I want to ask you one question.
In the last forty years, has the political class of this country been working for you — or for someone else?
Not which party. Not which leader. The class itself — the Labor and Liberal governments that have administered Australia since 1983. Because when you look at their decisions together, across four decades, a pattern emerges that cannot be explained by incompetence. Incompetence produces random outcomes. Some things get better. Some get worse. The direction is not consistent.
The direction of what has been done to Australia is entirely consistent. Every sovereign asset sold. Every strategic capability reduced. Every democratic override removed. Every form of national independence — financial, industrial, military, institutional — transferred to foreign governments, foreign capital, and international bodies that no Australian voted for.
"Random incompetence produces random outcomes. This produces consistent outcomes. Every decision goes the same direction. Forty years. Both parties. The trajectory never reverses. At some point, the distinction between deliberate and accidental stops mattering."
Movement One
THE INDICTMENT — WHAT WAS DONE TO AUSTRALIA
Over forty years, successive governments sold the national assets built by Australians over the preceding century. These were not failing enterprises. They were profitable, strategic institutions that gave Australia the ability to act independently.
1
Commonwealth Bank of Australia
Sold 1991–1996. A profitable national bank owned by every Australian. Now among the most profitable banks in the world. Profits flow to shareholders, not to you.
2
Qantas
Sold 1993–1996. The national carrier built with public money. Now in private hands that dismantled the workforce and the standards while extracting record profits.
3
Telstra
Sold 1997–2006. The national telecommunications infrastructure. Sold. The copper network was then replaced through the NBN at public expense. Australians paid to build it, paid to sell it, and are paying a third time to replace it.
4
Australian National Line — the merchant fleet
Wound up by 1998. Australia is an island continent. Every tonne of exports leaves by ship. Every tonne of imports arrives by ship. We no longer own a single significant merchant vessel. In a crisis, we cannot guarantee the movement of our own goods without foreign carrier permission.
5
State assets
Ports, electricity networks, land titles offices, public housing stock, water infrastructure — sold by state governments under fiscal pressure that was itself a product of Commonwealth policy choices.
6
The gold reserve
In 1997, Australia sold 167 tonnes — two thirds of its entire gold reserve — at approximately US$306 per ounce. Gold today trades above US$3,000 per ounce. The foregone value exceeds $28 billion. What remains: 80 tonnes. Stored not in Australia but in the Bank of England's vaults in London. Russia holds 2,335 tonnes. China holds 2,280 tonnes. Australia holds 80 tonnes, offshore.
7
Commonwealth land
Surplus government land sold to private developers rather than deployed for public housing, strategic reserve, or community infrastructure.
8
No Sovereign Wealth Fund
Norway discovered oil in 1969 and built a $1.7 trillion sovereign wealth fund from the proceeds. Australia has extracted resources worth trillions over the same period. We have no equivalent fund. The money was collected. No national wealth was built from it.
A sovereign nation manufactures. Australia had that base. It was systematically eliminated through deliberate policy choices.
9
Car industry
Holden, Ford, and Toyota all closed 2016–2017. 50,000 direct and indirect jobs gone. The sovereign capacity to manufacture vehicles — including military vehicles — eliminated.
10
Steel industry
Whyalla near collapse, Newcastle steelworks closed, Port Kembla shrunk. Australia has the iron ore and coal to be the world's most competitive steel producer. Policy choices — not market forces — made that impossible.
11
Shipbuilding
No sovereign capacity to build or maintain naval or commercial vessels at industrial scale. Every naval vessel contracted offshore or subject to foreign content. We cannot build our own fleet.
12
Textile and clothing manufacturing
Effectively eliminated through tariff removal with no transition support. Industries that employed hundreds of thousands of Australians, particularly women and migrants, closed within a decade of WTO framework adoption.
13
Government procurement
The Commonwealth and states spend over $600 billion annually in procurement. Minimal Australian content requirements mean a significant portion flows offshore. The largest customer in the country systematically purchases from foreign manufacturers, subsidising foreign industry with Australian taxpayer money.
14
Sovereign weapons manufacturing
Australia cannot manufacture its own ammunition at scale, its own missiles, its own armoured vehicles. Every round fired by the ADF in a sustained conflict requires US export approval. We are operationally dependent on foreign permission to defend ourselves.
A sovereign nation maintains the capability to function independently in a crisis. Australia has been systematically stripped of those capabilities.
