- 7 months ago
Original Broadcast Date: March 13th 2013
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00:00One, two, three!
00:30Thank you very much. Thank you. Well, I'm very excited. Look at the election doomsday clock.
00:42T minus six months.
00:45I feel like Kim Jong-un about to launch a nuclear missile. Mind you, I expect he's probably
00:50getting used to that by now. He's been practicing with various rockets and maneuvers and underground
00:54tests for a while now, hasn't he? This week, he even tore up North Korea's non-aggression
00:58pact with South Korea, which worries me a little, because if the Korean War's back on,
01:03you just know Channel 10 are going to use it as an excuse to start playing MASH again.
01:06And I don't think anybody wants to see that. And I love Channel 10, particularly their programming
01:13department. And North Korea should be worried too. Not about MASH so much, because state
01:21television is very tightly controlled, and I think the only program on over there is iCarly.
01:26I think that's right. And even then, it's only shown to political prisoners to get them
01:30to talk. It's a notch above waterboarding, apparently. But you know you're in trouble,
01:36don't you, when China thinks you're being too militarily aggressive. And the truth is
01:40that sanctions don't work, and neither does diplomacy. If anything, last week's US peace
01:44mission, headed by Dennis Rodman and the Harlem Globetrotters, has made things worse. That's
01:48why Western democracy is much better. Sure, occasionally the UN will accuse your New
01:53Start allowance scheme of being a human rights violation, or your offshore processing of refugees
01:57is inhumane, but no serious condemnation. The system works. For us, though, something of
02:03a practice launch for the September 14th doomsday election occurred on the weekend in Western
02:07Australia. The two major parties slogged it out in their usual fashion, with the Liberals'
02:11Colin Barnett emerging as victor. It was like Rocky, specifically Rocky V. A foregone conclusion
02:19that failed to capture the public's imagination.
02:22MAH's political correspondent's Ronnie Hazelhurst joins us live via satellite from our Perth studios.
02:28Ronnie, Stephen Smith's admitted Federal Labor's woes played a part in Colin Barnett's victory.
02:33What are the lessons that can be learned?
02:46Yeah, I don't think we have Ronnie...
02:47I'm thinking, thanks, Sean.
02:50Yes, look, there are lessons to be learned here, Sean, but I think the question is, will
02:55those lessons be learned in time?
02:56Yeah, and what sort of lessons are we talking about, Ronnie?
02:58I think he's thinking.
03:14I don't hear anything. Was there a follow-up question?
03:18Yes, Ronnie, what sort of lessons can be learned by Labor that can help them in the lead-up to
03:23September 14th?
03:28You still can't hear it, Sean.
03:33I'm thinking, if you don't mind, Sean.
03:35I beg your pardon?
03:36Look, I think Federal Labor needs to take this campaign to the streets. I don't think they
03:40can run a media campaign again this time round. They've got to get out there and they've got
03:45to connect with the voters.
03:46OK, doomsday scenario. Will they consider new leadership if it means garnering a few more
03:51seats for them in opposition?
03:52Are you still thinking, Ronnie?
04:12No, I think there's something wrong with me.
04:14OK, Ronnie, we'll leave it there. Thanks for your time. Just didn't think there'd be so
04:19much on it.
04:22No, he's on permanent delay now, I think.
04:25But the real hero of the WA election was this man, Henry Heng, family first candidate for
04:31the seat of Metro, who understands what Western democracy is all about, the cult of personality
04:35and the ability to capture the mood of the time in a powerful campaign song. And let me tell
04:40you, Henry Heng certainly tapped into the zeitgeist.
04:42Henry, Henry, let's go for Henry. Let's go for Henry.
04:49Let's go for Henry. And put our family first.
04:53He has a family. He knows what it's like to love and to care.
05:05He has a business. He knows what it's like to provide and to share.
05:20Henry, Henry, let's go for Henry.
05:27He was beaten by the informal vote.
05:29Well, I do think some of our federal contenders would be foolish if they didn't take on board
05:35some of the lessons learned from the WA campaign.
05:37Tony, Tony, let's go for Tony.
05:42Let's go for Tony.
05:45Put the liberals first.
05:48Put the liberals first.
05:51Put the liberals first.
05:53Tony, let's go for Tony.
06:00That'd go viral.
06:03Or at least bacterial.
06:04But at the end of the day, politics is not about elections and democracy.
06:09It's about politics.
06:10And politics is, as they say in the classics, a...
