Quote:well as a detailed analysis that was rather lacking.
Sorry, next time I will go for you thesis style "third parties however have one rise and one fall".
Quote:The Greens on the other hand have no such extensive history to base a prediction on. All we have to predict a trajectory is the performance of other third parties.
Like Labor, Liberal, the Nationals etc? Or only the ones you select?
Quote:Federal politics was transformed by WW2
How? It looks to me like you only chose the postwar period after you realised how stupid your initial claim of 100 years was. There was no transformation. There is just you drawing lines back on forth through the sand trying to exclude every bit of evidence that disagrees with you, and changing your mind about where those lines need to be as it (ever so slowly) dawns on you how silly it is getting.
Quote:and in the post-war period no third party has ever shown the ability to stay the course
Except of course the Nationals and the Greens.
Quote:IN fact, history demonstrates that third parties rise, spend a little time in the sun and then fade away.
Yeah we know. One rise, one fall. That's all that exists in your imagination, and no amount of reality is going to change that.
Quote:The Greens may in fact become a major long-lasting force. My argument is and has always been, that there is no evidence at all to suggest that is the likely outcome.
Sounds more like you changing your story to me.
Quote:And my primary evidence to support their likely demise is that they are to date tracking pretty much identical to third parties.
The fact you even lump third parties all into the one basket and insist the Greens are somehow identical shows you have not thought about this at all. You have gone through absurd mental gymnastics to explain why the Nationals were a special case, and also the Democrats. Everything is a special case to you, except for some reason your only conclusion is that the Greens must therefor fit your imaginary generic trajectory of third parties.
Quote:as long-term labor voters 'park' their votes with the greens while their preferred party gets its act together.
LOL. Another cracker from longy. If they change their votes they are not a long term labor voter (as about 30% of the population is). Voters drift between the two major parties. Some become long term voters for the other party. Some become long term voters for an alternative minor party. Some stick with the same major party. The most recent Greens peak in Greens vote was around the same time as Labors. Now they are both falling.
Quote:Now if you wish to dispute my analysis then feel free but how about trying some actual argument and not just saying drivel like 'the labor party was once a third party etc
This is true Longy. Labor did start out as a third party. Here are some examples of drivel. This thread has been pretty much a constant stream of it coming from you.
Quote:third parties however have one rise and one fall.
Quote:I repeat that there is ZERO historical example of a third party that has stayed the course.
Quote:The preponderance of evidence still suggests a slide and eventual irrelevance of the Greens. There is nothing to suggest that anything has changed from 100 years of thrid party history.
Quote:when you describe the ALP, Libs and Nats as third parties then your argument falls down rather badly.
Quote:and btw 2PP has precisely zero impact on elections
Quote:the democrats were the only party to have survived any significant length of time
Quote:so far they appear to following the usual trajectory and beginning their slide to irrelevance as all have before them
Quote:it is an actauly unbiased analysis of their likely trajectory based on history