15
Liquid fuel reserve — 21 days
The IEA minimum standard is 90 days. Australia has been in breach for over 20 years. We are the only IEA member nation that persistently fails this standard. In a conflict or supply disruption: three weeks, then paralysis.
16
Refinery closures — six to two
Clyde 2012. Kurnell 2014. Bulwer Island 2015. Six refineries became two in a decade. Not one closure was prevented by government policy despite documented warnings from defence and intelligence agencies.
17
Canola — 14 million barrels leaving the country
Australia produces approximately 6 million tonnes of canola per year. This represents approximately 14 million barrels of biodiesel — roughly 90 days of diesel supply. We are exporting it to Belgium and Germany as raw seed while our fuel reserve sits at 21 days.
18
Army personnel cut
The ADF has fewer full-time soldiers today than in the 1980s despite a significantly larger population and a demonstrably more dangerous strategic environment.
19
Ammunition reserves critically low
Defence analysts have publicly stated Australia has weeks — not months — of ammunition in a high-intensity conflict. With no sovereign manufacturing to replenish stocks, the ADF cannot sustain combat operations without continuous foreign resupply.
20
Armoured vehicles decades old
The LAND 400 program to replace ageing APCs has been delayed repeatedly. The sovereign capacity to manufacture replacements does not exist.
The complete transformation of Australia into a US forward base. Not one commitment put to the Australian people.
21
AUKUS — $400 billion, nothing deliverable for 20 years
Commits Australia to $400 billion or more on nuclear-powered submarines not deliverable for 15–20 years. Australia's strategic posture committed to US requirements in the Western Pacific — not the defence of Australian territory.
22
AUKUS signed without public vote
The largest defence commitment in Australian history. No referendum. No plebiscite. Minimal parliamentary debate. Signed by executive decision.
23
Land defence defunded for naval ambition
The Army — the force that defends Australian soil — has been cut to fund a blue-water naval capability that serves US strategic requirements in distant waters.
24
US Marines — Darwin
2,500 US Marines rotating permanently through Darwin since 2012. Darwin sits at the strategic gateway to Australia's northern approaches. Agreed by the Gillard government without a public vote.
25
US B-52 strategic bombers — Tindal
Nuclear-capable US B-52 bombers rotating permanently through RAAF Base Tindal. These aircraft carry nuclear weapons. Their presence makes Australia a military target in any US conflict — without the Australian people being asked.
26
US nuclear submarines — HMAS Stirling
Foreign nuclear vessels operating from Australian ports under US operational command before Australia has its own submarines.
27
Pine Gap
Operated jointly by the ADF and the CIA/NSA. Coordinates US military targeting, signals intelligence, and early warning for US operations globally. Its full operations are not subject to Australian parliamentary oversight. Pine Gap makes Australia a participant in US military operations — including lethal drone strikes — without the knowledge or consent of the Australian people.
28
Combined military infrastructure at Australian expense
US military facilities being constructed across northern Australia at Australian taxpayer expense — creating permanent foreign military infrastructure on sovereign Australian territory.
29
UK forces — expanded AUKUS access
Under AUKUS, UK forces have expanded access to Australian bases and facilities. A third foreign military with permanent presence on Australian soil, again without a public vote.
30
No public vote on any foreign military presence
US Marines. US bombers. US nuclear submarines. CIA/NSA operations. UK forces. Combined military infrastructure. The complete transformation of Australia into a US forward base. Not one commitment put to the Australian people.
The most direct evidence of whose interests the political class serves is found in the financial transfers documented on their watch.
31
RBA QE — $350 billion at near-zero rates
During COVID, the RBA purchased approximately $350 billion in government bonds at 0.1% yield — its first-ever quantitative easing program. Done simultaneously with the Fed ($4.5T), ECB (€4.9T), BoE (£895B), BoJ (¥700T), BoC, and RBNZ. Every major Western central bank. Same instrument. Same timing. Coordinated through BIS and G20 frameworks.
32
Bank of Russia did not participate
Russia maintained positive real interest rates through COVID and did not launch an equivalent bond purchase program. The uniformity of Western participation and Russian non-participation is not coincidental.
33
Rate rises — 13 times, $36.7 billion in losses
Rates then rose sharply — 13 consecutive rises. The RBA recorded losses of $36.7 billion. Australian taxpayers are recapitalising those losses. The banks that sold bonds at peak prices before rates rose have not contributed a cent.
