Yet we have leftie lunatics running around telling us that we are just scared to be ruled by a female. Not any female. Just her!

I can't recall a female PM who has copped such sexist bullshit before. Coincidence? I think notRorschach wrote:I can't recall any other government or PM that has tried to make SEX an issue to stay in government.
That just shows you that PM-KFC is a complete cuunt and hated by everyone whether they have a penis or vagina. Serves her right. She made it an issue.boxy wrote:I can't recall a female PM who has copped such sexist bullshit before. Coincidence? I think notRorschach wrote:I can't recall any other government or PM that has tried to make SEX an issue to stay in government.![]()
I even get this shit via email from the occasional female. Fuck me dead, and you act surprised when it's an issue?
Proves that she's a whining mole like the rest of the left who think that failing can be excused by finger pointing and a sook.boxy wrote:Proves that bogan arseholes like you have no class, more like.
boxy wrote:I can't recall a female PM who has copped such sexist bullshit before. Coincidence? I think notRorschach wrote:I can't recall any other government or PM that has tried to make SEX an issue to stay in government.![]()
I even get this shit via email from the occasional female. Fuck me dead, and you act surprised when it's an issue?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... ction.htmlGovernment MPs pack up their offices as polls count Gillard out 100 days before Australian election
Australia’s first female Prime Minister Julia Gillard is facing an historic defeat at the nation’s September election, new polls have shown, with MPs in her own party admitting they are packing up their offices in anticipation of losing power.
ALP MPs kept in dark on disastrous Labor poll which predicts election wipeout
SIMON BENSON
The Daily Telegraph
June 24, 2013 12:00AM
AN internal ALP report containing polling for 40 seats across Australia, and circulated among selected members of Julia Gillard's leadership group, shows Labor would be lucky to retain 30 to 35 seats after the election.
But the report has not been shared with most Labor MPs.
The Daily Telegraph has obtained data from the party's UMR research report compiled for the ALP national secretariat in the past two weeks.
It shows that in NSW, the swing against Labor is 10 to 12 per cent on average and warns it would lose 12 seats - the majority in Sydney.
In WA, the report warns of a wipe-out, with the party unlikely to retain any seats but for the outside chance of Fremantle. It also predicts Labor would lose all four seats in Tasmania and its two seats in the Northern Territory.
In Victoria, it forecast the loss of eight seats. In SA, Labor would keep only two seats and in Queensland it would be left with only Kevin Rudd's seat of Griffith and possibly Oxley.
It comes as the latest Newspoll revealed that Labor under Ms Gillard has retreated further with a primary vote of just 29 per cent.
That translates to a two-party preferred vote of 43 per cent for the ALP, and 57 per cent for the Coalition, according to the Newspoll, published in today's Australian newspaper.
Even more worrying for Ms Gillard, on the question of preferred prime minister, Opposition leader Tony Abbott's support rose 2 per cent to 45 per cent, while Ms Gillard slipped 2 per cent to 33 per cent.
Of the internal figures, a senior ALP source confirmed that select cabinet ministers in the leadership group were aware of the report but had declined to circulate it or share the results with MPs at risk of losing their seats.
It warns that Labor, with an overall primary vote of 32 per cent, would likely only retain between 30 and 35 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives - a loss of more than half its existing MPs.The report, showing polling results of 40 seats across the nation, also reveals that the swings were twice as bad in seats held by Labor than those it didn't hold - confirming the electorate was now intent on punishing Labor. Bats at the ready...
"This reduces us to a rump," the ALP source said. "I'm not sure people realise this is going to be a defeat of the likes the Labor Party has never seen." talk about being in denial and being out of touch....
Several MPs last night, when told of the report, demanded that the results be shared with the caucus.
The polling report comes on the back of analysis by The Daily Telegraph warning that Labor would also likely be stripped of any influence in the Senate, with the Coalition being delivered command of the numbers in both houses of parliament.
Rudd supporter and veteran ALP strategist and campaigner Bruce Hawker warned that Labor and the trade union movement risked oblivion if it lost its ability to influence the Senate - with Labor and the Greens likely to be able to command no more than 36 votes out of the 76.
He warned that last time the Coalition had control of both houses, it introduced WorkChoices. "This is very real danger for Labor if we lose control of the Senate as well as the House of Representatives because at that point the new government has carte blanche to do whatever it likes, such as industrial relations," Mr Hawker told Meet the Press. Typical Hawker scaremongering![]()
With leadership tensions likely to reach flashpoint this week, Mr Rudd has been warned by key supporters that he now has no choice but to challenge Julia Gillard this week.
In a sign of growing frustration within Mr Rudd's camp, he has been told he will have to abandon his pledge and force a spill this week to settle the leadership issue once and for all.
"He has just got to do it, even if he loses," one key backer said yesterday.
Gillard firm as Rudd backers accuse Combet of 'double dealing'
Another senior MP supporting a change back to Mr Rudd said it was now up to the former prime minister to make it happen: "No one is going to do it for him. He will not get what he wants, being carried in on our shoulders."
But several senior ministers again dismissed the suggestion a challenge would come this week and denied Ms Gillard had lost the majority support of caucus.![]()
Communications Minister Stephen Conroy joined a growing chorus of Gillard loyalists goading Mr Rudd to challenge if he believed he had the numbers.
"I support Julia Gillard. I don't believe there will be change," Mr Conroy told Sky News's Australian Agenda. "But I don't believe I would be in a position to be on a front bench." .
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