• fine_sandy_bottom
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    1 year ago

    LOL. Jono’s political career might be fairly brief I think. These policies are designed to get traction on social media but they’re completely impractical.

    Only rate payers vote in council elections and this guy’s platform is… checks notes… punishing rate payers. How is he proposing to determine which homes are vacant?

    The usual tired rhetoric about vacant homes and Short Term Rentals. The study he’s referencing by Bond et al doesn’t even support this type of punitive taxation.

    • ZagorathOP
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      1 year ago

      Only rate payers vote in council elections

      Incorrect. Council elections are voted in by all local residents.

      • fine_sandy_bottom
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        1 year ago

        Oof. You’re right. In west aus council elections aren’t compulsory which I guess led to (but does not excuse) my confusion.

        • ZagorathOP
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          1 year ago

          Ah interesting.

          In Queensland the elections are compulsory, but it’s worth noting that it’s optional preferential. So voters are allowed to just number “1” and stop there, if they want.

          The LNP uses this to great effect in their campaigns, and it’s apparently part of the reason they have such a large majority of seats in BCC.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      These policies are designed to get traction on social media but they’re completely impractical.

      That could be there motto. As much as I hate to say it as I would love to vote for the greens, they’re not a viable political party, they could survive in a proportional representation system but in a FPTP system they are barely any better than whatever UKIP are themselves this week.

      They also say they are going to ban GM crops and limit the development of nuclear power plants, I’d love to know how they actually plan to do that in a way that doesn’t result in everyone starving to death in the dark.

      The Monster Raving Looney party offered to introduce the 99 pence coin, which frankly I think is infinitely more practical.

      • ZagorathOP
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        1 year ago

        Are you British? UKIP and MRLP, as well as FPTP, make me think perhaps you are. This is a thread about Australian politics.

        We have a proportional(ish) system for our federal Senate (equivalent(ish) to you House of Lords), while the House of Representatives uses Instant Runoff Voting (sometimes called “the alternative vote” in the UK, or “ranked choice voting” in the US). Our Greens are very much a viable third party. More so than the LibDems are in the UK, for example, though for now they’re still only a minor third party. At our last federal election they won 4 federal seats out of 151, a quadrupling of their previous performance. That on top of their current 11/76 Senate seats.

        This is in the state of Queensland, where our unicameral legislature also uses IRV. The Greens have 2/93 seats.

        But the post is specifically about Brisbane City Council, which is by some measures the largest city council in the world. (By comparison, Sydney and Melbourne are similar to London. The area we usually call “Sydney” is in fact made up of dozens of city councils including the City of Sydney proper, but also Blacktown, Cumberland, and more, similar to City of London, Kensington and Chelsea, and Islington.) Brisbane by contrast is all one big council—or at least mostly one big council.

        Currently, Brisbane has just one Greens councillor out of 26 local wards plus the directly-elected Lord Mayor who represents the whole city. Jonathan Sriranganathan, the man quoted in this article, was the Greens councillor elected at the last election, but due to a quirk of how our system works he has stepped down to allow a different Greens member to get some experience in the role before she contests the next election. A few months after stepping down he also announced his Lord Mayoral candidacy.

        The Greens in Australia are a much more serious political party than in the UK, both in terms of their direct political representation, and their ability to shape the debate and bring into the mainstream ideas which previously would have been considered impossible. Sriranganathan has pointed out numerous times in BCC history where policies he brought to the Council chamber and were laughed out, a few years later got brought by the LNP majority. I’ve heard (though don’t know for sure, because I was too young at the time) that the gun laws Australia’s conservative LNP famously brought in in the 1990s were actually based on a bill that the Greens already had drafted ready to go.

        As far as nuclear goes, Australia is pretty anti-nuclear in general. You won’t find Labor or the mainstream wing of the LNP supporting nuclear either. Though the Greens do often seem to be criticised for their opposition to it. It’s worth noting though that the economics, at least in the Australian context where we previously have no nuclear, are firmly against nuclear. A report from almost a decade ago found that nuclear would be more expensive than just going all-in on renewables, and the cost of renewables have only gone down since then.

    • ZagorathOP
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      1 year ago

      Jono’s political career might be fairly brief I think

      FWIW, I think this depends on precisely what you mean by it.

      He’s already had a reasonably long 7 years as a local councillor before he resigned earlier this year.

      He also pretty clearly doesn’t expect to actually win Lord Mayoralty next year. He’s using his candidacy as a way to help prop up the local ward campaigns of other candidates, as well as to bring attention to the issues that he believes in. This much was, IMO, obvious just by paying attention to the polling numbers and history, but he actually came out and said it explicitly a while ago too.

      I wouldn’t be surprised if he runs again in 2028 for the same reason. Or maybe makes a state run in October 2024, or a federal run in 2025. Would those consist part of his “political career”?

      As for the practicality of his proposal, that’s a reasonable critique I think. How would you determine it? Not clear, and might cause issues with enforcement. But if those issues can be resolved, the policy itself is a very good one in my opinion. There are apparently thousands of vacant homes in Brisbane. That’s enough to make a very significant dent in the rental crisis. Heck, it’s enough that even if compliance rates are low, it could still be worth doing to make some dent.

      Short term rentals I comparatively agree. These aren’t in the thousands, but more in the hundreds. I think it’s still worth restricting because even hundreds is still hundreds of real people who could get housed. And also because short term accommodation via the like of Airbnb aren’t complying with the same types of safety and accessibility laws that more conventional short-term accommodation like hotels have to meet. This policy (which I think it’s worth remembering is in principle bipartisan—the LNP brought in increased rates for short-term accommodation last year, and the Greens policy would just be an increased version of this) is too often talked about as a silver bullet, which it just isn’t. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t worth doing, in combination with a number of other changes.