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Though I did cough up half a lung last night and ended up sleeping on the sofa until 5pm, which is why I am bright and sparky at 3.53am ...

Here's hoping that all my English and Welsh flist are escaping the worst of the storm, and [livejournal.com profile] jadzialove  and others being menaced by the cyclone. And if anyone is in Liverpool, how are things going with the giant robot spider roaming the streets?

It's been a strange week for Australian politics. In good news Quentin Bryce is the new Governor General. This is the ceremonial role of the Queen's representative in Australia. Or at least, it's usually ceremonial. A GG once brought down an Australian government and no one's ever really forgotten it. But Quentin is lovely. She was one of the first women barristers in Queensland, and has a long and strong record on women's rights and indigenous issues without for a moment divorcing herself from the broader social issues that go into constructing the complex problems behind sexism and racism.

On Friday we thought that the New South Wales treasurer would be sacked. This was good news because he is ghastly and has massively screwed up infrastructure management within the state. As it turned out, he went and the premier went, too. Now we have a new premier who is so low-key that even I had barely heard of him. He's a relative cleanskin from the ALP centre left, which might even equate to not in thrall to developers or particular unions, give it a few months to wait and see. The Labor party here is so very curate's egg, parts of it are excellent, while the rest would be perfectly at home in the Chicago of the early 20th century.

(The conservative opposition is the same. The Liberal leader is wonderful and I would have him as premier in an instant, but of the rest of his party there are too many who are anti public schools and hospitals, and also too many religious nutters for me to feel comfortable with the lot of them.)

The new premier is a bit of a cardigan man; dull and diligent, formerly a gardener and a binman (I do not jest), who went off to uni and took a degree in English Literature because he thought he ought to. I approve of cardigan men; politicians who rely on flash and personality have me running for the hills.  For this reason I am very glad that I do not live in the US. I would actually explode if I had to work with journos who wrote almost wholly in terms of personality politics. Whether Sarah Palin is the perfect girl next door or the daughter of Satan is immaterial, the fact of the matter is that she lacks substantive experience and firmly believes in a set of policies that will see the alleged greatest nation in the world back in the scientific stone age. That and the incredible financial ineptitude of the Republicans over the last eight years have me boggling at commentators who are suggesting that the Democrats are now in trouble for November.

Let me put it this way: I think that if I knew John McCain, we would probably get on. As long as we didn't talk about Cindy, she scares me. I might even get on with Sarah Palin if we restricted out topics of conversation to why gays should have partner superannuation rights. But if it were my country, I would want it run by someone who has a plan for managing the massive looming Social Security disaster, who has an idea of providing health care for the millions who are doing without (because America, you're doing it wrong) and who comes from a party that has historically presided over the majority of periods of financial growth and prosperity. And so even though I think I would end up finding Barack Obama mentally exhausting if he was my next door neighbour, and do suspect Joe Biden is just a bit odd, I'd be voting for them if I was American. Because you should care whether or not you like your friends, not your politicians.

And if I was an American journalist, I would be writing stories that looked at the economy and asking very seriously whether it can survive another Republican president, rather than playing this schoolyard game of who's cooler that they've all been playing this week. Because all those savings that have kept the US from utter fiscal disaster in the last eight years, they're long gone and not on anything that will make money or protect against loss in the future.

But instead, the Washington Post's lead online politics story is on first lady fashions.

Makes the robot spider look like a good deal ...

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