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'on the street' @ Le Gala des Pièces Jaunes 2025
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Walton Goggins as Wade Felton | Glasses
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WONYOUNG Eleven @ Music Core (220108)
#ive#iveinc#ivenet#jang wonyoung#wonyoung#femaleidol#femaleidolsedit#femadolsedit#2605#g#perf#userace#usershri#useraashna#danablr#heymax#userjoanna#usersha#uservince#usershreyu#heyteo
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MINGYU — April Shower (Special Live Clip)
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Rapunzel (Solo Version), LISA (2025)
#blackpink#lisa#lalisa manoban#lisa manoban#lisa blackpink#bp#kpopedit#femaleidolsedit#femaleidol#femadolsedit#musicedit#daphgifs#perf
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NAYEON ♡ 'ONE SPARK' Performance Video
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Blatantly Partisan Party Reviews: 2025 Western Australian State Election
A new state election, a new edition of this blog’s reviews! Hello everyone, it’s time to discover what weird micro-parties are cluttering the ballots in Australia’s western third. Let’s have some fun.
It’s my first state election since moving to WA, and I have come here at the right time: Labor won such a massive landslide in 2021 that it could take control of the Legislative Council (the upper house of parliament) and they introduced a much more democratic method of election. This year is the first election under the new system, where the state at large will elect the upper house, replacing a gerrymander that favoured WA’s most lightly populated regions. I’ll say more about this below.
Election day is Saturday, 8 March 2025. Early voting commences today, Monday 24 February. As usual I will not review the Liberals, the ALP, or the Greens, because I assume that if you are reading this blog you probably already have some idea about where those parties stand and how you feel about them. I will review every other party contesting the election, plus all the independents contesting the Legislative Council. For the first time ever, I will review the Nationals because of the distinctive nature of WA state politics (I normally do not review any members of the federal Coalition), and although I had previously sworn off reviewing One Nation after getting bored of writing the same thing about a party everybody knows just as well as they know the majors, this time I have something to say about them.
You will receive two ballots at the polling place. The smaller one is for your local seat in the Legislative Assembly, the lower house of parliament, where government is formed. The Legislative Assembly has 59 seats that each elect an individual member via full preferential instant runoff voting. This means that on the ballot for your local seat, you must number 1 for your first preference, and then number all the remaining squares in the order of your preference.
No matter what happens, your vote will shape the two-candidate-preferred outcome: it will either sit with the elected candidate, or with the last remaining unsuccessful candidate. This means you should think carefully about the order of all candidates: the final contest for the seat might come down to your two least favourite candidates, so who do you hate less? For instance, you might have a raging disdain for the Liberal Party—but there’s a good chance you despise far-right racist or religious fundamentalist parties even more.
As for the Legislative Council (the upper house, a house of review), it used to have 36 members: six elected from six regions. These were designed to favour rural WA so strongly that in 2021, 25% of the state elected half the members. In the three regions covering metropolitan Perth, a candidate needed about 52,000 votes to win a seat; by comparison, in the most sparsely populated region, Mining and Pastoral, a candidate needed just 7,010! Most Australasian parliaments have in the past had a “country quota” to give regional areas more seats than they are entitled on a population basis. WA clung to such a system for the longest. It effectively meant Labor could never win a majority in the upper house—until McGowan’s landslide in 2021. Labor was therefore able to enact democratic reforms that embody the principle of “one person, one vote, one value”.
So, at this election, WA will elect 37 members to the Legislative Council on a statewide basis. Your vote is worth just as much as any other voter anywhere in the state, and the only people mad about this are furious idiots in towns nobody else wants to live in who think they deserve more of a say than anybody else. Here’s a tip for regional areas upset about not getting enough representation in Perth: be somewhere that more people want to live! But apparently “attract more residents by having more of the things people like and less of the things they don’t” is too much to ask for these entitled whingers.
Anyway, to win a seat on the Legislative Council, a candidate will need 2.63% of the vote. It’s going to be fascinating to see who gets in, as this is the lowest quota anywhere in Australasia. Labor and Liberal should each win somewhere between 10–15 seats, the Greens can hope for 3–4, the Nationals 1–2, and then we will see which of the minors get in. Preferences won’t play a tremendously large role but they will matter. Most seats will be won on a quota, but the last few will come down to preferences—either for a minor party seeking their one and only seat (say from a primary vote of 2.1%) or for the last candidate of a bigger party (e.g. Greens primary vote might be good for 3.7 quotas and they get the remainder of the fourth quota via preferences).
