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== Social Policy Aims == |
== Social Policy Aims == |
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Some aims of the Liberal Democratic Party of Australia are to: |
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* Abolish all affirmative action programmes as they are discriminatory patronising and unfair. |
* Abolish all affirmative action programmes as they are discriminatory patronising and unfair. |
Revision as of 23:36, 15 February 2007
The Liberal Democratic Party is a moderate libertarian Australian political party founded in 2001. The party is registered in the Australian Capital Territory, but it is not yet registered federally.
Philosophy
The social policies of the LDP adhere to Libertarian philosophy. The LDP believes the ownership of property is a fundamental right that precedes the power of government.
The LDP upholds the rights of property owners to not be subjected to unnecessary legislation created for their own good. That includes commercial property owners giving permission to visitors to smoke or breast feed on their premises.
Consistent with the principle of the principle of non-interference, the Party acknowledges and respects the rights of others to make their own choices, provided they also accept responsibility for their consequences.
The LDP considers the role of government to be limited to the prevention of coercion in the exercise of choice, including the protection of children, and to ensuring that the consequences of choice are not transferred to others. The LDP favours strong sanctions against crimes that infringe the rights of others, both deliberately and through negligence
Social Policy Aims
Some aims of the Liberal Democratic Party of Australia are to:
- Abolish all affirmative action programmes as they are discriminatory patronising and unfair.
- Abolish all government funded programmes and bodies that cater to particular ethnic, religious or gender groups. All Australians should be regarded as equal before the law, and be granted equality of opportunity.
- Abolish government funding for ineffective bodies such as the Anti Discrimination Commission and Federation of Ethnic Communities' Councils of Australia.
- Remove the power of all bodies except courts to issue binding decisions on matters such as Discrimination, Harassment, Unfair Dismissal and Vilification.
- Amend relevant legislation so that marriage between two individuals has the same consequences irrespective of whether they were of the same or different gender.
- Decriminalise activities in which the participant is the only person likely to suffer adverse consequences. Examples include failing to wear a seatbelt or crash helmet, BASE jumping and bungy jumping.
- Decriminalise the consumption of pornography involving adults by adults (with safeguards to protect children).
- Decriminalise abortion: other than for later term abortions where the foetus would be viable if born naturally.
- Decriminalise prostitution involving adults.
- Decriminalise assisted suicide where a free and informed choice has been made.
Economic Policy: Reform 30/30
Much has been said about the need for tax and welfare reform in Australia, but the tyranny of the status quo and self-imposed limitations such as 'budget neutrality' and no 'person-worse-off' relegate any usual reform proposal to failure. Consequently, the LDP does not argue for incremental reform. Instead it offers a new template from which to consider tax and welfare issues, a tax revolution: Reform 30/30.
Full details on this reform policy are contained in Reform 30/30: Rebuilding Australia's Tax and Welfare Systems by John Humphreys: http://www.cis.org.au/publications/policymonographs/pm70.pdf
History
The LDP was founded by John Humphreys in 2001 and was registered in the ACT later that year. They contested their first election for the ACT legislative assembly in October 2001, running candidates in all seats and receiving 1% of the vote (around 2000 votes).
In the 2004 ACT election they again ran candidates in all seats and received 1.3% of the vote.
They did not run candidates in the federal elections of 2004.
In 2005 John Humphreys was replaced by David McAlary as Party President.
On January 7, 2007, the Party held its first National Conference.
External links
- Liberal Democratic Party of Australia official site
- LDP blog
- http://www.cis.org.au/publications/policymonographs/pm70.pdf