34
The transfer — precise and documented
QE created money at near-zero rates. That money inflated asset prices — property and equities. The wealthiest Australians hold the most assets. The least wealthy hold wages and savings. Inflation followed. Rates rose. The wealth transfer from wage-earners to asset-holders was the most significant in Australian peacetime history.
35
Section 11 RBA Act removed — 1996
Section 11 of the Reserve Bank Act gave the elected government a democratic override over RBA decisions. It existed for 40 years without ever being used — as a guarantee of last resort. It was removed in 1996. The democratic backstop over monetary policy has not existed for nearly thirty years.
36
13 rate rises — mortgage holders paid for imported inflation
The inflation that triggered 13 rate rises was substantially imported — caused by COVID supply chain disruption and the Russia-Ukraine conflict, not by Australian wage growth. Australian mortgage holders absorbed $36.7 billion in rate-rise costs for inflation they did not cause.
37
Foreign ownership of Australian farmland — 15% of total
Approximately 53 million hectares of Australian agricultural land — roughly 15% of total — is foreign-owned according to ATO Register figures. The largest holders include Chinese, UK, US, and Dutch entities. Food security requires that the land which produces food is Australian.
38
Foreign ownership of water rights
Water entitlements created by the Australian government for Australian agricultural production are now held by foreign entities and institutional investors as financial instruments. The mechanism for transferring food security to foreign interests through water ownership is complete and operational.
39
Port Darwin — sold to a Chinese company
Port Darwin — the most strategically significant port in Australia — was sold to Landbridge Group, a Chinese company with documented connections to the Chinese Communist Party, on a 99-year lease by the Northern Territory government in 2015. Defence and intelligence agencies raised concerns. The sale proceeded.
40
Critical infrastructure — foreign ownership unmonitored
Power networks, gas pipelines, and ports are significantly foreign-owned. Critical Infrastructure Centre was established only in 2017 — after decades of unrestricted sale. Comprehensive assessment of foreign ownership of critical infrastructure has never been published.
The housing crisis is not a market failure. It is the designed outcome of policy choices that serve asset owners over workers.
41
Negative gearing — $27 billion annually
The federal government subsidises property speculation at a cost of approximately $27 billion per year in foregone tax. The beneficiaries are existing property owners. The cost is borne by renters and first home buyers.
42
CGT discount — 50% for investment property
Capital gains on investment property are taxed at half the normal rate. This makes property the most tax-advantaged investment available to Australians. Capital flows into speculation rather than productive enterprise.
43
House price to income ratio — 15× in Sydney
Sydney median house price is now more than fifteen times the median household income. This is not a market outcome. It is the cumulative effect of policies — negative gearing, CGT discounts, superannuation access restrictions, zoning laws — that inflate asset prices and restrict supply.
44
38 consecutive months of rent increases
Rental stress — more than 30% of income to rent — now affects the majority of Australian renters. Vacancy rates are at historic lows. Rental increases have outpaced wages for over three years.
45
Social housing stock — 40 years of decline
Social housing as a proportion of total housing stock has fallen continuously since the 1980s. The privatisation of public housing and the failure to replace stock has created a structural homelessness crisis that exists independent of economic cycles.
The cost of healthcare and welfare has been progressively transferred from the state to households through the mechanism of gap fees, co-payments, and rebate stagnation.
46
Bulk billing collapse — GP gap fees
The Medicare rebate for a standard GP consultation has not kept pace with the cost of running a practice for decades. Bulk billing rates have collapsed below 50% in many regional areas. Australians now pay gap fees that the Medicare system was designed to eliminate.
47
$89 billion JobKeeper — distributed without adequate accountability
The $89 billion JobKeeper program distributed money to businesses whose revenue had not declined or had increased. Subsequent analysis found tens of billions distributed to ineligible recipients. No claw-back was legislated. No prosecution for knowing overclaim.
48
Robodebt — illegal and lethal
The Robodebt scheme used an illegal income-averaging method to generate $1.8 billion in false debts against welfare recipients. People died. The Royal Commission found it was unlawful from the beginning. Multiple senior public servants and ministers were found to have been aware of concerns. Criminal referrals were made. Prosecutions have not followed.
49
NDIS — $40 billion and growing
The NDIS now costs over $40 billion per year. Growing at approximately 14% annually. The NDIA's own analysis estimates $3–4 billion per year in provider fraud and over-servicing. Participants are not achieving greater independence over time. The scheme designed as an insurance investment has become a transfer mechanism.
