns if something goes wrong, such as livestock escaping or disease spreading. “People are rightly worried about losing farmland, biosecurity risks, disrupted livelihoods, and long-term damage to farming communities,” he said The VFF warned that the state government’s energy transition risks alienating the very communities it needs most. While the VFF supports the shift to renewable energy, VFF President Brett Hosking said the transition was being derailed by poor planning, worrying rhetoric, and alarming legislative proposals including the VicGrid Bill Amendment. “Farmers are not opposed to renewable energy. We know the world is changing and we’re part of that change, but we won’t cop being steamrolled in the process,” he said. “The VicGrid amendments are deeply troubling. Allowing police to enforce access and slapping hard working farmers with fines for simply wanting to protect their land is not how you build trust, it’s indicative of how trust has been lost.” Voice: State Opposition leader, Brad Battin speaking on the steps of Parliament last week. Photograph supplied Mr Hosking said the government’s determination to press ahead with major transmission projects without genuine community consultation including the Western Renewables Link (WRL), VNI West and projects in Gippsland, was undermining both public confidence and the project’s viability. “The WRL and VNI West are both failed projects and they should be scrapped entirely. Both have been mismanaged from the start, and communities have made it clear they won’t accept it being forced through their paddocks,” he said. The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) identified rising electricity infrastructure and energy delivery costs in its latest report on the development of the national electricity market between now and 2050. The AEMO report has found transmission costs have risen, particularly for overhead lines, as has the cost of building new essential infrastructure to meet consumer needs and government energy and emissions targets. The report stated “AEMO recognises that increases in costs for electricity transmission network development would impact bills for electricity consumers”. An example of the potential for cost blow-outs is the VNI West project in Victoria’s north-west. The project could cost anywhere between $5.2 and $11.4 billion despite the proponents estimating the cost at $7.6 billion. The upper limit of the AEMO estimate is $10.605 billion. Big new transmission infrastructure is also planned for South Gippsland and the Latrobe Valley to connect electricity from planned offshore wind farms to the energy infrastructure in the Latrobe Valley and from there to parts of Victoria. VicGrid is finalising preferred routes for transmission lines in the renewable energy zones in Gippsland with affected landowners. The shadow energy minister, David Davis said based on the report, “there is no doubt that households and businesses will see significant increases in their energy bills in the months and years ahead”. “Like VNI West, there are other projects showing similar cost trends which must be accounted for as part of the real cost of low emission technology that is underpinned by these massively expensive transmission projects,” he said. “Given the Allan Labor government’s inability to manage projects, it’s obvious Jacinta Allan will fund low emissions technology and the infrastructure that supports it through levies on household and business energy bills. “The Premier and federal Labor must be open and transparent with Victorians about the impact on household budgets and business costs from projects like VNI West.” The Member for Gippsland South and Leader of The Nationals, Danny O’Brien, said the cost blow-outs would add to pressure on a government already seeking to affect Victorian farmers’ property rights to get its failed energy policies back on track. “Labor wants to slap farmers with $12,000 fines for refusing access to their private property and to give itself the power to break locks and smash gates to get access,” he said. “These are not the actions of a government that respects regional Victoria. It is proposing all stick and no carrot and that has naturally angered landholders who feel they are being disrespected. “The Nationals and Liberals oppose this bill and will repeal it if elected (to government) next year.”

