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BBQ diplomacy hits snag

20 Oct, 2008 07:00 AM
The ACT could provide Australia's first Greens minister after Labor and the Liberals said nothing was off the table in negotiations to form the next territory government.

A resolution is still some time away, though. The Greens are vowing to take their time up to two weeks deciding who they will support as the ACT's chief minister.

Negotiations between the parties will begin as early as tomorrow. However, they could be delayed by the fact the three new Greens MLAs are yet to identify a leader.

Labor and the Liberals are likely to have seven seats each in the next Assembly, although there is a chance the Greens could steal a second seat in Molonglo, at the expense of the Liberals.

Labor leader Jon Stanhope is maintaining that he has a clear mandate to remain chief minister. The latest count had Labor more than six percentage points clear of the Liberals last night, at 37.5 per cent to 31.3per cent in the territory-wide vote.

''The Labor Party has achieved a significant vote and I believe in the context of Hare-Clark ... there is a clear precedent and mandate to take government and govern for four more years,'' Mr Stanhope said yesterday.

Greens Molonglo MLA-elect Shane Rattenbury indicated the party did not necessarily share that view.

''That's obviously Jon's interpretation and he is entitled to it,'' he said.

''We have said right along that it is going to come down to the policy outcomes. We have got four years to deliver for Canberra.

''We want to sit down and have that conversation and say the Greens have put out a bunch of policies, both parties have put out a bunch of policies, what can we find to go forward?''

Greens Ginninderra MLA-elect Meredith Hunter said policy priorities included public transport, climate change, health, education and community consultation.

The last two are set to be combined in a review of the Stanhope Government's school closures.

Ms Hunter would not say whether the Greens were seeking a ministry, saying only, ''We will need to think very, very carefully around a whole range of things and what we are going to go in and talk about.

''We are not going to be rushed, we are not going to be pressured into making a decision early.''

Although Mr Stanhope has not ruled out agreeing to bring a Greens MLA into his cabinet, he does not think it fits with the Westminster system of government he holds dear.

''I think everything's on the table. But we haven't had a first conversation yet. It's not a model of government that strikes a chord in my heart,'' he said.

Liberals leader Zed Seselja whose party made Independent MLA Michael Moore health minister has also left open the possibility of a Greens minister.

Greens Brindabella MLA-elect Amanda Bresnan said the party's three new Members would all meet the major parties for negotiations that would begin in the next day or two. Those negotiations are likely to take a long time.

Mr Rattenbury said it would be a week before the count was finished and the final make-up of the Assembly was certain. The Greens then had another week before the Assembly sat to choose a chief minister.

Mr Stanhope remains the front runner, and said yesterday he would be surprised if a party that campaigned on community consultation ignored the community's views through the ballot box.

He did concede there was a ''level of dissatisfaction and disquiet'' with himself and his party, ''and we need to continue to work our way through that''.

Mr Seselja is not conceding defeat and denied Mr Stanhope had a mandate to remain in power.

''It's a pretty weak argument, I think. We'll have a situation where there's seven Liberals and seven Labor representatives in the Assembly and three Greens.

''That's not a mandate, that's a tight parliament.''.

He said he was looking forward to meeting the new cross bench and discussing his green credentials.

''I think it is important for the Greens to show that they can't be taken for granted by the Labor Party. We've heard from Jon Stanhope, we've heard from Katy Gallagher last night that they simply expect the Greens to fall into line,'' he said.

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Lets hope the Greens dont fall into line. The voters in the ACT have given the Greens a great chance to effect change in the ACT I hope they do it. The tired old 2 party system in Australia isnt democratic and Australians need to realise that the Greens are a great party with loads of great policies.
Posted by Daniel , 20/10/2008 8:26:09 AM
I really hope the Greens make the other two parties work for thier support. I am so sick of the two party dualopoly. It is very clear that Australians are sick and tired of being force fed the same two political parties which have become more alike over the last decade. Australians want serious alternatives to the Lib/Lab opptions. Once the Democrats might have presented themselves as such an opption, but they betrayed the publicfs trust when they sold out to the libs and the GST. History shows they paid the price for that betrayal. I hope the Greens prove different, stand up to the other parties.
Posted by HardCalibre, 20/10/2008 8:53:02 AM
Well, i have been continually told that ACT residents are the smartest in the country. This weekend just blew that theory out of the water. For Canberrans to basically vote back in a labor government is surely the dumbest thing i have seen. Even as a labor voter, who couldnt stand stanhopes arrogance, i voted liberal hoping to see some youth and new energy put into canberras government. Thank you to the dumbar*es of canberra, we now have another term of labor mismanagement (via the greens)
Posted by andy, 20/10/2008 8:53:06 AM
If Little Jonny thinks he has a mandate after such an enormous swing, he’s a bigger idiot than I thought he was. Rattenbury is right to say that it should be about policy outcomes for the next four years, not how popular or unpopular Zed and Jon are now.
Posted by Trevar, 20/10/2008 9:10:26 AM
Greens need to put Zed to Bed. He's too green but not the "green" they want. Liberals always stand for $'s for greedy business at the cost of workers and the environment and that won't change if they're foolish enough to believe that the Liberal actually have an environmentally concerned bone in their bodies.
Posted by Toddler Trainer, 20/10/2008 9:18:21 AM
The party with the largest number of votes should lead the minority government. This should be embedded in the Hare Clarke systemn.
Posted by Dingo, 20/10/2008 9:22:48 AM
Labor has outscored the Libs by 6.2% of the electorate. It seems that either the system is wrong or Labor is the peoples' choice. Democracy as developed by Plato goes for majority rule not complete concensus of the electorate.
Posted by Greg from Latham, 20/10/2008 9:32:15 AM
Are you kidding me Stanhope? Clear mandate, really. If you had a clear mandate you would have won more seats but you didn't so you don't! People in Canberra obviously don't trust either side. Any way do the greens have to pick a Chief minister? Why can't policy be passed on its merits and not just on political lines...or is that too democratic?
Posted by Aaron, 20/10/2008 9:35:17 AM
The first leader of the two major parties which tied at the weekend to offer the Greens a Ministry and the Speaker's job will become Chief Minister. Coalition governments hve worked in this country and the ACT before - why not now? Get on with it Jon and Zed. Rid us of this uncertainty.
Posted by TonyJim, 20/10/2008 9:37:42 AM
i am disappointed to admit that Stanhope has misused the ACT police force. He has turned ACT police into traffic photographers. His campaign said he has employed 122 more police. But what's the point when their job is to screw average mums and dad on their way too and from work. I don't think the Greens should support labor given their dishonest misuse of the police.
Posted by William Hurst, 20/10/2008 10:16:44 AM
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