Australia First’s Council Campaign Manifesto

Australians Unite! Elect Australia First Councillors For New South Wales!


This is a campaign for farmers, truckies, workers, families, old folks and youth ….

 

THE New South Wales election for city and shire councils, to be held on September 8, will see Australia First Party candidates step up to the mark.

It is an aim of the party to win representation in some areas – and in other areas, cross over the barriers and obtain the public funding of its candidates and otherwise play a role in bringing more independents into local government.

It is further, an essential aim of the party, to have its elected representatives  become leader-activists in their communities, upholding the nationalist ideals of Australianism and establishing new networks of popular opposition to the many evils of globalization. Thus we work that our politics become ‘permanent’ and imbedded in our Aussie communities.

In our strategy, these communities become ‘base areas’ to extend the reach of our struggle towards the reclaiming of our country.

 

A vote for other than Australia First is largely a waste of time!


The election of the big party machines or the fake environmentalists called the Greens to local government, will not address those issues of the defence of Australian heritage, lifestyle and community cohesion.

Quite the contrary:  the major parties are dedicated to economic development at all costs through ramping up of immigration and the building of houses and shopping centres over farmland on the edges of Sydney and all around heritage sites and traditional villages in an arc from Camden to the Hawkesbury. They seek high rise living centres and alien cultural constructions in order to achieve the de-Australianization of sacred Sydney as they boost its numbers to six millions. This effort is viewed as part of the process of economic globalization and is to be considered beyond any discussion. Do the Greens oppose all this? Not really. Because the Greens are a pro immigration party, they follow suit lest the red-herring-cry of ‘racist’ be hurled at them.

In regional New South Wales, the globalizers have struck at Australian towns and cities. Coal seam gas mining and water restrictions and ‘buy backs’ are direct challenges to the viability of Aussie farmlands that once fed our Nation. Today, these farms and vineyards and stations are dying
whilst Australia imports foodstuffs! A way of life dies with it and heritage and small communities
may be lost.

With the destruction of Aussie towns and rural production, the Australian transport industry is threatened too; rural workers and service industries find themselves displaced and worthy people are forced onto the dole. A drift of Australians to the cities is inevitable – and unwanted refugees can be shunted back out to regional towns as permanent welfare recipients. Is this a Mad Max movie?

In the ultimate cynicism to which the Greens also subscribe, much of rural New South Wales is now under mining claim. Our countryside runs the risk of becoming a polluted mining hole. And that seems to be the plan. Unable to make the books balance, the Lib/Lab governments see mining as salvation. Look at Wollondilly Shire in which sits Sydney’s water supply at Warragamba Dam – even it is subject to the rampage of the coal seam gas miners and another rural living zone – is sacrificed.

Any person casting a vote for a major party or the Greens earns what he deserves!

 

Is it a venal hatred of Australians?


It is not odd to us that the Premier of New South Wales, Barry O’Farrell should express rancour at the “monocultural” Sutherland Shire and Hawkesbury City areas. It is clearly part of ‘the program’ that these areas in particular should be targeted, as Mayor Provan of the Shire lovingly said it, for more refugees and a more multicultural diversity.  The Shire is hated by the elites for the Civil
Uprising of 2005 and the Hawkesbury contains some of the best of Australia’s colonial history.

Culture busting is always an imperative for the revolution from above that is directed by the globalizing elites against the ordinary working Australian. But these two areas are not unique;  there are other cities and shires targeted too – like Gunnedah and the Liverpool Plains via its Chinese state-owned mining company and coal seam gas and Coffs Harbour with its refugee invasion.

 

Resistance must begin local. Think national, but act local!


Tony Pettitt, the National President of the Australia First Party and lead candidate for Hawkesbury City said:

“If you want Windsor to be the next Parramatta, vote Liberal, if you want Windsor to be the next Auburn, vote Labor. If you want it a refugee settlement zone, vote Green. If you like it how it is, vote Pettitt.”

Mr. Pettitt added:

“We will be presenting the truth that the reason people want to live in places like the Hawkesbury is that it is like it is right now, a pleasant mix of low density suburbs and “Villages” set in an overall rural context. This description of the Hawkesbury is a perfect example of future town planning for Australia as it would be one day, under an Australia First government.”

Essentially, only at a local level can we engage with Australians in numbers and offer other pathways to the machine politics of the regime.

 

Australianism In Action


The Australia First ideology of Australianism – protecting and promoting our (Aussie) community first and in every way – before we are led off on tangents by minority interests, like that of the developers, and foreign pre-occupations, like easing the overcrowding in India, the Middle East and the Asia/Pacific area and similar humanist fantasies, lies at the very core of our electoral and community effort.

The Aussies are the underdogs now and the little bloke standing up against the greedy developers, the supermarket chains, the banks and politicians, is the essence of our struggle. Thousands of people have joined such struggles and we salute these efforts. But we seek to generalize this struggle into a political force.

If we win representation, our Councillors will work might and main to clean up the cultural and moral climate of our suburbs and towns. Our Councillors might build support to maintain the sanctity of ANZAC Day, promote local history, declare their areas Paedophile Free Zones’, dis-encourage the sexual lifestylists who proclaim their sicknesses ‘normal’, fight against homelessness and every attack upon families and youth; they might also work to improve the
sports facilities or local parks and ensure their area is family friendly and that their Council supports local industry and workers in its contracts and dealings.

And our Councillors would encourage Citizens Initiated Referendum (CIR) to enshrine popular power. We are tired of the old democracy of stilted ‘representation’ only arrived at in a vote every many years; we want freedom and we want popular authority. We want our effort to bring about CIR to be a model for the New Australia.

 

The discouraged Aussie

 

We can expect that strong electoral results peppered by some ‘wins’ will give us an indication of what we could achieve on a larger territorial scale if we could enlist sufficient resources. With the prestige we obtain from successful results we may then reactivate the many Australians who have lost faith in successfully opposing the criminal actions of the current un-Australian system. Such a revitalization of the Australian willpower could furnish the party with more human material and on a larger geographical scale.

And we are speaking not only of electoral resources and efforts. We seek to mobilize the community in its own interest to defend its farms, businesses, heritage and lifestyle. Many Australians who have already started to fight back may also choose to link their local concerns with a wider Australianist agenda.

But more deeply, to wean the Australian majority away from the suburban ethos, the consumer society, the non political stupor of disengagement from responsibility and de facto acceptance of globalist solutions, the very things killing our country,is not the province of a political programme but of community action. As the crisis of our political-economic system deepens our party must be with the minority who have already taken the first steps along the new path, demonstrating that we have an alternative – such that hosts of other Australians may follow us tomorrow.

Australia First Party has an opportunity on September 8. Let’s take it!