Talk:Steve Bracks
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Untitled
editTannin, "little-known" is probably fair enough. --Robert Merkel 09:13 Jan 7, 2003 (UTC)
Board memberships
editHe's been director of cbus since 2009, ref: https://www.cbussuper.com.au/about-us/how-were-run/board . In a recent Guardian article, he's commenting on politics /as the director of CBUS/ https://amp.theguardian.com/environment/2020/jan/15/scott-morrison-in-danger-of-becoming-a-climate-change-casualty-says-steve-bracks , so even though board memberships are usually pretty small in terms of hours, is this notable enough for inclusion? ~~ NcLean — Preceding unsigned comment added by 121.200.6.72 (talk) 08:39, 22 January 2020 (UTC)
Tollway backdown
edit"In May 2003 Bracks made what many saw as his first serious error in office when he broke an election promise and announced that the proposed Scoresby Freeway in Melbourne's eastern suburbs would be a tollway rather than a freeway, as promised at the 2002 elections."
Certainly it was unpopular, but is it fair to say it was an error?
BenAveling 09:00, 24 October 2005 (UTC)
Lol I could list a few things he's done prior to this that were unpopular and/or erroneous. ZPMMaker 09:53, 24 October 2005 (UTC)
I'm sure you could. :-) Glad I've never made a mistake ;-) BenAveling 10:01, 24 October 2005 (UTC)
Spouse
editIn the intruduction it mentions that his wife's name is Terry, however in the info box it says he is married to Lyn Bracks. Does he practice polygamy or is there some sort of error here? gnpaaron
- Yes, there was an error, which has been fixed. Thanks for pointing it out. --Robert Merkel 08:46, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
Brackswatch?
editSomebody removed the link as "extremist". It is clearly highly critical of Bracks, but describing it as "extremist" seems rather harsh. I think it's probably relevant enough to add as an external link. --Robert Merkel 15:46, 10 February 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, there is an ALP run link on the Howard page. May as well be consistent. Xtra 00:39, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
- No, Brackswatch is not extremist. But it does choose to criticise the administration in a adversarial manner. If it was to provide a good critical analysis, then it would be relevant. However, I don't think it is appropriate to link what is clearly a Liberal Dirt Blog on Bracks. --Gomalcolm
- Please! We keep other "dirt blogs" on other people. E.g. on John Howard there is Truth Overboard. This has been up for a while and there is no consensus to remove it. Xtra 10:00, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
- Political blogs of any kind should not be on these pages - whether Bracks or Howard. michael talk 10:05, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
- See this on the howard talk page where I lost a similar battle there. So for consistency, I believe this one should be kept too. Xtra 10:09, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
- Brackswatch is a blog that apparently claims to be "Keeping Steve Accountable Until 2006", not disclosing the fact that it is a partisan website. Truth Overboard is an ALP site, which is apparent both on the webpage, and in the John Howard article next to the link.--Gomalcolm
- It shouldn't matter whether they are partisan - it should matter if they're relevant. Neither are; they are simply attack blogs and do not deserve a link from this encylopedia. michael talk 10:35, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
- They don't have a link to the Liberal Party website, nor are they pushing for anyone in the Liberal party in particular. You can't tag them as purely "Liberal". Anti-Bracks perhaps?--schgooda 03:33, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
- No, they don't have a link to the Liberal Party website, and they may even not be pushing for any one in the Liberal party in particular. But with articles like this Brackswatch - A weekend to consider the future I think it is pretty safe to tag them as Liberal. --Gomalcolm 06:09, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
It seems Brackswatch is not the only site devoted to chronicling the Premier of Victoria and his government's alleged shortcomings. Maybe a link should be provided to Boot Out Bracks (which makes its position quite clear) at http://www.whitepage.com.au/Bracks41 Sites such as this surely give an indication of what some of the electorate are thinking and should therefore be pointed to. -- (James_Linton@fastmail.fm)
- Its a good insider source of information regarding Steve Bracks. It contains quotes from Steve Bracks and balances the heavily spun official website written by his PR department. The link should stand as a matter of balance --User: anonymous 06:09, 2 Aug 2006 (UTC)
- I removed it once as blogspam before reading this talk page. So if anyone's counting, count me as another vote against the brackswatch page link. --Scott Davis Talk 12:41, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
- I've added it back. The majority of comments on this page support the link being there.
- Oh, I just removed it before I read this. add another vote against - The "truth overboard" one is different as it has an obvious byline and noone is going to think it otherwise. I could elaborate but hopefully people understand the difference in weight between major newspapers (local or statewide), websites sponsored (glaringly) by major political parties and fliers left on lunchroom tables and random rant blogs by noone in particular.
