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The Forum > Article Comments > Who should we elect to represent us? > Comments

Who should we elect to represent us? : Comments

By David Leyonhjelm, published 21/11/2017

What they had in mind was to avoid a situation where someone in the federal parliament owed allegiance to a country with which Australia had a significant conflict.

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Money talks Bu-- Sh-- walks, simply if you have lots of money most countries in the world will give you citizenship.
Posted by Philip S, Tuesday, 21 November 2017 6:40:15 PM
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Who should we elect to represent us?

People with the ability to develop good policies that bring value to the wider community and the taxpayer.
Posted by Armchair Critic, Thursday, 23 November 2017 7:27:46 AM
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Who should we elect to represent us?

People with the ability to correctly fill out simple forms.
Posted by Is Mise, Thursday, 23 November 2017 8:53:19 AM
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There is only one social entity capable of leading 'Australians' and that is a social group that has no allegiance to any other nation on the planet.....the indigenous full blood Aborigine....not an Islander, not a gimme gimme I'm entitled, but a home grown Australian who hasn't time for BS Anglo or otherwise.
Someone whose done the hard yards is guaranteed to put Australia first!....even if the nature of government need to be changed.
Posted by ilmessaggio, Friday, 24 November 2017 2:04:24 PM
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.

Dear David,

.

There comes a time when there are so many holes in the rusty old bucket that you just can’t fix it anymore.

Our old colonial constitution was drafted in the 1890’s. Population was about 3.5 million in those days. But we are no longer a British colony. We abandoned the White Australia policy in 1973 and have since become one of the world’s most multicultural societies.

According to the federal government web site :

« At Federation in 1901, ‘British subject’ was the sole civic status noted in the Australian Constitution … Throughout the 1960s, Australian citizens were still required to declare their nationality as British. The term ‘Australian nationality’ had no official recognition or meaning until the Act was amended in 1969 and renamed the Citizenship Act. This followed a growing sense of Australian nationalism and the declining importance for Australians of the British Empire. In 1973 the Act was renamed the Australian Citizenship Act. It was not until 1984 that Australian citizens ceased to be British subjects ».

Our rusty old bucket (the constitution) is so old and fragile it is full of holes and beyond repair. Freedom of expression (speech, cartoons, etc.) has fallen through one of them. The Prime Minister has fallen through another one. There is nothing in the constitution about a Prime Minister. It says the British Crown is the head of state.

We tried to patch it up 44 times since it was drafted 120 years ago but only succeeded 8 times.

The only way it can be fixed is by referendum and that’s almost certain to fail. Howard knew that. That’s why he used it to preserve royalty and prevent the country from becoming a republic.

Nevertheless, the only sensible thing to do would be to wrap our old colonial constitution in fine silk tissue paper (just plain white would be nice) to carefully conserve all the dusty bits and pieces - and get a new one.

That won’t happen until we decide to become a republic. For that, we need more non-British Australians.

.
Posted by Banjo Paterson, Monday, 27 November 2017 2:02:01 AM
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Mind reading too David and post-birth mind reading at that!
Posted by Hilily, Tuesday, 28 November 2017 4:41:32 PM
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