You should ask Beowulf. He's a fan of our Pauline.boxy wrote:Anyone know how much she makes with all these half arsed runs?
![Mr. Green :mrgreen:](./images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)
You should ask Beowulf. He's a fan of our Pauline.boxy wrote:Anyone know how much she makes with all these half arsed runs?
No... you are right. The education funding model has been faulty for too many years... too many liberal years at that... and as a result secondary schools and the education they offer has suffered greatly. The libs and labs have let us down profoundly. Still, the only politician that I know of who claims to have entered politics in order to make a difference in education is Gillard... and in all that time, she has done nothing.Pastafarian wrote:Sappho wrote:They haven't even touched the funding model in that time... nor even talked about the funding model in that time. You are being far too charitable and nowhere near critical enough... remember, Dullard claims to have joined politics to make a difference in education... and she is yet to do that.Pastafarian wrote:
Well its only been three years, you can't reverse the effects of a decade of crap funding that quick.
OK, Labors done a crap job, hows that. I admit it, I also admit though that this whole thing hasn't been helped by previous governments.
Why don't you ask Beowulf? Just because some newspaper quotes a sum of money, doesn't make it true.mantra wrote:The last time Hanson ran and failed the amount she got paid was around $280,000 - it may have been a bit more, and her campaigning consisted of a couple of appearances on TV and radio - oh she did talk to Alan Jones more than once, but that was about it.
mellie wrote:The peak of Hanson's success occurred in June 1998, when One Nation attracted nearly one-quarter of the vote in that month's State elections in Queensland, and One Nation won 11 out of 89 seats in the Queensland Legislative Assembly.
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Hanson, Olfield and Ethridge were convicted at trial.mellie wrote:The fact she was jailed without trial
In what has been described in the media as one of the most sensational and unusual years in Queensland's legal history} the 2003 criminal trial of Pauline Hanson, former MP and founder of the political party Pauline Hanson's One Nation was the most sensational event of them all. Pauline Hanson and her co-accused David Ettridge were convicted and sentenced to three years imprisonment on fraud charges under the Criminal Code (Qld) (the Code), relating to their part in the registration of the political party. What particularly characterised this event was not so much the trial itself, which was relatively uneventful considering the identity of the accused, but the extensive public debate and media coverage following their conviction and imprisonment on 20 August 2003. Pending the hearing of their appeal, unsuccessful applications for bail were taken as far as the High Court. Ultimately, on 6 November 2003,the Queensland Court of Appeal quashed all the convictions and ordered that verdicts of acquittal be entered. Much media analysis has followed, but little discussion of the charges, sentence and appeal process. This article analyses what occurred, and asks the question: Is there really any explaining to do, or were the eventual acquittals an example of due process in accordance with the rule of law? The article also examines the impact of the extraordinary media coverage of the case.
Well lets see ...then later acquitted is testament to this fact.
On 20 August 2003, in a separate and this time criminal case, a jury in the District Court of Queensland convicted Hanson and Ettridge of electoral fraud. Both of them were sentenced to three years imprisonment for falsely claiming that 500 members of the 'Pauline Hanson Support Movement' were members of the political organisation 'Pauline Hanson's One Nation', in order to register that organisation in Queensland as a political party and apply for electoral funding. Because the registration was found to be unlawful, Hanson's receipt of electoral funding worth A$498,637 resulted in two further convictions for dishonestly obtaining property - each with three-year sentences, to run concurrently with the first. Hanson's initial reaction to the verdict was - "Rubbish, I'm not guilty. It's a joke."[55]
Either the 3 members of One Nation were completely ignorant of Australian electoral laws or deliberately defrauded the Ozzie public .... you choose ... halfwits or thieves?On 6 November 2003 (delivering judgment the day after hearing the appeal), the Queensland Court of Appeal quashed all of Hanson's and Ettridge's convictions. Hanson and Ettridge were immediately released from jail.[57] The Court's unanimous decision was that the evidence did not support a conclusion beyond reasonable doubt that the people on the list were not members of the 'Pauline Hanson's One Nation' party and that Hanson and Ettridge knew this when the application to register the party was submitted. Accordingly, the convictions regarding registration were quashed. The convictions regarding funding, which depended on the same facts, were also quashed. However, in order to reach this decision the court had to suppose that the three founding members of One Nation - Hanson, Ettridge and Oldfield - had misinterpreted the party's constitution when they had claimed, in earlier public statements, to be the only members of the party.[58]
Still, not bad for a single mum working out of her fish and chip shop.Pastafarian wrote:mellie wrote:The peak of Hanson's success occurred in June 1998, when One Nation attracted nearly one-quarter of the vote in that month's State elections in Queensland, and One Nation won 11 out of 89 seats in the Queensland Legislative Assembly.
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ANd yet somehow that same year, she was voted out in the Federal Election. That must be the peak.
mellie wrote:Still, not bad for a single mum working out of her fish and chip shop.Pastafarian wrote:mellie wrote:The peak of Hanson's success occurred in June 1998, when One Nation attracted nearly one-quarter of the vote in that month's State elections in Queensland, and One Nation won 11 out of 89 seats in the Queensland Legislative Assembly.
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ANd yet somehow that same year, she was voted out in the Federal Election. That must be the peak.
She captured the mood of the electorate, something the larger partys were reluctant to touch on.
Has Kristina held a job, other than in the supine position in Labors press gallery?
She loves it down there....
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