50
Aged care — exposed and underfunded
The Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety found the system to be systemically under-resourced, poorly regulated, and in many instances unsafe. The recommendations have been partially implemented. Mandatory staffing ratios resisted for years. The fundamental care shortage remains.
Democratic accountability over critical national decisions has been transferred to international bodies no Australian voted for.
51
WHO IHR amendments — health sovereignty transferred
Australia signed amended International Health Regulations giving the WHO significant new powers over Australian health policy during declared health emergencies. The amendments were signed by executive decision. No parliamentary vote. Australians were not asked whether they consent to international health governance authority over their country.
52
ISDS clauses — foreign corporations can sue Australia
Investor-State Dispute Settlement clauses in Australian free trade agreements allow foreign corporations to sue the Australian government for policy decisions that affect their profits. Philip Morris used such a clause to challenge plain packaging laws. The mechanism that allows foreign companies to override Australian democratic decisions is embedded in our trade architecture.
53
BIS — Australian monetary policy coordinated internationally
The Bank for International Settlements coordinates central bank policy globally. The Australian RBA participates in BIS frameworks. The simultaneous QE and rate-rise decisions by Western central banks were coordinated through BIS mechanisms. Australian monetary policy is not made solely by Australians for Australian conditions.
54
IMF prescriptions followed without public mandate
IMF Article IV consultations with Australia have consistently recommended policies — labour market deregulation, reduced wage growth, fiscal consolidation — that successive governments have implemented. The IMF has no democratic mandate from Australian citizens. Its recommendations have the practical force of policy.
55
WTO framework — tariffs removed without sovereign carve-outs
Australia's tariff removal under WTO frameworks was implemented without the strategic industry carve-outs that other WTO members retained. The car industry, textile industry, and steel industry were not protected. Other nations protected equivalent industries and retained them. Australia did not. The choice was deliberate.
56
News Corp and Nine Entertainment domination
Two companies control the majority of Australian print, broadcast, and digital news. News Corp alone controls approximately 70% of Australian print media by circulation. The political class and the media class share financial interests, social networks, and property portfolios.
57
ABC defunded and pressured
The one broadcaster without commercial ownership interest has had its funding cut repeatedly and its editorial independence challenged by successive governments, particularly when its reporting was inconvenient.
58
No media diversity laws
Cross-ownership rules have been weakened over successive governments. Concentration has been approved. The media landscape has narrowed.
59
COVID information suppression
During COVID, content contradicting official health advice was removed from platforms with Australian government involvement through ACMA. Content later proven accurate — including questions about natural immunity, vaccine efficacy duration, and the lab leak hypothesis — was suppressed. The Australians whose content was removed have received no acknowledgement.
60
Political advertising unregulated for truth
The most consequential information Australians receive — election advertising — is unregulated for factual accuracy. Politicians can say anything. No correction mechanism exists.
The same decisions were made simultaneously by the same category of Western governments, coordinated through the same international institutions. In each case, Russia did not participate.
61
Gold sales — simultaneous
Australia, UK, Switzerland, Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Canada — all sold gold simultaneously in the late 1990s at generational lows. Washington Agreement 1999 provided the framework. Russia did not participate. Russian gold reserve today: 2,335 tonnes.
62
QE — simultaneous
Fed, ECB, BoE, BoJ, BoC, RBNZ — all same direction, same timing, 2020–2021. Bank of Russia did not participate. Coordinated through BIS and G20 frameworks.
63
Central bank independence expanded — simultaneously
Democratic overrides of central banks were removed or weakened across the Western world in the same period. The removal of democratic accountability over monetary policy was not a uniquely Australian decision.
64
COVID response — identical template
Different countries, different political systems, different legal frameworks, different disease burdens — identical response. Lockdowns, mandates, emergency powers, vaccine passports, border closures. All within weeks of each other.
65
Refinery closures — Western world, same decade
The UK, Australia, and other Western nations all reduced domestic refining capacity in the same decades through the same policy of market deference over strategic industry protection.
Not one of the decisions documented above has been subjected to a full independent public inquiry with the power to examine documents, compel testimony, and name those responsible.
66
No Royal Commission into COVID
The suspension of democracy. The vaccine mandates. The $89 billion JobKeeper. The information suppression. The border closures. None examined under oath. The most significant exercise of government power over Australian citizens in peacetime history — unexamined.
67
No accounting of asset sale proceeds
Forty years of public asset sales. Hundreds of billions received. No public accounting of where the money went, what it produced, or why the national balance sheet does not reflect it.