06:13Shitty business.
06:15In fact, that motto is enshrined on the Victorian government's coat of arms.
06:19Res publica, sit excrementum, negotia.
06:22And it was between the stools of unpopularity and ineffectuality
06:26that Victorian Premier Ted Ballyu fell this week when he was replaced as leader by Dennis Napthine.
06:32Commentators were quick to point out that the circumstances of the leadership change
06:36were not dissimilar to what happened to federal labour back in 2010.
06:39But Tony Abbott and Joe Hockey were, unusually for them, both saying the same thing about that.
06:44There's a world of difference.
06:46Of course, they're both right.
06:47There is a world of difference.
06:49Kevin Rudd was knifed in the back.
06:52Whereas Ted Ballyu fell on his sword.
06:59Albeit a very short sword, which Ted sort of fell backwards on
07:02after someone pushed him.
07:06Of course, that's pure conjecture on my part.
07:09But what is certain is that Ted Ballyu didn't see it coming.
07:11If only this giant carrot loaded with vitamin A
07:14had arrived at Mr Ballyu's office just minutes earlier,
07:17it could have made all the difference.
07:19I mean, sliding doors, eh?
07:21Anyway, Victoria has a new leader, Dennis Napthine.
07:24Former vet, expert at neutering dogs.
07:27But does this ability translate to effective government of humans?
07:30And what does it all mean for the state's teachers,
07:32presently locked in a long-running industrial dispute
07:34with the Victorian government over higher wages?
07:36A question I may well ask Victorian Vice President
07:39of the Australian Education Union, Esther Korg.
07:42Esther?
07:43Well, Sean, what this change of leadership means
07:46is that I've got 500 blimmin' placards
07:48that I have to alter before our next rally.
07:51Plus, there's nowhere near as many plays on the word Dennis
07:54as there are Ted.
07:56I think while you're at it,
07:57you might need to alter some of the spelling and grammar
08:00on your placards.
08:00There's no E at the end of Premier,
08:02and the plural of teachers has no apostrophe.
08:05LAUGHTER
08:05Sean, this is about teachers being properly
08:09and fairly compensated for their hard work.
08:12Not about your blimmin' pedantry.
08:13All right, all right. Thank you. Thank you, Esther.
08:15Mind your language.
08:16A very strong, if poorly executed, message there
08:18for the new Victorian Liberal leader.
08:20And later on in the show,
08:22I speak with someone from Tanya Plibersek's office
08:24about the widening divide between the states
08:26and the federal government
08:27on that other hot topic issue, health.
08:29LAUGHTER
08:30The federal government has increased health spending.
08:33It's the states who've pulled the funding out.
08:35They're not interested in finding solutions.
08:37They're just interested in playing the blame game.
08:40OK, so you're saying it's the state's fault
08:41for cutting health funding?
08:42Yes, and then playing the blame game.
08:45And Australians are sick of the blame game, Sean.
08:47They want solutions.
08:48Aren't you playing the blame game?
08:50Don't blame us for playing the blame game, Sean.
08:52They're the ones who are trashing the health system
08:53and then blaming us for it.
08:55And Australians are sick of the blame game, Sean.
08:58But what is the blame game exactly?
08:59The blame game is where the states blame us
09:02for cutting funds to health when we never did.
09:04It was them.
09:05Yeah, but how come the states blaming you for the health crisis
09:07is playing the blame game,
09:08but you blaming the states isn't playing the blame game?
09:11OK, Australians are sick of hearing the federal government,
09:14who aren't at fault here, blaming the states, right?
09:17OK.
09:17And the states, who have actually sucked the money out of the system,
09:20blame the federal government.
09:22They're sick of it.
09:23They hate it.
09:24They don't want to hear it anymore.
09:25So why do you keep saying it?
09:26We're just stating the facts, Sean.
09:28We're not playing the blame game.
09:29Australians are sick of the blame game, Sean,
09:32and I don't blame them.
09:33Hmm, quite irritating.
09:36At the end of the end of the day, though,
09:38politics is not about campaign songs or Machiavellian plots.
09:41It's about rolling up your sleeves, getting out there,
09:44and pulling up voters by the grassroots,
09:45as our caretaker PM ably showed us last week,
09:48by daring to speak aloud a subject
09:50that stirs the passions of all Australians.
09:52We're here to talk about the traffic and congestion issues
09:56in Western Sydney.