LV Express: Fury over forced entry proposal #News #BradBattin #BrettHosking

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Report to pave a way forward By DAVID BRAITHWAITE   This report contains details of harm caused to people, as well as the names of Aboriginal people who are deceased.   THE Yoorrook Justice Commission’s final report has been tabled in state Parliament, making public its findings and recommendations a day after the historic commission wrapped up its work. Among the recommendations are for the state government to issue an apology and for restitution be given to First Nations people. With its release, the final report from Australia’s first formal truth-telling process, Yoorrook for Transformation provides an authoritative official public record of this state’s history since colonisation as told by First Peoples. Included is recognition of historical massacres against Gippsland’s Gunaikurnai people. “Victoria’s frontier delivered its own horrors. As the Eumeralla Wars were being waged in the west, across in the east pastoralist Angus McMillan and his men – the self-appointed ‘Highland Brigade’ – left a trail of blood in a series of massacres in Gippsland from 1843 onwards, in which hundreds of Gunaikurnai people were killed,” the report stated. “The violence left no region untouched. On Gunaikurnai Country, the Warrigal Creek massacres (around Darriman) wiped out as many as 150 lives, while 15 were lost at Milly Creek (near Marlo). “Rolf Boldrewood, a colonist and author, wrote with casual candour that ‘for one reason or other the gun was rarely a day out of our hands’. Gippsland colonist Agnes Buntine whipped Gunaikurnai people and forced them into the sea. “Patrick Coady Buckley put a rope around a Gunaikurnai man’s neck and made him run into the surf for four hours. Cannons were fired into camps. “Bungelene, another Gunaikurnai man, was chained to a tree outside Native Police headquarters.” On the ‘timeline of colonisation of Victoria’, there are numerous references to incidents in Gippsland: 1840 – Angus McMillan ‘invades’ Gunaikurnai Country (present-day Gippsland); Latrobe Valley massacre; Boney Point (Lake Wellington) massacre. 1841 – Butchers Creek (near Metung) massacre. 1842 – Tambo Crossing massacre Eumeralla massacre; Hollands Landing massacre. 1843 – Grazing licences introduced to ‘preserve the rights of the Crown to the lands’; Warrigal Creek massacre; Warrigal Creek Mouth massacre; Bruthen Creek massacre; Freshwater Creek massacre; Gammon Creek massacre; Victoria Range massacre. 1846 – Snowy River massacre. 1862 – Ramahyuck Mission established by German Moravian missionaries and Presbyterians on Gunaikurnai Country at a known massacre site (Boney Point). 1908 – Ramahyuck Mission closed. Lake Tyers Aboriginal Reserve transferred to board control. The report details the ongoing impacts of colonisation, racism and intergenerational trauma on First Peoples’ lives today and shares stories of First Peoples’ resistance, courage and survival over hundreds of years. The report included 100 recommendations which the commission claimed “lay out a bold path for reform to create a better future for First Peoples”. The recommendations deal with transformative change through the treaty process; self-determination, rights and accountability; reforms regarding land, education, health, housing, economic, political life and access to records, and redress. In the recommendations, the government must “officially acknowledge the responsibility of its predecessors for laws, policies and practices which contributed to the systemic injustices against Victorian First Peoples”; make an official apology to First Peoples, and through statewide and Traditional Owner treaties, provide redress in the form of restitution of traditional lands, waters and natural resources, monetary compensation and tax relief. Yoorrook expects the government to immediately begin work to implement the urgent recommendations so they can be achieved over the next two years. First Peoples’ Assembly co-chairman Rueben Berg said Yoorrook’s final report showed the clear need for change in responding to issues facing First Peoples, which a treaty would deliver. “Truth and treaty go hand-in-hand – treaty will acknowledge our shared history and be an agreement between First Peoples and the Victorian government on how we move forward together to help right past wrongs,” Mr Berg said. “Victorians know that we can’t keep doing the same thing and expecting different results. When it comes to issues facing First Peoples, we need a different approach, one that draws on the expertise of First Peoples to design and deliver practical solutions to local challenges. That’s what Treaty is all about.” The government acknowledged the immense undertaking of the Yoorrook commission in preparing these historic reports, and shares the commission’s goals of truth and justice and will consider the findings and recommendations. Premier Jacinta Allan said the historic reports shined “a light on hard truths and lay the foundations for a better future for all Victorians”. “Victoria’s truth-telling process is a historic opportunity to hear the stories of our past that have been buried – these are stories that all Victorians need to hear,” she said. The assembly is currently negotiating the first statewide treaty agreement between First Peoples and the state government. Later this year, the government expects to introduce the Statewide Treaty Bill to Parliament. Negotiations on the bill are focusing on how to evolve the First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria into an ongoing representative body to provide advice to government and make decisions over matters that affect First Peoples. Under the Statewide Treaty bill, the proposal is for the First Peoples’ Assembly to be a statutory corporation.​ Opposition leader Brad Battin said the push for a treaty would fundamentally reshape how Victorians interacted with each other. “We currently have no details on what this bill will contain. If Labor really cared, they would be upfront with Victorians on how they intend to negotiate their treaty, ” Mr Battin said.