68
No investigation of RBA QE coordination
What advice did the RBA receive before launching the program? What communications occurred with BIS and other central banks before COVID was declared? Who authorised $36.7 billion in losses to be borne by Australian taxpayers? Unanswered.
69
NDIS — $40 billion growing without healing
693,000 participants. Growing at a rate Treasury has described as unsustainable. Fraud documented at scale. The scheme designed as an insurance investment has become a transfer mechanism — and who it transfers money to deserves scrutiny that has not been applied.
70
No prosecution of major corporate fraud
The Banking Royal Commission found systemic fraud, criminal conduct, and consumer harm across the financial sector. Criminal charges: negligible. The institutions that were found to have broken the law continued operating, continued paying bonuses.
71
Defence capability reports — documented, ignored
Every defence white paper and capability review for twenty years has documented the capability gap: inadequate ammunition, ageing equipment, insufficient personnel, absent sovereign manufacturing. The gap has widened with every report. The reports have been received, noted, and filed.
72
Foreign military presence — no parliamentary vote
2,500 US Marines. B-52 bombers. Nuclear submarines. Pine Gap. UK forces. None voted on.
73
Media concentration — approved, not reviewed
The concentration of media ownership that produced the information environment described above was approved by the same political class whose decisions that media environment reports on.
74
The WHO IHR amendments — executive decision
Health sovereignty transferred without a vote. It will define Australia's response to the next pandemic — and no Australian was consulted.
Movement Two
THE VERDICT — WHAT THE EVIDENCE SHOWS
THE VERDICT
You have read seventy-four facts. This is not a record of incompetence. Incompetence produces random outcomes — sometimes things improve, sometimes they worsen, the direction is inconsistent. What the evidence above documents is a consistent direction across four decades, across both major parties, across different Treasurers and Prime Ministers and economic conditions and global circumstances.
Every sovereign asset sold. Every strategic capability reduced. Every democratic accountability mechanism weakened. Every form of national independence — financial, industrial, military, institutional, health — transferred to foreign governments, foreign capital, and international bodies that no Australian ever voted for.
"Capture does not require conspiracy. It requires only that the people making decisions share interests with the people who benefit from those decisions — and that no institutional mechanism exists to correct the divergence from the public interest."
THE BENEFICIARIES OF EVERY DECISION DOCUMENTED ABOVE:
▶
Financial institutions — banks, investment funds, and international capital that profit from privatised essential services, inflated asset markets, and monetary policy that serves creditors over debtors.
▶
Foreign governments and corporations — that now own Australian farmland, water, ports, energy assets, and receive the sovereign premium that should be returning to Australians.
▶
The United States strategic establishment — which now has marines, bombers, submarines, and intelligence operations on Australian soil, making Australia a forward base for US global military operations.
▶
International institutions — the BIS, IMF, WHO, and WTO frameworks that have progressively displaced Australian democratic decision-making with technocratic governance that no Australian elected.
The people who do not appear on that list: the Australian worker. The Australian family. The Australian farmer. The young Australian who cannot afford a home. The mortgage holder who absorbed thirteen rate rises. The defence force member operating ageing equipment with weeks of ammunition. The Australian who lost their job for refusing a mandated medical procedure.
"Foreign troops are on our soil. Foreign submarines are in our ports. Foreign bombers fly from our airbases. A foreign intelligence agency operates from our centre. Our gold is in a foreign vault. Our ships were sold. Our farms are owned by foreign investors. Our resources extracted by foreign corporations. Our monetary policy coordinated by foreign institutions. And our political class calls this an alliance. We call it what it is."
Australia has been handed over — piece by piece, decision by decision, without a single vote of the Australian people — to interests that are not Australian. That is the verdict. The jury is you.
Movement Three
THE SENTENCE — WHAT HAPPENS NOW
The Moral Majority Party does not offer managed decline at a slower pace. It offers reversal. The decisions documented above were made by governments. They can be unmade by governments. This is the MMP first-term commitment. Not aspirational. Not subject to review. Delivered or we have failed.
RESTORE SOVEREIGNTY — IMMEDIATELY
✔
Liquid Fuel Emergency declared Day 1 — Under the Liquid Fuel Emergency Act 1984. Strategic hold on canola exports. 90-day sovereign reserve legislated within first term. Domestic biodiesel crush mandated at market price.
