Australia's PM and Australia's worst judge of character. Best friends the Stewarts QAnon, and Hillsong hypocrite Houston. Who else can he squeeze into this notorious clique?
Australians say Scott Morrison is the nation’s least trustworthy politician, as new figures show he is presiding over a nation losing trust in the Prime Minister but also government more broadly. The role Mr Morrison has played personally in attracting public criticism, but also the way in which his polarising leadership has changed the way many Australians view politics is outlined in new Roy Morgan research released this week. Contained within a wider analysis of public sentiment to government, the study showed which MPs are least trusted by Australians. Many are on the Coalition leadership team. Prime Minister Scott Morrison is the nation’s most distrusted, with Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce in second and Defence Minister Peter Dutton rounding out the ‘winner’s’ circle. Labor, by contrast, dominated most trusted in the snap survey, taken by Roy Morgan in March. South Australian Senator Penny Wong came in first. Party leader Anthony Albanese is now in second place, up from eighth in 2020 research.
Source: Australians’ distrust of Morrison turning them off government
Australia's Shame = LNP
“A growing number of G20 developed economies have announced meaningful emissions reductions by 2030 – with a handful of holdouts, such as Australia,” he said.
Source: UN chief singles out Australia as ‘holdout’ on climate action
Like Monty Python’s Black Knight Scott Morrison is mustering his Media Forces and Dirt Brigade to keep Albo tarnished in the view of the electorate. Kimberly Kitching vs the “Mean Girls” has been his current attention grabber to keep the brutal defeat of the LNP in South Australia off the front pages. Peter Dutton’s promise of a space force sometime next century is intended to add some spit and polish to Scumo
Coalition support is lower than it was during the Black Summer bushfires, a study has found. Just 32.2 per cent of respondents said they would vote for the government if an election was held in January, compared with 35.4 per cent in January 2020. It is also a sizeable drop from January 2021 at the height of the pandemic, when 40.3 per cent of respondent said they’d vote for the Liberal-National coalition. Lead author of the Australian National University study Professor Nicholas Biddle said with less than one in three respondents to back the incumbents, things did not look good for the coalition. “This is significantly lower than the 37 per cent who said they would vote for Labor, who would appear to have been in an election-winning position,” he said.
Source: Government support lower than at bushfires – Michael West Media
Commander Dutton is compulsory bedtime reading
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