Monday, March 27, 2006

Peter Garrett for PM


Well,
I left well enough alone until the following article carried on into the media today... then Peter was on the Political Forum on ABC 702 Radio...

The thing that people seem to miss about him [with the 'can a rock star be Aussie PM?' stuff is that he is a person: of intengrity; with knowledge, legal skills, a good mind, plain speaking and honest!! Not just some "rock star"!!
Midnight Oil was a different animal when it comes to music, they ran their own race, flew in the face of popularity, dissed Countdown and Mollie Meldrum, went independent, stayed home from the US for family when worldwide success beckoned after "Diesel and Dust" etc

Now Peter Garrett is quietly working away as a Federal MP, sure to eventually be tested with a Ministry and in doing so is slowly building a case for a long future in public life as a significant figure in Aussie history!! As PM? We could do a lot worse!!

I'm sure Peter has his moments, foibles and faults... but in the brief moments of conversation I have had, he showed himself to be the kind of humble, self effacing and uncomfortably ordinary sort of bloke who would appeal as a fair and honest political Leader.

Can Peter Garrett rock the Lodge? Some see a future PM
SMH 25th March 2006

COULD the former Midnight Oil frontman Peter Garrett be prime minister?
As the ALP seeks a long-term answer to its leadership squabbles, an unusually quiet and unassuming member for Kingsford Smith has emerged as a potential future leader after barely 18 months in Parliament.
It may not be a big stretch of the imagination, considering the political transformation in the US of Ronald Reagan and Arnold Schwarzenegger.
One senior Labor official said: "Peter has impressed a lot of people with his policy brain. He needs time as a shadow minister so he can get key portfolio experience, but there are people in the party who see that potential [to be leader]."
An experienced party powerbroker, Bob McMullan, one of Mr Garrett's closest parliamentary colleagues, also responded positively: "Leading the ALP? It's not out of the question.
"I can't see a Labor government in the future without a big role for Peter as a policy player. Whether he gets beyond that is still too early to tell. He is an innovative policy thinker and I expect he will play a big role.
"What progressive parties need are leaders who give people hope that things might be better, that they can change the country for the better if there is a change of government. Peter has that quality but leadership requires more than that. Until people are really tested you can't really tell."
The Greens leader, Bob Brown, is unequivocal: "Absolutely electable. The Labor Party would do extremely well to take Peter on as leader. The rank and file would be delighted with the news. What they need is not just a power politician but one with a social conscience."
And Mr Garrett? "There is no way I am going to buy into your very eloquent hypothetical," he told the Herald during a wide-ranging interview about his budding new career.

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