✔
Section 11 RBA override restored — The democratic backstop that existed for 65 years is restored in the first sitting week of Parliament. The RBA operates within democratic boundaries again.
✔
AUKUS cancelled — $368 billion redirected to sovereign defence — Ghost Shark autonomous submarines, Army Engineer Corps, coastal defence missile systems, drone strike manufacturing, ammunition production on Australian soil.
✔
Foreign military presence reviewed — Full parliamentary review of all foreign military basing arrangements. Any arrangement that makes Australia a participant in foreign conflicts without public consent is subject to renegotiation or termination.
✔
FIRB strategic cap — Foreign ownership of agricultural land, water rights, critical infrastructure, and strategic assets capped and partially reversed. Australia's land, water, and infrastructure are Australian.
✔
No further public asset sales — Not one. Ever. The MMP government will not sell a single public asset. It will build new sovereign institutions.
BUILD WHAT WAS SOLD
✔
Sovereign Build Corporation — Six infrastructure corridors carrying power, water, gas, fibre, freight rail, and maglev. The largest sovereign infrastructure program in Australian history. Built in Australia, by Australians, owned by Australia permanently.
✔
Resource Extraction Levy — 73%×50%×49% = $17.88 per $100 of gross commodity value at point of sale — not profit, which can be engineered to zero. $87.6B/yr funds defence, budget support, debt reduction, and a permanently lower income tax rate. The ground pays its owners.
✔
Citizen Dividend — Every enrolled Australian receives a direct annual payment from corridor and resource revenue. ~$408/yr from Year 5, growing as SBC revenue scales. Not welfare. Not a handout. Your share of what Australia owns.
✔
Sovereign manufacturing mandate — Government procurement requires minimum Australian content. The $600B annual procurement budget anchors sovereign manufacturing — steel, vehicles, ammunition, pharmaceuticals, electronics — in Australia.
RETURN YOUR MONEY
✔
$50,000 tax-free threshold — From Day 1 of the first term. Every worker saves $4,500–$7,500 per year immediately. Funded by the Resource Extraction Levy.
✔
Power at 15 cents per kilowatt-hour — Legislated by end of first term. Trending to 6 cents on the SBC corridor. Bills cut nearly in half.
✔
Essential Food Basket — margins capped — 120 items tracked weekly. ACCC given real divestiture powers. The supermarket duopoly ends.
✔
$150,000 corridor homes — Rent-to-buy on Crown land. Granny flats as of right nationally. 200 new towns with power at cost, water, fibre, and maglev.
HOLD THE PAST TO ACCOUNT
✔
Royal Commission into COVID-19 — Full scope. Emergency powers, vaccine mandates, information suppression, JobKeeper distribution, international coordination of response, WHO IHR amendments. On the record. Under oath. Documents produced. Findings published.
✔
Full accounting of asset sale proceeds — What was received for every public asset sold since 1983. Where it went. What it produced. Published in full.
✔
Parliamentary inquiry into RBA QE — What advice was received. What international coordination occurred. Who authorised the loss. What communications existed with BIS before COVID was declared.
✔
Seven further Royal Commissions — Family Law. Local Government. Drug Epidemic. Banking and Corporate Fraud. Media Ownership and Political Influence. Foreign Military Basing. Water Rights and Foreign Ownership.
THE MOMENT
You have read the evidence. You know what was done. You know the consistent direction of forty years of decisions. You know who benefited. You know it is still happening — today, in this electoral cycle, with new trade agreements being signed, new foreign basing arrangements being expanded, new international health frameworks being adopted.
The political class is counting on three things: your exhaustion, your cynicism, and your belief that nothing can change. That the machine is too large, too entrenched, too well-funded, and too well-connected to be moved by one election in one regional electorate.
They are wrong about that.
"You have read the evidence. You know what was done. The only question left is whether you are the generation that stops it — or the generation that handed it to your children unsolved."
On 2027 federal election, Robertson votes. One electorate. One federal election. But the first moment — the first public statement by Australian voters in a federal election — that the pattern has been seen, named, and rejected.
▶ VOTE 1 BRETT MURRELL — ROBERTSON — 2027 FEDERAL ELECTION
▶ SHARE THIS DOCUMENT WITH EVERY AUSTRALIAN YOU KNOW
▶ ASK THE QUESTION: HAS THE POLITICAL CLASS BEEN WORKING FOR YOU?
★ ON 9 MAY, FARRER ANSWERS FIRST ★
AUSTRALIA IS WATCHING.