LV Express: Report to pave a way forward #News #BradBattin #Gurnaikurnai

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This is not the fault of either political party, and as much as I like #BradBattin as a person, Im really starting to NOT like him.

As someone who needs to have one of these checks for a lot of things that I do, I am aware that its just a quick check of the VICPOL system for any red flags. (2/4)

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Victoria’s debt is among the worst in the world Victoria’s gross debt is forecast to make up 202.6 per cent of its operating revenue in the 2026 financial year and balloon to 213.1 per cent the following year. The post Victoria’s debt is among the worst in the world first appeared on VibeWire Magazine.

#Australia #AustraliaPolitics #BreakingNews #BradBattin

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Protests against levy erupt across state, including in Morwell By BLAKE METCALF-HOLT and AIDAN KNIGHT   NO more. Enough is enough. Scrap the tax. THESE were just a few of the sentiments that flowed through the local protest against the recently instated Emergency Services Levy Bill last Tuesday (May 20), which began outside the Morwell office of state government frontbencher Harriet Shing. Close to 150 people of a mix of farmers, volunteer firefighters, and supporting and effected citizens assembled to renounce the new changes, with police blocking the section of road just before 10am for the peaceful yet explicit demonstration. After discussions between organisers and local police, plans shifted and many protesters marched up Commercial Road to the Latrobe Valley Magistrates’ Court, which was still in the thick of the Erin Patterson Trial, making their voice loud and clear. The doubled rates were confirmed days out from the Victorian State Budget, expanding the previous Fire Services Property Levy (FSPL) into a broader fund which extends to services such as the SES and Emergency Recovery Victoria under the Emergency Services and Volunteers Fund Levy (ESVF). To secure crossbench support, the state government agreed to amend the bill, dropping the levy for farmers from an initially proposed variable rate of 83 cents per $1000 of the value of the land to 71.8c per $1000. Beforehand, under the FSPL, it was 28.7c per $1000. The ESVFL is to officially replace the FSPL and begin on July 1. Assembled: A peaceful demonstration took place outside the office of Labor Member for Eastern Victoria Region, Harriet Shing, in opposition to the Fire Services Levy. Photographs: Blake Metcalf-Holt Boisdale farmer Tom Howson made the trip down to the Latrobe Valley to show his support and distain for the recent changes, and how it’s deeply effecting his cattle farm. “People from the country are fed up with the state government spending more money in the city when we’re not going to benefit, and (then) they come into the country and try and pillage us to get the money to try and pay for their mistakes,” he said. “I’m semi-retired, still farming, still got a few cattle or so, but it just increases. “Tax, everything has gone up, cattle’s gone up a bit, but in 1970 we were still getting $500 for a cow, now you might get $1500, but the cost-wise from ’70 to now is ridiculous.” Lieutenant of Heyfield Fire Brigade, Phil Graham addressed the Morwell crowd from atop one of the many tankers positioned along Commercial Rd, giving voice to the many fed up and disheartened. “Why do we have to fund it? Why are we the ones scratching through the change in the console of our farm utes trying to find a dollar to give to them? It’s just not fair,” he said. “We need to send the message, it needs to go loud and clear. “So, Jacinta Allan if you can hear me, if you’d listen – you’re hurting us. “You’re really hurting us. We don’t have any more for you anymore Jacinta, so stop trying to take it off us.” With everyone present standing together against the instatement, Lt. Graham also made an impassioned message about how his fellow CFA members and local police figures must put their arms around the rest of the community. “We’ve all got our stories. It’s all going to hurt us in many, many different ways. Just stay strong, stay respectful,” he said. “I see all of the CFA people here along with me, remember our communities. “We are leaders in our communities – be leaders – I implore you all, everyone that wears yellow or a blue uniform, you are a leader in your community. “You need to have the ability for other members of the community to lean on your shoulder, you need to lead through strength. “It’s now more than ever, there’s no fires burning in the bush, but it’s now more than ever that we need to support our