Australia: Faith-based political parties would 'undermine social cohesion', prime minister says
'-Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says faith-based political parties would undermine social cohesion in Australia.
-His comments came after revelations that The Muslim Vote movement was planning to target federal Labor seats at the next election.
-The Muslim Vote denied it was a political party or religious campaign, but rather a political campaign that aimed to "educate and mobilise" its community on a grassroots level.'
Source: Faith-based political parties would 'undermine social cohesion', PM says
Although I understand and agree with the need to recognise Palestinian statehood, I understand that the Greens recognise it anyway, so starting a religious campaign to pit Muslim MPs against Labor MPs does sound like a theocratic take on Australian politics similar to that taken by the Christian Democratic Party in my view and I can see how this would increase ideas that Muslims stand against the values of the rest of us thus undermining social cohesion (although I admit to not knowing what PM Albanese had in mind when he made the comments).
Also doesn't it kind of advertise dishonesty to say one is not a religious campaign at the same time it attempts to mobilise a specifically religious community to vote for it? I mean the name - the "Muslim vote" movement kind of gives it way don't you think?
Thoughts?
'-Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says faith-based political parties would undermine social cohesion in Australia.
-His comments came after revelations that The Muslim Vote movement was planning to target federal Labor seats at the next election.
-The Muslim Vote denied it was a political party or religious campaign, but rather a political campaign that aimed to "educate and mobilise" its community on a grassroots level.'
Source: Faith-based political parties would 'undermine social cohesion', PM says
Although I understand and agree with the need to recognise Palestinian statehood, I understand that the Greens recognise it anyway, so starting a religious campaign to pit Muslim MPs against Labor MPs does sound like a theocratic take on Australian politics similar to that taken by the Christian Democratic Party in my view and I can see how this would increase ideas that Muslims stand against the values of the rest of us thus undermining social cohesion (although I admit to not knowing what PM Albanese had in mind when he made the comments).
Also doesn't it kind of advertise dishonesty to say one is not a religious campaign at the same time it attempts to mobilise a specifically religious community to vote for it? I mean the name - the "Muslim vote" movement kind of gives it way don't you think?
Thoughts?