So many times material is removed which gives balance to the official Bracks propaganda, we the citizens of Victoria are entitled to give facts on what effects his real policies are having on us, even an W3C avalidity and accessibility test of the Bracks homepage is removed. Is Wicki just a servant of the Bracks' government media campaign. It makes Wicki worthless to remove all factual content relating to policies of his government. Leave Brackswatch and my entries on the world first drug testing of drivers, and the police state alone.
Lebanese Australian
editDescribing Bracks as "Lebanese Australian is a misnomer. It should be noted that his Maternal grandparents were Lebanese, but describing him as being purely lebanses is incorrect—Preceding unsigned comment added by 61.68.137.56 (talk • contribs) . Any reference to is lebnese background is irrelevant. Do we say that John Howard is of Anglo-Celtic ancestry in Wikipedia? No. If perhaps Bracks had been born in Lebanon it would be relevant, but his ancestry has nof affected his plicies, or his character.—Preceding unsigned comment added by Gullivers travels (talk • contribs)
Bracks has passed a Religion and racial Vilification Act which prohibits free speech on race or religion, six months jails is the penalty, in light of his policy to jail Victorians for speaking about religion his religious background is relevant, why would he proposes such anti-free speech laws. Maybe he is from a strange Lebanese Catholic sect, it is a question worth asking in light of his laws against free speech.
- Hate speech isn't quite the same thing as 'free speech'. 1) Is there such such a thing as 'pure' Lebanese anyway? 2) WRT to the comment about John Howard's ancestry - perhaps it would be a good idea if his ethnic background was included in the article on him - clearly it has influenced his policies. 3) WRT Bracks' ancestry, media articles about him have often referred to his ancestry, because in multicultural Australia ethnicity is notable, so in that sense it meets WP notability criteria anyway. And if Bracks' ancestry is perceived not to have affected his policies, then perhaps that is something that could be noted in the article. Eyedubya 19:19, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
textual infelicities
editI don't edit articles on Australian politicians (since I work for one), but I note the following textual infelicities which someone might like to fix.
- "Labor would arguably claim that their spending on education, culminating in what may be Victoria's lowest ever primary school class numbers as the Bracks Government main achievement." This sentence is awakward, ungrammatical and generally meaningless. What does "arguably claim" mean? Either Labor does make such a claim or they don't.
- Fair point.
- "Labor's most lasting reform under Bracks may well prove to be his changes to the electoral system in the state upper house." This is an opinion.
- Agreed, but I think one that should be reinforced by some quotes by opinion articles. Changing an electoral system that has kept your opponents in control of one house of Parliament almost unbroken for a century is a pretty big deal.
- "One could be forgiven thinking that Premier Bracks is an events organiser rather than Premier." This is a political opinion.
- Agreed, and one that could equally have been applied to his predecessor...--Robert Merkel 00:50, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
- "Premier Bracks continues to enjoy reasonable support, but it is envisioned the next election will be a watershed event if the government is re-elected." Envisaged by whom? In what sense a "watershead event"? The meaning of this sentence is most obscure.
- Yep, needs editing.
- On the question of Bracks' Lebanese ancestry, this is a biographical article, and a person's ethnic descent is part of their biography. It is meaningless to say that it is "irrelevant." How is his date of birth "relevant"? Bracks is the first state premier of Lebanese descent. This makes the fact notable, which is the important criterion.Adam 09:50, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed, it is relevant, though comparatively little has been made of it.
- I'll try and fix the article in reference to your comments ASAP. -Robert Merkel 00:50, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
- I edited before reading here: I removed " (some of whom are of Lebanese origin)" from the first paragraph. I would not have removed it from a paragraph in a "background and childhood" section or similar, if it noted whatever the rest of his ancestry is, or from a paragraph that explained what impact Lebanese ancestry has had on his politics. Are either of these possible? I'm not from Victoria, but had never heard he was part-Lebanese until recently reading this article, and have not yet seen what impact it has. Did he make some strongly worded speech supporting Hezbollah or fit some other stereotype of Lebanese immigrants (rich, poor, refugee, refugee-made-good, Muslim, Christian, hard-working, lazy,...)? --Scott Davis Talk 13:07, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
No, he didn't say a word during the war, and so far as I know his Lebanese descent has had no influence on his politics. But that isn't the point. This isn't an article about Things which have influenced Steve Bracks' politics, it's a biography, and his ethnic descent is part of his biography. It doesn't have to be "relevant" to anything, any more than his date of birth is "relevant." The purpose of an encyclopaedia is to give information. Which bits of information are relevant to anything else is a matter for readers. Someone researching Overseas Lebanese and Their Success in Business and Politics would find the reference very relevant. Adam 13:44, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- If he's part Lebanese, and that's relevant, then what are the other parts? They aren't identified, but are presumably just as important. If his Lebanese descent doesn't influence his politics, it doesn't belong in the lead paragraph. The precise date of his birth is equally irrelevant, but the year/decade is interesting to help put him in the context of his peers, and the rest of the date just goes with it. I imagine being a Maronite is actually a much more interesting and influential trait than being of Lebanese descent. Is it? --Scott Davis Talk 14:38, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- I don't know what his non-Lebanese ancestry is, presumably Anglo or Irish like most Victorians, but since that is the Australian "default ethnicity" it's not especially notable.