communities. Not just with a hose and with a branch and a big red truck, but we need to be there side-by-side with the other members of our community to support them, because they’re going to struggle and suffer too.”Voice: Heyfield Fire Brigade Lieutenant, Phil Graham delivered an impassioned speech. IN the wake of the ESVFL announcement, many fire stations across the state have gone offline, flown CFA flags upside down, and some even going as far as to post videos online setting fire to their uniforms in protest. Fellow Heyfield volunteer firefighter, Meryl Graham also articulated the overall affect the levy will have. With the ESVFL, residential charges have also increased from 8.7c per $1000 of a residential property’s capital improved value to 17.3c per $1000. “What I disagree with is the bleeding the life out of Victoria, because it’s not just farmers,” Ms Graham said. “Everyone’s paying it. It’s going to drive the cost of living up, that’s going to put pressure on interest rates to go up because inflation will go up. “It’s every single Victorian that’s going to bleed over this and it’s not right.” While Ms Graham doesn’t believe their stand will see the state government shift its position, she said everyone who is tired of this “bleeding” needs to make a stand. “You have to try, we can’t be apathetic forever, we can’t sit on the lounge and complain about it forever,” she continued. “Sooner or later, you’ve got to pick your hill and stand on it. “Sometimes you’ve got to pick a fight and say ‘this is my fight, I can’t let everybody else do it.’ I just want to say no more.” Latrobe City Moe Ward Councillor, Adele Pugsley also addressed the crowd, making a strong declaration about council’s stance. “Council have already done a motion that we don’t want to collect the tax. We will continue to advocate to do whatever we can,” she said. “It’s not fair that we are expected to fork out more money out of our pockets. “There are so many farmers who are already struggling to make ends meet. This would be the difference between a viable business or not. “There are so many people already experiencing cost-of-living pressures, this would be the difference between being able to eat or not.” Council’s position towards these changes began at the February 2025 council meeting, formally writing to Premier Jacinta Allan and the Minister for Local Government, Nick Staikos calling for the requirement of Victorian councils to collect the new fund to be removed and for it to be managed directly by the State Revenue Office. “The recent announcement by the Victorian government to replace the (FSPL) with the (ESVFL), has sparked significant unrest across regional and rural areas including here in Latrobe City,” Latrobe City Council Mayor, Cr Dale Harriman told the Express. “We support our local farmers and business owners and share their dismay at the change and the pressure it will place on our community. “We strongly believe it is not the role of local councils to act as tax collectors for state-imposed levies, particularly when the burden falls disproportionately on our communities. “The State Revenue Office should be responsible for administering this levy, at the state’s expense.” Listen: Protestors had a clear message for the state government. Thousands of demonstrators also congregated on Spring Street in Melbourne’s CBD to voice their disapproval of the levy directly and loudly to the Victorian Premier. Former Premier and farmer, Denis Napthine, state opposition leader Brad Battin, and leader of the state Nationals and Member for Gippsland South, Danny O’Brien also showed their support among the crowd in the city’s standstill on Tuesday, May 20 (the same day the state budget was handed down). Mr Battin, when addressing the crowd, promised to scrap the ESVFL if his party won next year’s state election. Premier Allan told Parliament last week that the ESVFL was integral in providing sufficient resources to emergency services. “You cannot ignore that more and more is being asked of our emergency services, our state emergency services,” she said. “You cannot commit to ripping away… hundreds of millions of dollars from our emergency services without finding it from somewhere else.” The state government has guaranteed that through legislation that 95 per cent of VICSES and CFA funding would come from the new ESVF and 90 per cent of Fire Rescue Victoria’s (FRV) annual funding would also come through the levy. CFA brigades in Erica and Moe South were announced as the first recipients of new Medium Tankers funded through the ESVFL. CFA were reached for comment but did not respond before the Express’ deadline. All-in-all, the message was simple: no farmers, no food.

