Price: Muppet City Council on full display in Melbourne
This week’s desperate promises from Melbourne’s mayoral hopefuls prove these suburban attention seekers don’t get that those they represent just want a clean city they can be happy in.
This week’s desperate promises from Melbourne’s mayoral hopefuls prove these suburban attention seekers don’t get that those they represent just want a clean city they can be happy in.
Holding a pro-Palestine rally on the first anniversary of the worst attack on Jews since the Holocaust should sicken every right-thinking Victorian. Jacinta Allan and Anthony Albanese have failed the state.
We all know Victoria has become a national laughing stock, but it’s not beyond repair. These are the steps that can pull Melbourne, and the state, back from the brink.
Daniel Andrews, the most despised politician Victoria has ever known, quit as premier a year ago this September 26, leaving a smoking ruin of a once great state behind him.
Recording five women do their business in a “grubby” live-radio stunt proves why these Sydney trash talkers need to stop taking the p*ss and get out of Melbourne.
The Albanese government seems captured by Rudd-like grand schemes while forgetting keeping the lights on is what matters. It’s not a green energy dream unfolding before us but an Indigenous heritage challenge nightmare.
They embrace all woke causes and now the AFL wants a say on who commentates on the game, and “old white men” don’t deliver diversity. But fans wants to hear from ex-champions, so it’s not jobs for the boys but the best people for the job.
There’s never been a better example of how out of touch Victoria’s politicians are than Jacinta Allan and her ministers bagging Chris Minns’ get-back-to-work edict. His tough leadership is in stark contrast to what we see from the Labor Left.
Victoria’s bail laws were weakened as a youth crime crisis swept Melbourne, and the reasons why are a blueprint for what hard left governments do to keep their inner-city base happy.
Lord Mayor Nicholas Reece has boasted about spending close to$30m a year on graffiti removal, yet the city remains blanketed in ugly tags, smears and slogans. Something needs to change.
Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/journalists/steve-price/page/2