Angus Taylor has replaced Sussan Ley as the leader of the federal Liberal Party, surprising nobody and changing nothing. In response, Ley quit politics to cry into her big pile of money, collecting a $220K pension for life.
It forces an intriguing by election in the electorate of Farrer, given that the Liberal and National parties will vie for the seat not only against each other, but against a surging One Nation.
The fact that One Nation’s primary vote has overtaken the Liberal Party’s is the prime reason for Ley’s sacking. So this by election will be the first real test of One Nation’s support.
Regardless of the result, the replacement of a far left female leader with a purportedly conservative male leader will have little impact on the Liberal Party’s decline, and amounts to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.
The Liberal Party’s vote is tanking because it has betrayed the Australian people with regard to mass replacement immigration, and its support for the government’s horrendous bill which attempts to make political advocacy for Anglo Australians a crime.
Taylor has hinted that he understands this, however his vague language indicates that the Liberal Party intends to do little more than signal to its former base:
“We’re in this position because we didn’t stay true to our core values because we stopped listening to Australians because we were attracted to the politics of convenience, rather than focusing on the politics of conviction. This ends today,” he said.
“The choice is simple for the Liberal Party: change or die. And I choose change.”
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Taylor pledged to win back those voters who had shifted to One Nation by restoring the standard of living and “protecting their way of life”. He pointedly singled out immigration.
“Record immigration has added pressure to infrastructure, services, to housing in this country,” he said. “Our borders have been open to people who hate our way of life.
“We’ve had the worst terrorist attack on our soil in our history, by Islamist extremists.
“If people want to come to this country who don’t believe in democracy, don’t believe in the rule of law and don’t believe in our basic freedoms, that is a problem, and it is unacceptable. The truth is that some people do not want to change in order to fit with our core values.”
We’ve heard this waffle many times before.
Australia is not in crisis because our multiculturalism is under threat from radical islam. We are not struggling because the rate of change has been too quick, or because infrastructure cannot keep pace, or because we’re letting in too many people who don’t “share our values”.
The fundamental issue is that the Australian people – White/Anglo Australians – are being replaced by mass immigration, and the multicultural religion and despotic policies are suppressing our ability to oppose this genocide.
This unholy replacement currently defines Australian politics and will continue to define it until we either win or perish into oblivion. The Liberal Party is currently being gutted like a fish because Aussies recognise it has betrayed us and will only pretend to not betray us when its survival is threatened.
Crucially, the Liberal Party is never going to recover like it has in the past, because demographics have fundamentally altered Australia and transformed Australian politics. Government policy is now explicitly anti-White/Anglophobic, and Aussies are responding by voting along racial fault lines rather than ideological or class imperatives.
One Nation is currently surging because it is perceived by Aussies to represent us. This perception is based on the memory of Pauline Hanson’s prophetic maiden speech to parliament, and a promised annual immigration cap of 130,000 which its proponents claim will lead to effective net zero or even net negative immigration. One Nation will very soon become either the federal opposition or the federal government, so its policies and resolve will be put to the test.
If One Nation can genuinely represent the Australian people it will be rewarded, particularly as Labor in its turn fragments under the pressures of multiculturalism. There are simply too many electorally significant foreign ethnic groups in this country for one political party to manage in some grand multicultural alliance.
If however One Nation merely drapes multiculturalism in an Australian flag and proves to be a front for the major parties, it will go the same way as the Liberal Party.



