Let the people judge. You can have whatever rules and regulations you want but you will never get agreement on what is a fair and reasonable expense for a member of parliament, so why even bother to try? Just give MPs a lump sum to cover expenses of all kinds that they can spend as they wish. Then make them explain to those that choose them where the money went. Let first the pre-selectors then the electors sit in judgment.
What the Roxon criticisms say about her and the rest of them. What a spineless lot of Labor ministers Nicola Roxon exposed us to in her speech bucketing Kevin Rudd. Fancy a group of adults, tough enough to become politicians, being cowered into silent inaction by one man. Surely there once was a time when, confronted by the kind of behaviour of which Roxon spoke, a minister like her would have followed the honourable course of resigning and then publicly stating why.
Too popular for the presidency. The problem of being too popular is not one that many politicians have but in Indonesia Jakarta Governor Joko Widodo is facing it.
Many in his party want him to run for president of the nation next year but, reports the Kompas newspaper, Jakarta residents find the governor friendly and willing to hear the complaints of citizens. They worry that if he’s named as a presidential candidate, his replacement won’t be as good.
Campaigning for election via Twitter. Now it’s the turn of the actors as the election bid for James Franco to win an Oscar gets under way. A24 has launched its digital campaign for James Franco in “Spring Breakers,” with a Twitter feed that contained critics’ praise under the tagline “Consider This Sh*t” then followed up with this:
The entertainment industry newspaper Variety reports:
Harmony Korine’s controversial film, which also stars Vanessa Hudgens and Selena Gomez, drew strong reactions this spring for its graphic mockery of MTV exploitation shows like Jersey Shore, but it was Franco’s performance as rapper/gangster Alien that garnered the most praise from critics.
“Franco dominates the proceedings after entering them about a half-hour in,” Guy Lodge wrote in Variety‘s review, while Manohla Dargis of the New York Times heralded him as “the fantastic Mr. Franco.”
The backfire effect. New York Times columnist Paul Krugman refers his readers this morning to research from some years ago that helps explain why facts not only don’t win arguments, they make people on the wrong side dig in even deeper: “When your deepest convictions are challenged by contradictory evidence, your beliefs get stronger.”
Seems a perfect summary of Andrew Bolt to me.
News and views noted along the way.
- Tea Party’s image turns more negative — “The Tea Party’s favorability rating has fallen across most groups since June, but the decline has been particularly dramatic among moderate and liberal Republicans.”
- China may be in much better shape than it looks — “The transition to consumption-driven growth may be more advanced than previously thought”
- The un-default: Congress has become a Seinfeld episode – “All this uncertainty and bitterness. All this lost credibility. All to schedule a meeting.”
- Enemies vs. adversaries — “For democracies to work, politicians need to respect the difference between an enemy and an adversary.”
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