At the end of the day, one of these two parties will form government. Perhaps in a minority government but certainly with a diverse upper house full of minor parties and independents. The lower house too looks set to gain a couple of new independents.
Voting for minor parties in any house (as I did) will ultimately deliver a victory via preferences to LABOR or LIBERAL.
Here are the policy platforms of each party, and some commentary from me.
And our voting recommendation? Vote for whomever you like. Just do it whilst informed.
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LABOR
https://www.danandrews.com.au/doingwhatmatters
>Branded heavily with Dan (URL and nearly all photos)
>Laid out in 4 broad portfolio categories 'education', 'transport', 'health', 'jobs'.
>Makes more general and qualitative, emotionally appealing statements backed up by key numbers demonstrating their achievements.
>Each category links to a sub page of approximately 7 sentences. Again, presented in a more narrative, aspirational form that uses numbers where needed to emphasise past achievements.
>At the bottom of each portfolio page are 4-8 promises which link to previous media releases as more subpages ('Making Nursing Free', 'Free IVF', 'We're Making Kinder Free', 'Free TAFE', 'Free Rego for Apprentices').
>No full PDF or similar is available.
>Overall strategy seems to be to unite potential voters beneath aspirational or value statements, using simple, effective slogans that represent desires and values.
LIBERAL
https://www.realsolutionsvic.com.au/our-plan
>A high amount of granular detail on site, linking to lightbox popups that showcase previously released policy statements
>Laid out in promise categories eg 'Helping Small Business', 'Restore Integrity and Accountability in Government'.
>A 100 page (!) PDF link to their 'Full Plan' is front and centre, with obviously large amounts of money spent on fantastic graphic design.
>The most detailed and specific set of policy I've seen pre-election in my albeit young life. This kind of detail is warranted though, given they are asking Victorians to switch governments.
>Policy points tend to tie an incoming Liberal government's hands to trigger points eg. No orders for desalination plants allowed until water storage falls below 60%.
>Overall strategy seems to be to demonstrate competence and pre-commit to granular policy decisions, winning as much support as is possible by appealing to a myriad of specific interests with those specific commitments.
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