- His ethnic descent does belong in the opening paragraph because that is the paragraph where his date and place of birth are mentioned. It would only need to be mentioned again further on if there was something more to say about it, which there doesn't seem to be.
- A Maronite is a Lebanese Eastern Rite Catholic. If you say someone is of Lebanese descent, you have to specify whether they are of Christian or Muslim background, because there is a big difference (duh). Adam 14:49, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Incidentally, the only other Victorian Premier I can think of who was not of wholly Anglo-Scottish-Irish descent was Henry Bolte, who was of German descent. That fact is duly noted at his article. So is Morris Iemma's Italian parentage and Joh Bjelke-Petersen's Danish descent. Adam 14:54, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- All three examples appear to list complete ethnic origin, and in the section after the intro, not in the lead paragraph. Demographics of Lebanon says that there are 18 religious sects recognised in the Constitution of Lebanon, and at a rough count, at least five of those are Eastern Rite Catholic. I find it much more interesting that a Maronite was elected as a Labor premier than a third-generation (?) descendant of Lebanese extraction. --Scott Davis Talk 15:18, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- I don't think Bolte was German on both sides, I will have to check.
- Bracks is not a Maronite, he's a Catholic. His Lebanese ancestors were Maronite. Adam 03:05, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
- So his Maronite Lebanese ancestry is important enough to be in the second sentence and first category, but his own Catholicism is not important enough to mention anywhere in the article or to classify him in Category:Australian Roman Catholics? Why? If the article explained why, I'd (probably) be satisfied. It doesn't. --Scott Davis Talk 13:28, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
So put in yourself and stop complaining. Adam 13:47, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
- Done. But I'd rather either tie it into the article with some relevance later, or delete the entire sentence (and the two categories). --Scott Davis Talk 15:20, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
I have broken my vow of abstinence from Australian politician articles since no-one fixed the various illiteracies and irrelevancies which cluttered this article. As the election approaches this article will require constant attention to stop people turning it into a mess of "what happened today and what I think about it." Adam 15:34, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
- I am not sure that we can say his financial policies are "fiscally prudent", surely that is a matter of opinion--Scitty 04:46, 3 October 2006 (UTC)
- Bracks's likeable public persona and consensus-based approach to leadership made him popular with the electorate, and the partnership of Labor and the independents provided stable, fiscally prudent government. This too seems opinion based.?--Scitty 04:46, 3 October 2006 (UTC)
Appears to need some changes rolled into it from at least: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Steve_Bracks&diff=prev&oldid=121155660 as entry has been vandalised
- This article implies John Brumby was appointed State Treasurer after Labor's 1999 election win - however (as noted on John Brumby's page, and in the table at the bottom of this article) Steve Bracks took on both the role of State Treasurer and Premier, handing Brumby the position of Finance Minister and later promoting him to Treasurer in May 2000.
Steve resigns as premier announcement.
editJust a quick link to an announcement. [1] --Joewski 03:58, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
The ABC website links to this Wikipedia article on their homepage.--cj | talk 02:41, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
On broken promises...
editThere is no mention of the fact that the promise wasn't just broken for the hell of it - the rail system nearly collapsed at the end of the previous year when National Express broke its contract (signed during the Kennett privatisation push a few years earlier) and simply abandoned the railways and if I recall correctly one of the tram operators as well. Bracks kept the trains running on a tight funding leash initially and then basically bought the system back and leased it to Connex. The money to pay for this ended up having to come from the tolls, which is why that election promise had to be broken. My memory of what occurred is based on the news at the time and is so hazy that I don't wish to edit it into the article, but I feel that without some reference to the background circumstances, the section of the article presents a considerable and POV bias against Labor. At present the article's chosen list of issues, with the exception of the electoral reform, reads like a grab bag of the Liberals' rather specific beefs with the current government, rather than an actual evaluation of Bracks's performance over time. Orderinchaos 16:40, 29 July 2007 (UTC)
Longest Serving Labor Premier???
editArticle lists Bracks as the Longest Serving Labor Premier of Victoria.
- John Cain II served 8 years, 124 days
- Steve Bracks served 7 years, 284 days
Julie Bishop's decision to revoke his appointment
editIt's been widely reported that she has revoked the appointment as Consul-General - but that can't be, because she has not yet been sworn in as Foreign Minister and has no power to take any such action. All she can do at this stage is signal her intention to revoke the appointment as soon as she is in a position to do so, next week. It's certainly prudent to let Bracks know this before the event, but that does not amount to a revocation at this stage. -- Jack of Oz [pleasantries] 04:20, 11 September 2013 (UTC)
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