Creepy Kevni (and snap)

Cruising the Australian MSM blogs today, and a comment jumped out at me:

“Is it just me, or is all this ‘me-tooing’ from Kevin Rudd now starting to look embarrassingly bald-faced and over the top?

Twelve hours before he (and the ALP) resiled?

One could be forgiven for coming to the conclusion that the [Australian – Ed.] opposition are telling whoppers, and pretty much most of the time now.”
The commenter was talking about the Rudd turnaround on the ‘no death penalty’ thing from McClelland vis-a-vis Asia, and more pointedly, the Bali bombers. What really struck me, though, was that I’ve been thinking exactly the same thing.

And all this copycat policy is starting to come across as – well – not so much dishonest anymore, as frankly a bit creepy.

I’m just wondering when a lot more people of the potentially ALP-voting variety are going to start coming to the same conclusion.

The ALP is saying whatever it thinks will win them the day, which is why, of course, so much of it sounds like a blanket policy endorsement for the current Howard Government. That the ALP doesn’t believe a word of it, though, is a given.

The gloss is starting to wear a little thin.

Update:

Down in Melbourne, Andrew Bolt provides a little clarity on Creepy Kevni's previous position:

"Well, here is Rudd himself in December 2005:

It is important that our policy (on capital punishment) is consistent. Labor policy, like the Liberal policy, worldwide, is opposed to the death penalty. And whether we are talking about individuals in Iraq or Indonesia or elsewhere, our policy has to be consistent.
When it comes to Australians, Australian citizens, who are convicted of the death penalty, then together with the Liberal Party, Labor’s policy is to make representations to the government concerned to try and seek clemency.
And reader Steve has other examples:

Kevin Rudd, 2006: “we oppose the use of capital punishment under all circumstances. That is what our platform says. That is what the party stands for and that is what I stand for ."

Kevin Rudd, 2006: ““We must conclude that capital punishment is unacceptable in all circumstances and in all jurisdictions
McClelland said exactly what Rudd has been saying. But when the going got tough, Rudd ditched both his policy and his spokesman."

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