09:58Both major parties said they'd help pay for the new road.
10:01Tony Abbott confidently subjecting himself
10:03to a rigorous cross-examination
10:04from my colleague and friend
10:06and one of political journalism's heavy hitters,
10:09while the issue of unwelcome arrivals from overseas
10:11seemed to be stalking the Prime Minister.
10:14Finally, a little victory for the Prime Minister, I think,
10:16who showed that she'd done her research.
10:18She knows exactly what you need
10:20if you want to build a road.
10:21Ta.
10:30But as the polls show, the thing is,
10:32you have to admit that while Julia Gillard
10:34took to Western Sydney last week,
10:36the people of Western Sydney really took to her.
10:38Yeah, it was full of it!
10:40You are unbelievable!
10:42Come and talk to my Prime Minister!
10:47Still, any way you look at it,
10:49that's Western Sydney taken care of.
10:51But to look at the government standing nationally,
10:53we cross live to Australian staffologist,
10:55who isn't Anthony Green, Clancy Lanyard.
10:58Sean, what I thought we'd do
11:00is look at some of the hot spots around the country
11:02where Julia Gillard needs to shore up the Labor vote.
11:05All right.
11:06OK, so what I've done here is highlight in red
11:08the electorate state by state
11:10where Labor is in trouble.
11:12Yes.
11:14Fascinating stuff, yes.
11:15Interesting, very good.
11:16And now let's take a look at those electorates
11:18that would benefit the most
11:19from having a personal visit from Prime Minister Gillard.
11:21All right.
11:23Incredible.
11:24Incredible software, isn't it?
11:26Interesting results also in the latest Galaxy poll
11:28regarding the Labor leadership, Sean.
11:30Yes, yes.
11:3033% of those surveyed
11:33preferred an alternative to Julia Gillard or Kevin Rudd.
11:35In fact, more people preferred someone else to Julia Gillard.
11:39Right.
11:40So the labs have three leadership options then.
11:43Rudd, Gillard and someone else.
11:44Yeah.
11:45All right.
11:45Anybody else?
11:46We haven't seen any polling figures for anybody else,
11:49just someone else.
11:50OK.
11:51So let's say anybody else isn't a contender
11:52and someone else doesn't put their hand up.
11:54That leaves just really Kevin Rudd, doesn't it,
11:55as the lab's only viable option.
11:57Well, Sean, I suspect as far as the labs are concerned,
12:00the Labor Party will be led to the next election
12:02by Julia Gillard and no-one else.
12:05What a kind of power-sharing arrangement.
12:07That's interesting.
12:07No-one else.
12:08Certainly the dark horse in this race.
12:09Thanks, guys.
12:12We'll be right back after a word from our masters.
12:15Time for inertia, time to do nothing, time to maintain the status quo.
12:28Not time for changing, things aren't too bad.
12:34It's time to let things drift along.
12:37It's time for taxes, time to devastate.
12:44It's not time to keep promises.
12:49Time for forgetting about...
12:52Written, spoken, unauthorised by Etcetera.
12:54Winter's just around the corner,
12:57so it's the perfect time to check
12:59that all your doors and windows are properly sealed.
13:01Mother and son Wi-Fi dongle, $9.71.
13:05Jonathan Holmes, if he had multiple arms,
13:06micro figure with desk, $13.77.
13:10We don't sell seals here.
13:11It was just a handy tip.
13:14Bottom cleaning wipes, $4.31.
13:17Bastard Boys child lunchbox, $1.51.
13:19I mean, we could sell door seals here.
13:23Let's face it,
13:23the connection between some of the stuff we flog here
13:25and the ABC is pretty tenuous.
13:28We stop Fountain Abbey stuff and the bloody things on Channel 7.
13:30No, no, no, don't cut me off like they do on the bunny.
13:33The ABC Charter.
13:37Right, yeah, sorry, no, I wasn't aware of that.
13:38OK, thanks, Anthony.
13:40Well, apparently running a campaign ad paid for
13:42by the Australian Labor Party is against the ABC Charter.
13:45Something to do with bias.
13:46So we are now required to run
13:48a pro-liberal party piece to make up for it.
13:51What are you doing?
13:52Hey.
13:53What are you doing?
13:53I'm just checking my Facebook.
13:57This is going to air.
13:59We're on air?
13:59Yeah, we're on air now.
14:02I'm totally going to Instagram this.
14:04Go away, go away.
14:05Go away.
