
From a photo by Andrew Meares. You can follow Andrew Meares election campaign photography here.
Earlier, top Navy brass stepped in to stop Mr Abbott grilling officers about how they felt patrolling for asylum seeker boats.The Australian Navy previously had to tell Abbott to stop using the phrase "spending like drunken sailors."
Mr Abbott toured Australia's busiest Naval port he asked several personnel for detail about Operation Resolute.
"Do you get out on those boats often," he asked four Navy personnel at an outdoor staff canteen.
"So you guys were doing people smuggling patrols?," he asked.
"What was it like to apprehend these vessels."
After a pause they offered stilted answers including "it's tiring", "a challenge".
"It's busy," said another.
While another said it was "Tiring work too, frustrating."
At this point Lieutenant Commander Michael Doncaster stepped in and asked for the questions to stop.
"Sir I'd prefer we don't talk on that line and move on," he said.
Senior Navy officers have implored Mr Abbott to tone it down because it doesn't fit with the image they are trying to portray of the modern-day Navy professional as a sensitive, well-behaved individual.
"We are not like that any more,'' a Navy source said.Tony Abbott splashes the cash:
"It is not an image that is reflective of the current force or ideals.''
There is a gap of almost $30 billion between the size of the tax cuts and new spending the Coalition has promised and the savings it has unveiled so far, leading economist Saul Eslake estimates.
In a 34-page review for clients of how a Coalition government might change economic management, Mr Eslake, chief Australian economist for Bank of America Merrill Lynch, also highlights the potential for "significant and ongoing tensions" in an Abbott government between its "genuine economic liberals", such as shadow treasurer Joe Hockey, and those who are "more sceptical about markets . . . including in many cases Tony Abbott as prime minister".
"I took a dip in Twitter this week, and understand even better how Labor got flushed away in a sewer of hate.The real world, you see, isn't millions of people in more than 100 hundred countries around the world communicating freely and sharing information, ideas and quality knowledge, without paywalls.
"How could Labor - and many journalists - disastrously mistake Twitter for the real world?"
"(#AskBolt) electrified the Twittersphere. For hours the topic trended as Leftists, many anonymous, competed to ask me - the Great Satan of Conservatism - the worst, silliest or most abusive questions on the #askbolt hashtag.It wasn't sensational, but it was idiotic enough a move to warrant media attention.
"Fairfax newspapers thought this was sensational news."
"Gosh, hold the presses. No, wait, they're slowing already at Fairfax and no wonder, if recycling playground taunts by anonymous tweeters now passes for news reporting."Miaow. Poor Andrew. He doesn't even know Murdoch's newspaper operation has lost more recently than Fairfax.
"In fact, to be attacked on Twitter is no news to a conservative.Twitter refused to take him seriously.
"Twitter skews hard to the Left..."
"Twitter also seems to bring out the worst in users."Twitter isn't a bubble.
"Maybe it's the relative youth of tweeters, and the anonymity of many. Maybe it's because hate tends to sell best in the look-at-me Twittersphere."He has his own TV show. About His Opinions.
"Or maybe it's because Twitter appeals to the impulsive sensation junkies eager to instantly broadcast their most idle thought..."This a person who has often published more than a dozen blog posts in a single day.
"But here's the bizarre thing: this is the audience Labor thought could save it.What was Bolt saying before about people ranting like arseholes?
"This is the crowd Prime Minister Kevin Rudd tried to impress by tweeting a picture of his shaving cut to his 1.4 million followers, thus confusing the magpie attention of tweeters with respect from very real and unimpressed voters.
"But Julia Gillard as prime minister had an even more fatal attraction to Twitter.
"Her infamous misogyny speech last year - falsely branding Abbott a woman-hater - was rightly seen at first by most commentators as a hate-filled rant that would appal many Australians."
"But Gillard's communications director, John McTernan, eventually convinced press gallery journalists it was a success because it had gone viral on social media, including Twitter."Gillard's speech was viewed by millions across the planet, within days. A political speech. Viewed by millions. That wasn't JFK, Obama or MLK.
