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Title: |
The Big Teal |
Search Result:
| By (author): |
Simon Holmes à Court |
| ISBN10-13: |
1922633569 : 9781922633569 |
| Format: |
Paperback |
| Pages: |
96 |
| Weight: |
.000 Kg. |
| Published: |
Monash University Publishing - October 2022 |
| List Price: |
13.99 Pounds Sterling |
| Availability: |
In Stock
Qty Available: 14 |
| Subjects: |
Elections & referenda |
| â We will not achieve net zero in the cafes, dinner parties and wine bars of our inner cities.â Little infuriated the forgotten people of the twenty-first centuryâ women and younger voters, especiallyâ more than Scott Morrisonâ s deluge of disparagement on the issues that mattered to them. The May 2022 election marked the great re-engagement of those ignored and patronised for too long on climate, integrity and gender equity. The electoral map has been dramatically redrawn. However, the triumph of the â tealsâ was not entirely unexpected to those assisting their rise, such as Climate 200 founder Simon Holmes à Court. As Australia entered its lost decade on climate action, he observed that conventional advocacy had become a case of diminishing returns, and that Cathy McGowanâ s election as a community independent in 2013 provided a template for direct political engagement. The result was Climate 200, a crowdfunded outfit intended to provide the money and expertise to better match the major parties and turbocharge the grassroots movement emerging in thirty-plus electorates. Despite a relentless and increasingly shrill campaign of vilification aimed at Holmes à Court and the candidates by the Liberals, assisted by their media mates, we saw the election of six new community independent MPs and one senator. It was a victory of facts over fear, priorities over prejudice. It was a blow to the unfit-for-purpose â majoritariatâ , a rejection of the false binary choice between parties that no longer reflect the hopes and complexity of modern democratic Australia. This is the story of how a team of inspired young tech-heads and older sages used their real and virtual-world experience to help a cluster of communities get the representation they wanted. |
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