14:09Look where you're going, look where you're going.
14:13Hurry up, hurry up.
14:18Soon.
14:19There they are.
14:32Go away.
14:33Move.
14:34Come back.
14:35Are you going to win?
14:36We go, oop.
14:37영상.
14:37Go away.
14:39Go away.
14:39Go away.
14:40Go away.
14:41Go away.
14:41Go away.
14:41Go away.
14:41Hey, hey, hey.
14:42Hey, hey.
14:43How are you doing?
14:43Oh, what are you doing?
14:44Oh, what are you doing?
14:44Oh, Ioh.
14:46Bloody hipsters.
15:05Anyway, here's the pro-liberal piece.
15:08Bye.
15:10This is Humberta Newell.
15:12She's a periodontist here in the sleepy country town of Grey,
15:15nestled in the foothills of eastern New South Wales
15:18Premier Aniseed Farming District, the mighty Kanaguna Plains,
15:22long regarded as the most arable flatlands in Australia,
15:25the largest island continent in the southern hemisphere,
15:29a hemisphere reputed to cover exactly half the surface of the Earth,
15:33the densest and fifth largest of the eight planets in our solar system.
15:38Humberta wants to put her lucrative periodontic career on hold for a while.
15:42She's hoping for pre-selection as a Liberal candidate
15:45in the blue ribbon seat of Hennessy.
15:47I spend a lot of time digging around in people's heads
15:50and I think I know what goes on in them.
15:53Sometimes what they're saying is muffled by cotton wool,
15:55but the message is loud and clear.
15:59People in this country are sick to death of labour.
16:03Shouldn't there be this much blood?
16:05Humberta is very active in her community.
16:07Hey, you dog just shat in the footpath.
16:09We all do it, Stan.
16:11She hosts Bible readings for the elderly...
16:13...the kingdom of heaven.
16:15...and is president of the Cronulla Riots Reenactment Society.
16:20I don't care what anybody says.
16:22You've got to listen to people.
16:24Humberta is referring to her early student days
16:27when she was a member of the left-leaning Communist Party
16:29and later the Anandamaga and Armenian Revolutionary Federation
16:33where she worked as a bomb maker.
16:35Yes, I made a few bombs.
16:37Who didn't back then?
16:38If Humberta is successful in her bid for pre-selection,
16:41she will have to move to a town somewhere in the seat of Hennessy.
16:44No!
16:45I asked her how she will be able to serve the members
16:47of the local community she loves so much
16:50if she no longer lives among them.
16:52I think you're deliberately trying to show me in a negative light.
16:55Oh, it's a typical ABC bias.
16:57You've got some blood on your face.
16:59Have I?
17:01Got it?
17:02Yeah.
17:02All right, well, we're done here.
17:06And mark my words, when we get into power,
17:09I am going to talk to the Shadow Minister for Communications,
17:11Malcolm Turnbull, my personal friend,
17:13and get him to dismantle this little network of yours
17:16so we can get on with the job of running this country
17:18how it should be run
17:19without having to mind our P's and Q's on Q&A
17:21or pretend to be anything other than what we are.
17:23Because if you want another two and a half years
17:26of namby-pamby, populist, focus-group-driven policies
17:29half-enacted by a government that's all tail and no dog,
17:33go ahead, be my guest, and throw your vote away on Labor.
17:36But if you want someone who will shove the bitter pill
17:38that we all need to swallow down your throat
17:40without having to sugarcoat the f***ing thing,
17:42then the Libs are your only sensible choice.
17:44Now, if you'll excuse me,
17:45I'm going to go and drown some kittens in the river.
17:47Well, Australia has a rapidly ageing population,
17:55at least according to my researcher's post-it note
17:57on this federal government press release.
17:59It goes on to say that $1.2 billion
18:01will be spent over the next four years
18:03to raise the wages of Australia's aged care workers.
18:05I've had time to read the press release myself
18:07because I'm busy putting this show together.
18:09But money expert Jennifer Stolls has.
18:11Jennifer, what do you make of it all?
18:13Sean, in this country,
18:14the average 60-year-old is living longer
18:16and that means you, and to a greater extent I,
18:20who aren't 60, will have to look after them.
18:22Now, in 1970, the average 60-year-old would be dead at 75.
18:27Today, they'd be in their 90s.
18:30In short, old people are getting older and that costs money.
18:33All right.
18:34Regular talkback listener Caspar Jonkel,
18:36you don't like the idea of anything.