"And so Gillard, convinced by tweets and blog posts, doubled down on her politics of division, pitting women against men, workers against bosses."Oh Twitter, is there nothing you can't do?
"Stirring hatred may indeed light up the Twittersphere but it makes the world outside your window feel sick."Eh?
"But it's no surprise if Twitter's culture has spilled out of the internet sewers and now floods media offices.
"No surprise, when Channel 10's Paul Bongiorno retweets Mike Carlton who retweets Rudd's daughter, Jessica, who retweets Channel 10's Charlie Pickering who retweets blogger Mia Freedman who retweets the ABC's Leigh Sales who retweets her boss, Mark Scott, who retweets his presenter, Jonathan Green, who retweets John McTernan who retweets the ABC's Mark Colvin who retweets Marieke Hardy who retweets Mike Carlton who . . .
"And on it flows, a steady stream of hate, flushing the feckless with it. Labor, too."Andrew Bolt doesn't mention, of course, the numerous automated Twitter accounts operated by NewsCorp retweeting his every blog post intro, around the clock.
The Courier-Mail has pleaded guilty to breaching the Family Law Act during its coverage of an international custody battle over four Italian sisters last year.They published the photos of the children on the front page, and were bombarded with complaints, and helpful requests, that they shouldn't do that again.
The Australian Federal Police launched an investigation into the Queensland newspaper after it last year published the names and photographs of the sisters at the centre of the dispute.
Photos of the girls were published on the front page of the The Courier-Mail on May 15 and 16 last year, prompting a complaint from the Chief Justice of the Family Court.
The guilty plea came despite previous indications the paper would defend the charges.
"It showed very bad judgement and it shows (Tony Abbott) has low standards.This is appalling.
"I had a good look at Fiona Scott on page eight ... and she doesn't have sex appeal at all.
"She's not that good of a sort."
"She's a rather plain ordinary-looking woman and Abbott has exaggerated massively to try and win her vote among the blokes ... "
"Tony had the beer goggles on and in politics they say it's showbiz for ugly people and I don't think she'll (Fiona) be out of place."
"My idea is to build on the strength of our society and I support, by and large, evolutionary change," he said.
"I'm not someone who wants to see radical change based on the fashion of the moment."
"There were many a few years ago who kept telling us a republic is inevitable," he said.Yes, a Republic is exactly like two consenting adults in love being denied the right to have their relationship and commitment legally recognised.
"If this country lasts for a thousand years quite possibly at some point we might be a republic but I don't think a republic is inevitable any time soon and similarly I don't see same sex marriage as inevitable."
Mr Pyne says she was actually helping out and is proud of her.So the same day we hear the Liberals and Labor are going to preference the hell out of each other to save their Two Party System, we hear that Liberal volunteers are making sure Labor election poters are positioned correctly on walls around Adelaide.
"I am absolutely confident that no wrongdoing has occurred and I understand that she will be entirely cleared," he said.
"She was fixing them for the Labor Party because they'd been so poorly put up."
The Coalition and the Labor Party share similar aims for Australia. Both of our major parties know that economic growth is the key to our nation's ongoing prosperity and security. Where they differ is in how economic growth should be accomplished and in the ability to achieve this goal.The Greens aren't so hostile to the 21st century or the environment, but hey, money is money money money money.
Yet the goal itself remains a bipartisan vision. Both parties believe in jobs, investment and financial aspiration.
The Greens, however, are another story. Their vision for Australia is more aligned with former communist bloc nations than anything with which mainstream Australia is familiar. The Greens are, to put it simply, a party of far-left clowns.
But don't just take our word for it. Listen to senior Labor identities....
Now that opposition leader Tony Abbott has put Australia first by putting the Greens last in Coalition preferences, Labor is invited to do the same.
The Greens represent a view that is hostile to the nation's interests and to both major parties. A bipartisan solution is needed to fix a bipartisan problem.