<iframe src="//www.googletagmanager.com/ns.html?id=GTM-K3L4M3" height="0" width="0" style="display:none;visibility:hidden">

Flat White

The Greens new addition pushes the party harder left

22 June 2020

5:00 AM

22 June 2020

5:00 AM

Repeatedly, the Greens demonstrate they are the most dangerous party in the Australian political scene. Last week, the Greens voted against a motion condemning calls to defund essential police forces.

Those on the right side of common sense and respect – including Matt Canavan and Jim Molan – wished to recognise the hard work and dedication of our police officers. And on the other side, we had the clueless Greens bleating about “justice reinvestment”. Oh, joy.

Make no mistake; the Greens are the enemy of Australia.

And now, we have a new one to keep an eye on; extremist activist Lidia Thorpe who’s been named the new Greens senator for Victoria. She won the two-party preferred vote with the backing of 58 per cent of 2342 voters. This is Di Natale is the “Green New Deal” reimagined in female form.


This far-left extremist lunatic has described Brisbane Immigration as “Australia’s concentration camps 2020”. She was previously the managing director of Clan Corporation, a sustainable housing and renewable energy business catering for Aboriginal communities. Because, of course, “renewable energy” is the biggest issue facing remote communities.

In news that will come as a surprise to precisely no one, she’s a mate of Clementine Ford (Ford backs the dubious “pay the rent” fund run by Warriors of the Aboriginal Resistance — Thorpe insists asking questions about its governance is “racist”) and a favourite of the(ir) ABC.

She recently interviewed Miriam-I-Wish-Boris-Johnson-Would-Die Margolyes about “what the Australian dream means to us”. Am going to hazard a guess this doesn’t mean honouring our frontline heroes in the emergency services on Australia Day as part of a national day of thanks?

Excellent.

The last thing Australia needs right now is another Green troublemaker. And yet, here we are…

Got something to add? Join the discussion and comment below.

Got something to add? Join the discussion and comment below.


Comments

Don't miss out

Join the conversation with other Spectator Australia readers. Subscribe to leave a comment.

Already a subscriber? Log in

Close