Английская Википедия:Advance (lobby group)

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use Australian English Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox organization

Advance, stylised as ADVANCE and formerly known as Advance Australia, is a conservative political lobbying group launched in 2018 to counter the left-wing activist group GetUp.[1][2]

Structure and funding

Шаблон:Conservatism in Australia The national director of Advance Australia was Gerard Benedet, a former Liberal Party staffer who led the organisation during the 2019 Australian federal election.[3] Benedet stood down in September 2019, and was replaced by Liz Storer, former City of Gosnells councillor,[4][5] and advisor to Liberal senator Zed Seselja.[6]

High-profile backers include businessmen such as Maurice Newman, Kennards Self Storage managing director Sam Kennard, and Australian Jewish Association president David Adler.[2][3] Other members of the advisory council include security specialist Sean Jacobs and journalist Kerry Wakefield.[7] Queensland businessman James Power is also said to have been involved.[8]

In its first four months, Advance Australia raised $395,000 and signed up 27,500 members.[3] By May 2019, it had raised $1.7 million, according to Benedet.[9] It raises money through donations on its website.[10] Benedet says the membership is 60 per cent male and has an average age of about 50.[11]

Advance Australia has been accused of astroturfing and being little more than a front for the Liberal Party.[12] Advance Australia's independence has yet to be tested by the electoral commission in the same manner as similar lobby groups have.[13]

Шаблон:As of the group had been renamed simply "Advance".[1]

Policies

The group says it opposes left-wing activists who it says are trying to change the Australian way of life. It decries radicalism and political correctness, and says, "Mainstream values have been the bedrock of Australia's growth as a western liberal democracy".[14] It promotes family values, free markets, meritocracy, business, a Judeo-Christian heritage, a strong defence force and national borders.[15][16][17][18][19][20] The group believes that anthropogenic climate change is a "hoax",[6] with current national director Liz Storer describing the teaching of the predominant scientific view as "the other side of the story being shoved down their throats. It's already happening. The left have infiltrated our education systems. Any aware parent knows that their child is being taught the left's ideology."[6]

Campaigns

Climate campaigns

Advance Australia's national director Liz Storer vowed upon her appointment in September 2019 to target the "militant advance of climate activism" and in particular, the protest group Extinction Rebellion, whom she described as "criminals who pose a menace to society".[21]

In 2020, Advance Australia commenced a campaign aimed at children with an e-book titled "10 climate facts to expose the climate change hoax". They claim that a "consensus" goes against the "scientific method" and that there are many recognised scientists who do not agree that human generation of Шаблон:Chem is the "control knob" of climate. The group are seeking to have their material distributed in classrooms. However the New South Wales Department of Education has stated it would not allow Advance Australia's in schools as they are not objective and would be in violation of the Controversial Issues in Schools policy. The Victorian Education Minister James Merlino has described the book as "rubbish", adding "this organisation is a front for a group of ill-informed climate change deniers".[6]

Online petitions

The earliest campaigns of Advance Australia were online petitions to:

  • keep Australia Day on January 26 to mark the anniversary of the First Fleet's arrival[22]
  • oppose plans by the Labor Party to scrap dividend imputation tax refunds for retirees with superannuation[23]
  • oppose targets set by the Labor Party to reduce carbon-dioxide emissions.[24]

Ongoing campaigns of Advance Australia are online petitions to:

2019 federal election

During the 2019 federal election campaign:

  • costumed characters named Captain GetUp and Freddie Foreign Money appeared in electorates where GetUp was trying to unseat Liberals who had been key supporters of a leadership challenge by Peter Dutton[26][27]
  • a documentary-style series was launched on social media attacking GetUp.[28]

2022 federal election

During the 2022 federal election campaign:

2022–2023: Indigenous Voice to Parliament

Advance has set up campaigns to oppose the Voice to Parliament,[34] encouraging voters to vote No in the 2023 referendum on the matter. Its campaigns include a new social media advertising campaign titled "The Voice is Not Enough" (or just "Not Enough"),[35] aimed at a young demographic and targeting the "progressive no" vote, suggesting that the Voice would be too weak, or is not the main priority for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. As part of this campaign, they have misrepresented the views of some Indigenous people and used others' photos without their permission.[36] It has also created a "Referendum News" Facebook page,[37] which shows only anti-Voice posts, and by May 2023 the group had spent thousands of dollars on Facebook and Instagram ads.[38]

In July 2023, a cartoon ad run by Advance Australia in the Australian Financial Review, featuring caricatures of Yes campaigner Thomas Mayo, MP and Yes advocate Kate Chaney, and her father businessman Michael Chaney, led to bipartisan condemnation of the ad as "racist".[39] The AFR later apologised for the ad.[40][41]

Reception

The group has received a considerable amount of criticism in the Australian media. In 2018, Crikey's Bernard Keane said that the idea of a "right-wing" GetUp! had been attempted many times with little success, and described Advance Australia's public backers as "a clutch of angry men" who were unlikely to succeed in their venture.[42] In September 2020, Kishor Napier-Raman wrote in Crikey that the group was "fading into irrelevance" despite injections of funding from wealthy donors, while noting that despite their stated goal of providing a conservative counterweight to GetUp!, "Advance Australia are still playing catch up to GetUp when it comes to membership numbers, financial muscle, and sheer relevance".[43]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links