LV Express: Protests against levy erupt across state, including in Morwell #News #BradBattin #CFA

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Jacinta Allan 'more responsible than Daniel Andrews' for Victoria's debt-laden state Premier Jacinta Allan is more responsible for Victoria's debt-laden state than her predecessor Daniel Andrews, according to state Opposition Leader Brad Battin.

Labor runs #Victoria like a "socialist state" complete with "Marxist economics", and that is why the state is now racked with an astronomical debt nearing $200 billion, and climbing.

Not saying #BradBattin 's Liberals are the answer but Labor under #JacintaAllan equals bankruptcy X 10 for Victoria.

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'Land tax by stealth': Victorian Liberals pledge to scrap Labor’s emergency services tax The Victorian Opposition has vowed to scrap Labor's highly controversial new emergency services levy if it wins government next year as Premier Jacinta Allan stands firm on the measure in the face of protests.

If the Liberals led by #BradBattin cannot win the next election on November 28th, 2026 and end by then 12 years of stifling Labor rule then #Victoria may as well be declared a "one party socialist state", and Liberal MPs may as well become garbos, fish scalers, floor sweepers & toilet cleaners. 😄🤣😛

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Pesutto potentially out of pocket By LIAM DURKIN   TRARALGON-born former state Liberal leader, John Pesutto may be forced out of politics, if the collateral damage from his case against Liberal colleague, Moira Deeming plunges him into bankruptcy. By law, anyone declared bankrupt cannot sit in parliament. Mr Pesutto was last year found guilty of defaming Ms Deeming, after she attended a women’s rights rally, and ordered to pay $300,000 in damages by the federal court. The fallout saw Mr Pesutto lose the Liberal party leadership, and be relegated to the crossbench under current leader Brad Battin. Things might yet go from bad to worse for the Traralgon local, as there are fears a cost ruling could bankrupt him. If Mr Pesutto (the Member for Hawthorn), is declared insolvent, it will trigger a by-election. Deputy Premier, Ben Carroll last week told the Herald Sun Labor would entertain the prospect of contesting Hawthorn. “If there is a by-election in Hawthorn, we’d welcome it,” he said. “We’ve held that seat before. I’ve been in Hawthorn regularly. We’ve got a good story to tell. “It’s a very marginal seat and I know we’ve put a lot of investment in there but it’s a matter for John Pesutto and the Liberal Party as to whether there’s changes in that district.” Mr Pesutto however said he was up for what is looming as the fight of his political career. “Serving as the Member for Hawthorn has been the privilege and honour of my professional career. I have continued to receive very strong support from my constituents to represent them and I remain fully committed to doing so for as long as they will have me,” he said. “I will continue to be a constructive and devoted member of the Liberal team in order to win the 2026 election and be the positive and reforming government Victorians desperately need.” Mr Pesutto appears to have people in his corner, as it is understood some within the Liberal party room are plotting to end Ms Deeming’s own political career. His demise however could only solidify Labor’s chances of seeking an historic fourth term next year. “I’ve always said I thought there was a place for John Pesutto. I thought he was their best and was their strongest leader (but) they decided to neck him,” Mr Carroll said. The Herald Sun also reported former premiers Jeff Kennett, Ted Baillieu and Denis Napthine had chipped in their own money to help the embattled MP. The sorry saga has been a swift turn of events for Mr Pesutto, who only five months ago was leading a Resolve poll as preferred Premier. Seven weeks later, he wasn’t even party leader. Mr Pesutto grew up and went to school in Traralgon, and played soccer for Olympians and Traralgon City. He is not the first Traralgon MP to come out of court crestfallen. Former Member for Morwell, Russell Northe was sentenced to 21 months jail in 2023 for using public money to fuel his gambling addiction. The Liberals will be hoping to win something bigger than a state election next week, with the federal election laid down for Saturday, May 3. Early voting began Tuesday (April 22). Latrobe Valley locals can attend either 40-50 Queens Parade, Traralgon, 34 Princes Drive, Morwell, or 34 Fowler Street, Moe to avoid the queue on election day. Candidates for Gippsland and Monash have also begun revealing their preferences. Labor is expected to hold government, with the most recent Resolve poll showing 46 per cent have Anthony Albanese as preferred Prime Minister. Not encouraging gambling, but giving betting agencies are generally the most accurate political measure, Sportsbet had Labor as short as $1.22 odds on Monday.

