
By GEORGE CHRISTENSEN
They’ve blown it. Again.
After another gutless, rudderless campaign, the Liberals and Nationals have been rightly thrashed at the ballot box—and let me be clear, they deserved it. Not because the other side had a better vision. Not because the mainstream media was fair or balanced. But because the Coalition stands for nothing anymore. Nothing except clinging to seats and appeasing people who hate them anyway. Let’s call it out.
The Liberal Party isn’t a movement. It’s a bland, beige shell—a party of clichés and cowardice. You could slap half their policies on a Greens flyer and no one would bat an eye. “Opportunity.” “Aspiration.” “Middle Australia.” Empty words. Words every party recites to fool the disengaged masses.
The Nationals? Even worse. A club of seat-savers who’ve confused pork-barrelling for principle.
The Coalition loves to joke about Labor’s factions, but Labor’s factions, as rotten as they are, work. They march in lockstep because they believe the party comes before ego. That’s the cold, robotic collectivism of the Left. It’s ideological tyranny, sure—but it wins.
Meanwhile, our side? We don’t even know what side we’re on. The Coalition has become a Frankenstein’s monster—stitched together by ambition, duct tape, and a few lukewarm slogans spat out by marketing consultants. No spine. No fire. No fight.Let’s call it out.
How did we get here? It’s simple: the Liberal and National parties have become election vehicles. Not political movements. Not forces for cultural and moral renewal. Just machines to get a few blokes re-elected, grab a ministerial car, and maybe score a profile in The Australian.
That’s not leadership. That’s rot. And it’s why I say this—without apology: let it burn.
Let the Coalition as we know it sink beneath the waves. There is no fixing this with a committee. There is no “renewal” from within a corpse. Australia needs a new force—rooted in values, conviction, liberty, family, faith, sovereignty. Something that doesn’t flinch when the media snarls or the bureaucrats cry foul. Something that stands for the farmer and the family. For the unborn and small business. For borders and common sense.
This election result is not a tragedy. It’s an opportunity. A clear message from the base: enough.