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 Right To Life Australia breaking the law 

 Sunday 18 November 2007, 5:37 pm    The Editor
 Categories: Australia Decides '07, Religion   Tags: , , , ,

Good ol’ Margaret Tighe from Right to Life Australia has been working hard in the electorate of Menzies to try and ensure that Australians continue to enjoy freedom from freedom. This time she’s been distributing pamphlets urging voters to put independent candidate and voluntary euthanasia campaigner, Philip Nitschke, last on their ballot papers. The front cover is — in the tradition of religious nutjobs who are desperate to impose their morals upon others — calm, fair and balanced.

The inside contains four Nitschke quotes that make a hell-of-a-lot of sense to anyone who believes that people should have the right to choose what they do with their own lives and bodies. But it’s the back of the pamphlet that is most interesting.

Section 328 of the Commonwealth Electoral Act requires the person authorising political advertising (any material intended or likely to affect voting intention) to declare a street address at which they can be contacted during business hours. The use of a PO box address is not legal.

I understand that the AEC has been notified. Hopefully the pamphlets containing this right-to-life rubbish will end up as, well, rubbish.

UPDATE: Philip Nitschke’s office has issued a press release about the pamphlet.

Church weighs in to prop up Kevin Andrews Menzies Seat

In a move that can only be described as “desperate” Right to Life Australia have weighed in to the election debate supporting Minister for Immigration Kevin Andrews, by leafleting all homes of the Menzies electorate on Saturday with a brochure headed “Vote Nitschke Last”.

The brochure, authorised by Margaret Tighe of Right to Life Australia, has the title “Are you Dying to Vote for Nitschke?” and features a picture of a coffin and a cross on the cover.

According to Voluntary Euthanasia Activist and Independent Candidate for Menzies, Philip Nitschke, the leaflet represents a last minute grab to stem the overwhelmingly feeling in the electorate that Mr Andrews has betrayed his voters and has not acted ethically in issues like Workchoices, the Dr Haneef affair and Sudanese refugees.

“When we are out at the shopping centres, the response to our campaign plan to remove Kevin Andrews has struck a chord. While many voters support our pro-choice agenda on the so-called ‘moral issues’, many others are motivated by concerns over his role in human rights, refugees and industrial relations. Indeed Andrews is now carrying a great deal of damaging electoral baggage.”

The Right to Life leaflet is a “deliberate misrepresentation” of the views of Dr Nitschke.

“Every time Right to Life want to discredit me they wheel out these out of context quotes” said Dr Nitschke.

An additional issue of concern is that the leaflet represents a clear breach of the electoral act.

“The Act states clearly that political advertising must have printed at the bottom the name and address of the person printing the advertisement. This leaflet with only Right to Life’s post office box number is a clear breach of the electoral Act.

“We have reported this breach both the Australian Electoral and the Australian Federal Police and we expect action to be taken, especially given that this leaflet’s sole purpose is to smear my name in the last week of the election campaign.”

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 9 Comments

  1.  Gravatar Mikey (Sunday 18 November 2007, 11:05 pm) # 

    Um isn’t Andrews a member of that organisation? Should they be campaigning on his behalf when they have not disclosed that?


  2.  Gravatar The Editor (Monday 19 November 2007, 7:58 am) # 

    Not sure if he is. Will check.


  3.  Gravatar krypto (Monday 19 November 2007, 12:27 pm) # 

    oooooh you can smell the desperation wafting off of these rank facists. I wish them a long long stint in the political wilderness that is opposition.


  4.  Gravatar Iain Hall (Monday 19 November 2007, 2:22 pm) # 

    Looking at the second line of your scan of the authorisation it looks very much like there is a valid telephone number to me. So perhaps your whinges about contacting the authorising person are rather petty. This close to the actual poll I doubt that it will make a scrap of difference to the result.


  5.  Gravatar The Editor (Monday 19 November 2007, 2:26 pm) # 

    The Act clearly states that political advertising must carry a street address at which the advertiser can be found during business hours. Open and shut.


  6.  Gravatar Iain Hall (Monday 19 November 2007, 6:38 pm) # 

    I bet that you would not get so het up were the author of a similar leaflet a Green or Uber-lefty of any other persuasion. This is really a storm in a teacup situation.


  7.  Gravatar The Editor (Monday 19 November 2007, 6:46 pm) # 

    If somebody whose views aligned more closely with my own distributed a pamphlet similarly incorrectly authorised, of course I wouldn’t blog about it. I’m a blogger; I’m biased — big deal. I don’t see how this is any huge “gotcha” situation.


  8.  Gravatar Bruce (Monday 19 November 2007, 10:52 pm) # 

    Iain’s gotcha!


  9.  Gravatar Bruce (Monday 19 November 2007, 10:54 pm) # 

    Oh for crying out loud…. first del/stike (which admittedly was obvious given the XHTML instructions above), now “small”. Forget Web 2.0. I feel like Web 0.87 Man.


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