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Greens' links to violence backfire

September 21, 2024

Saturday 21 September 2024
Alexi Demetriadi
The Australian

While the Greens' support of violent Melbourne protests may appease and  embolden their new hard-left base it may also deter those intending to vote  for the party at the next federal election and keep swing voters away, new  polling suggests.
 
 Last week, federal and state Greens members skipped parliament to instead  attend the rally, at which protesters threw acid and rocks at officers and  attacked police horses.
 
 The scenes were slammed across the political spectrum the Greens' criticism  instead took aim at Victoria Police - and recent polling conducted by  conservative group Advance suggests the party's protest endorsement may harm  it at the ballot box next year.
 
 The polling found that one in five voters who intended to vote for the Greens  at the next poll would now be less likely to after the party's endorsement of  and attendance at the rallies, and about 26 per cent of those who voted for  the Greens in 2022 said they were also less likely to.
 
 But nearly 40 per cent of those intending to vote for the Greens said they'd  be more likely to vote for the party after its protest support, as an  internal fissure between old and new members appeared to widen.
 
 The Australian revealed in July how longstanding Greens members felt forced  out of a party they had joined for its green policies as the party courted a  younger, more radical demographic whose primary concern was Palestine and  foreign policy.
 
 Of the 1000 people surveyed, which also included those intending to vote for  Labor, the Coalition, independents and One Nation, more than 70 per cent said  they'd be less likely to vote for a party whose members attended or supported  Melbourne's rally.
 
 Advance has campaigned heavily on "debunking" what it say is an  outdated notion of the Greens' priorities, and its spokeswoman Sandra Bourke  said the group was "ratcheting up the pressure" on the minor party.
 
 "Our research is showing that a good chunk of Greens support comes from  Australians who think they're just nice people who want to look after the  environment," she said.
 
 "When the truth is revealed that this is no longer the case, their  support folds.
 
 "An elitist activism machine providing moral and political covering fire  for violent protesters who throw rocks, acid and urine at police is not who  the Greens used to be." Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson  said it was obvious that mainstream Australians "don't like extremist  rallies or MPs who attend them".
 
 "That's hardly surprising given the shocking scenes we have witnessed on  our streets since October 7, including hateful chants about abolishing Israel  and people wearing symbols of terrorist organisations," Senator Paterson  said.
 
 Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin called  the Greens the "most dangerous force in Australian politics" and  said the party had long been formed of a "hard-left group of campusgrade  ideologues".
 
 On Friday, NDIS Minister Bill Shorten called the Greens  "destructive" and an "outrage factory".
 
 Political strategist Kos Samaras said the Greens had an "in and out  problem", citing his organisation RedBridge's own polling and a recent  "live example", the NSW local government elections, in which the  party went backwards in areas where it made foreign policy a focus.
 
 The former Labor strategist said the Greens were successfully courting a  younger demographic but at the expense of older millennial and Gen X voters,  who were jumping ship due to the party's radical lurch, saying its support  was "flattening": spreading geographically but becoming more  "shallow" in certain electorates.
 
 At the protest, Greens senator David Shoebridge said that while there was  "no place for violence" in public gatherings the party condemned  Victoria Police's "extreme violence".

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