LV Express: Pesutto potentially out of pocket #News #BenCarroll #BradBattin

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FFS #BradBattin, there is no "anti-Australia Day" movement. There is a campaign to shift the date, but not eliminate it. Facts matter. If you are seriously trying to be elected, stop treating Victorian voters like idiots. #auspol #springst

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SEC to go if Liberals win By PHILIP HOPKINS   THE new Coalition Leader, Brad Battin, has vowed to abolish Victoria’s revived State Electricity Commission, in an initial announcement of the Coalition’s new policy approach. The state government said it had re-established the…

LV Express: SEC to go if Liberals win: By PHILIP HOPKINS


 


THE new Coalition Leader, Brad Battin, has vowed to abolish Victoria’s revived State Electricity Commission, in an initial announcement of the Coalition’s new policy approach.


The state government… #News #BradBattin #BridgetVallence

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#BradBattin #LNPVIC
#VICpol #AUSpol 🦘

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#MurdochMediaAU
#NewsCorpAU
#FakeNewsAU
#TheAustralian
☢️ #PeterDutton #LNP
#DicksonDecides #QLDpol
#BradBattin #VICpol
#AUSpol 🦘

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#VICpol #BradBattin
#AUSpol 🦘

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Can Victoria's new Opposition leader save the Liberals? - ABC listen Victoria's new Opposition leader Brad Battin has vowed to put the state Liberal Party's turmoil in the past, after toppling his predecessor John Pesutto in a leadership vote this morning.

New Victorian Liberal Opposition leader #BradBattin says "right now is not the time" to discuss raising the age of criminal responsibility to 14, after previously backing the change.

Listen to his first ABC interview since taking on the job.
#springst #ABCPM www.abc.net.au/listen/progr...

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May I clarify for all readers that running a Baker's Delight franchise does not make you a baker.

#Vicpol #BradBattin

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Introducing #BradBattin the new Vic Lib opposition leader. BL head tilt side, submission. Dogs tilt their heads, exposing their neck to show difference to a dominant animal, Media?🤔 Head tilt down anger. Pursed mouth anger. Tongue licks lips to counter saliva drying deception.

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Book burning, toilet inspections, blaming migrants for everything, forcing births only to lock children up as soon as they can walk will be top priorities for the new liberal party of lunatics. #auspol #libspill #vicpol #BradBattin

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Enjoy the shit sandwich #BradBattin!

#auspol #springst

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At breaking point By TOM HAYES   MORE than 20 officers from the Traralgon Police Station and The Police Association of Victoria (TPAV) walked off the job last Wednesday (December 11), amid ongoing wage negotiations. Administered by TPAV, staged with a banner reading…

LV Express: At breaking point: By TOM HAYES


 


MORE than 20 officers from the Traralgon Police Station and The Police Association of Victoria (TPAV) walked off the job last Wednesday (December 11), amid ongoing wage negotiations.


Administered by TPAV,… #News #BradBattin #FairWorkCommission

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