18:38What's your knee-jerk response to the government's planned spending?
18:41$4.2 billion sounds like a lot of money, Sean.
18:44Yeah, it's actually $1.2 billion.
18:45I don't care how much it is, Sean.
18:47It sounds like a lot.
18:48And where are they going to get all this money from?
18:50I pay my taxes regularly.
18:51The road down near my house is full of holes
18:53and the high school kids seem to be free to come and go as they please.
18:57I mean, I've asked the man next door to cut those branches back,
19:00but does he listen?
19:00Put a note in his letterbox.
19:02Very polite.
19:03And I've contacted the council and Swimming Australia.
19:06They say, oh, it's nothing to do with us.
19:09Anyway, long story short, Sean, I agree to disagree.
19:12All right.
19:12Thank you very much, Caspar.
19:13Jennifer, what are the alternatives to fattening the already bulging wallets of our aged care workers?
19:18Well, Sean, according to the IMF, raising retirement ages might be the answer.
19:24Make old people work longer and therefore pay more taxes in order to fund their pensions.
19:29All right.
19:29Pensions that presumably they won't be receiving because they're still working.
19:32Exactly.
19:33More money in government coffers and less demand for it.
19:37And by driving old people to work harder,
19:40we'll be ensuring that what time they do spend on their pensions isn't long at all.
19:44It's a sort of Logan's run, but double the age.
19:49Long as it doesn't get to be Soylent Green.
19:53It is people.
19:57Are they film references?
19:59Yes.
20:01Yes, yes, they are.
20:03I bloody hated that best exotic marigold hotel.
20:11But while our Minister for Ageing is throwing money at the problem
20:14and the IMF are all for making them earn it,
20:18it's IMF, not EMF.
20:21Unbelievable.
20:22Perhaps Japan's Minister of Finance has got it right with his more direct approach,
20:26urging the elderly to hurry up and die.
20:31Mind you, I don't know how much credibility Japan has on the economic world stage these days.
20:35What with its 1.48 trillion yen trade deficit.
20:39What's that in dollars, Jennifer?
20:40I'm just working it out now, Sean.
20:43This much.
20:46Gosh.
20:49Still very expensive, particularly when the rest of the world is enjoying a bull market.
20:53Despite $85 billion worth of spending cuts in the US,
20:56which even the president of the former superpower described as...
21:00Dumb.
21:01The Dow Jones continues to post record numbers.
21:04Why this unparalleled US optimism, George Bailey from Bedford Falls, building a loan?
21:09Well, it's a little complicated, Sean.
21:13You see the central banks are forcing investors out of the currency market into the equity market.
21:18Yeah, yeah, yeah.
21:19But why are they...
21:20Wait a minute here.
21:23Wait a minute here.
21:24The rising equity market across Europe and China's growth of 7%.
21:28Yeah, but why are people spending money when it buys less?
21:33Well, Sean, you're thinking of the world economy all wrong.
21:36Our money's not here anymore.
21:39It used to be in people's houses of Fannie Mae and Fannie Max and hundreds of other adjustable rate...
21:44Mortgage...
21:45Hang on, hang on, hang on.
21:48Does this go back to the subprime mortgage crisis?
21:52Yeah.
21:53Well, we have to leave it there, George, because it's too dull.
21:55And let's go to Ricardo Gonsalves on SBS for a more succinct explanation.
22:01Now, the Dow fell around 54% from mid-2007 through to 2009 when the subprime mortgage crisis emerged.
22:10But it's only taken 1,357 days to recover all those losses, and that's one year faster than the internet bubble.
22:20Thank you, Ricardo.
22:21It does help to have a graph, doesn't it?
22:23Jennifer, although I was a little confused there, those downward and upward lines Ricardo was drawing alongside the upward and downward lines already on the graph, what do they mean exactly?
22:32Yes, Sean, it can be confusing.
22:35And that's where this high-tech news presentation can help with communicating complicated ideas.
22:39Now, the downward line Ricardo was drawing next to the downward line already on the graph going down indicates that the share prices had gone down.
22:49Yes, yes, yes, I'm following.
22:51Whereas the upward line Ricardo indicates here on the already pre-existing upward line on the graph is indicating the upward direction of the share prices in a non-downward direction, Sean.
23:03Right, right, thanks, Jennifer, for that idiot-proof explanation.
23:08I didn't like quartet either.
23:14And that's finance.