There are two ways to vote for the Legislative Council:
Above the line: you vote for a party or group of independents and accept their candidates in the order they are listed below the line. You must number 1 for your first preference, and then distribute as many preferences as you want. To get a square above the line, a party or group of independents must nominate at least 5 candidates. All parties/groups this election nominated at least 5 people; the one group of independents (column M) does not have their box labelled—only registered parties get that.
Pros: it’s much quicker; it is sufficient for the average voter to express their view
Cons: you cannot reorder candidates within a group; you cannot give preferences to ungrouped independents (there are five people standing solo, listed in the rightmost column)
Below the line: you vote for individual candidates in any order of your choosing. You must give a minimum of 20 preferences, and then you can keep preferencing as far as you want.
Pros: you can change the order of a group’s candidates; you can mix preferences between individuals from multiple parties; you can vote for ungrouped independents
Cons: it is way more time consuming; none of the ungrouped independents have a chance of victory and nor do down-ballot candidates for many groups (below about 3rd for most), so is it worth your time?
Whichever way you vote, I recommend distributing as many preferences as you feel you can—it makes your vote more powerful.
Every review will end with my recommendation of how favourably to preference a party. This is the recommendation system I will be using:
Good preference: a party with a positive overall platform that has few or no significant flaws for the left-wing voter.
Decent preference: a party with a generally positive overall platform but some reservations; or, a single-issue party with a good objective but by definition too limited in their scope to encompass the fullness of parliamentary business.
Middling preference: a party with a balance of positive and negative qualities, or a party with a decent platform undermined by a notably terrible policy or characteristic.
Weak or no preference: a party with more negatives than positives. Either give this party a poor preference or (in the upper house only) you might prefer to let your vote exhaust before reaching it.
This schema is flexible; I may, for instance, suggest a “middling to decent preference”. Every election, I link to my reviews of each party from previous elections, and this will be no exception. I have not reviewed a WA state election before, but my good friend b_auspol reviewed 2021 and I will link to her reviews; our politics are pretty similar, and I cannot think of any time we’ve had a notable divergence of opinion about a micro-party or obscure independent. I’m happy to endorse her takes.
#auspol#ausvotes#WApol#WAvotes#Western Australia#WA#Election 2025#politics#political parties#elections are great#shame most candidates aren't great#West Australia Best Australia#weak or no preference#middling preference#decent preference#good preference#Perth#Perf#election candidates#political candidates#WA election
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Pandora's Box + STOP HOPE ON THE STAGE in Seoul D2
#flashing tw#bts#hoseok#jhope#hobi#btsgif#btsedit#dailybts#usersky#annietrack#userines#userdimple#raplineuser#*#perf#hope on the stage
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Some pictures from ArtBook_ENG.pdf
from files from game Magical Deathpair
#magical deathpair#Vastine#Izala#Sazaluka#Perf#Glassical#Mutsukumo#Merloa#Azumano#Barokuro#Reverie#Neville#Millephina#Giginose#Lily#Gretten#Darim
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SEOKJIN @ MBC Gayo Daejejeon 2018 (181231)
#bts#btsgif#dailybts#kim seokjin#seokjin#kpopedit#2605#g#perf#tw flashing#usersky#userkelli#tuserhales#usershreyu#usersan#annietrack#userrsun#niniblr#userines#userpat#userdimple#usertaeyungie#who looks like that...WHO
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WONWOO & JEONGHAN — 'Last Night' / Genius Open Mic
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Honey likes anime and junk and Husk will sometimes let them ramble to him about the shows they’re into even if he doesn’t remember everything (he’s an old man) cuz it’s nicer than listening to the others fussing.
Honey: (passionately talking about my hero academia and the owl house)
Husk:
Husk is the kind of dad you think never listens but then for your birthday he gets you the one thing you've been gushing over 😭
#HUSK IS A GOOD DAD#BETTER THAN ALASTOR#THERE I SAID IT#OUR HUSBAND IS TRASH#BUT WE LOVE HIM#BUT HUSK IS JUST#PERF#THE BEST DADDY#AND HONEY IS THE BEST#BABY EVER
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~Try da Grimace Shake~
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j-hope through the eras:
We Are Bulletproof Pt.2 stages
#flashing tw#bts#jhope#hoseok#hobi#btsgif#btsedit#bangtanarmynet#networkbangtan#dailybts#userbangtan#usersky#annietrack#*#*eras#perf#i redownloaded vapoursynth for this 🧍#i figured i had to if im gonna be giffing a bunch of ts files again 🔫#didnt use any denoise tho i will never go back to those days ..#also apparently they only wore the same two outfits for wab pt2 promo ?? they rly were poor#anyway im sorry this is so late again i promise ill try to do better now im done with the semester 🙏
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