23:15Well, all this talk of Japan and the US and SBS does rather sound like news from countries that aren't Australia.
23:30Well, in a big f*** you to global warming, the Vatican this week installed a chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel in order to elect the new Pope.
23:38Now, I don't want to be controversial here, but I'm not sure the Sistine Chapel is the appropriate venue to elect the head of the Holy Catholic Church.
23:46Have you seen the ceiling in there?
23:47A nearly nude man reaching out to touch another man who is completely nude, surrounded by a bunch of other completely nude men who are just sort of hanging around watching.
23:58Nudely.
23:59I'm just not sure that's a good look for the church at the moment.
24:02Next time, I think, why not book the Naples Kiwanee Club conference room?
24:05Great atmosphere and very, very affordable.
24:09Well, to the opposite of Catholics now and Syrian rebels still haven't been able to overthrow President Assad, but they have managed to overthrow this statue of his father, a move described by analysts as a major blow to pro-government pigeons.
24:24And later on in the programme, I speak to our Chinese affiliate, Clavis Sinica, about the outgoing Premier, Wen Ji-bao, who was soon to be replaced in the parliamentary session.
24:34OK, so when is he leaving?
24:35Yes, absolutely.
24:36When?
24:37Yes, when?
24:38Yeah, you understand my question, do you?
24:40Yes, when is he leaving?
24:42Yes.
24:42Yes, he definitely is.
24:44When?
24:47OK, forget about him.
24:48OK, tell us about the change of president.
24:49Yes, sure.
24:50Communist Party Chief Xi Jinping will become president, replacing Hu Qintao.
24:55OK, sorry, who was replacing the president?
24:57No, who is the president?
24:59No, no, who is the new one?
25:00No, he's been replaced.
25:01Oh, that's his name.
25:06I'm sorry, all right.
25:06So he'll become president?
25:08Yes.
25:08When?
25:09No, he is the premier.
25:10We're not talking about him.
25:12And you can see the full five-hour interview on our website.
25:16Alternatively, YouTube Abbott and Costello in the naughty 90s.
25:18And coming up in sport, a shortage of AFL goal umpires has led to the league asking the federal
25:25government to grant 457 visas to a group of highly skilled North Koreans.
25:31Not coming up because Stephen Fry is on in a minute.
25:35Sex with robots.
25:37Will they find us attractive enough?
25:38Well, finally, during the ABC's coverage of the Western Australian election, Julie Bishop
25:53made reference to the absence of Julia Gillard from the state Labor campaign.
25:57Imagine what would happen if Julia Gillard had campaigned here.
26:00It would be a 15% swing.
26:01Liberal Party strategist Callista Sperntable, if Julie Bishop's right and Julia Gillard is
26:10electoral booth poison, you must be supremely confident of victory in September.
26:14No, no, not at all.
26:15It's going to be a very tough and tight contest.
26:18All right.
26:18So all the polls that you have been winning decisively are wrong, are they?
26:23Well, no.
26:24All those companies that employ hundreds of people to research public sentiment are incompetent,
26:28so they're wildly inaccurate, or they just simply make it up as they go along, do they?
26:32No, no, no.
26:33I just think that the result is going to be a lot closer than people think.
26:36Why is it that you're all so scared of appearing confident of victory?
26:41Because the minute the electorate censors you think you're going to win, they vote the
26:45other way.
26:46They're fickle.
26:46They're fickle, aren't they?
26:48They're complete arseholes.
26:50Yeah, they want you to win, but they don't want you to think you're going to win.
26:54Yeah, so we have to go around telling all these idiots who are obviously going to vote
26:57for us that we don't know that they're going to vote for us.
27:00Then we have to pretend that the shambles of a Labour party are actually half a chance
27:03to get back in when it's pretty obvious they're all dead men and women walking.
27:07You think so?
27:09Absolutely not.
27:09It's going to be very tight.
27:13Goodbye.
27:13Goodbye.
27:15Tony, Tony, let's all vote for Tony.
27:20Let's all vote for Tony.
27:22Put the Libros for him.
27:25Henry, Henry, let's all vote for Henry.
27:29Let's all vote for Henry.
27:32And put a family first.
27:37Henry, Henry, let's all vote for Henry.
27:41Let's all vote for Henry.
27:43And put a family first.
27:47He has a family, he knows what it's like to love and to care.
28:00Jive, baby.
28:07Copyright 2013 it is.
28:11Thanks, Sean.
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