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School Education

The LDP believes school regulation should be devolved to state level and funded through school vouchers that promote competition between schools and encourage parental choice. ...
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Immigration

The LDP would increase opportunities to live and work in Australia while carefully guarding access to welfare and citizenship. ...
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Taiwan

The LDP recognises the reality that Taiwan (The Republic of China) is a free, prosperous and independent country and supports immediate re-establishment of full diplomatic relations and a seat at the...
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Environment

The LDP values the natural environment within the context of a prosperous society that provides equal protection under the law and is based on respect for individual freedom, personal responsi...
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Free Trade

The LDP supports free international trade in goods, services and capital. ...
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Firearms

The LDP regards the right to own firearms for sport, hunting, collecting and self-defence as fundamental to a free society. ...
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Energy

The LDP does not believe in either subsidising or unfairly taxing any particular source of energy, including nuclear. ...
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Global Warming

The LDP believes governments lack the competence to address climate change and prefers market responses instead. ...
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Welfare

The LDP supports replacing all current welfare with a negative income tax that provides a basic standard of living and assistance to the working poor. ...
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Victimless Crimes

The LDP does not generally support the criminalisation of victimless crimes and seeks to reduce the intrusion of government into these areas. ...
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Democracy

The LDP supports voluntary voting, citizens initiated referenda, fixed parliamentary terms, recall elections, constitutional protection of private property and sunset clauses on legislation. ...
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Labour Market Regulation

  The LDP supports a free market in labour and would replace the minimum wage with a negative income tax to support low-income earners. ...
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Taxation

The LDP supports significant tax cuts in conjunction with a major reduction in Commonwealth expenditure. ...
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Motorcycles

The LDP believes those who choose to use motorcycles and scooters should not be discouraged by government policies. ...
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Gambling

The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) neither supports nor opposes gambling. It considers it to be like any other form of entertainment - a matter of choice for responsible adults. ...
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Smoking

The LDP is neither pro-smoking nor anti-smoking; it is pro-choice. ...
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Foreign Aid

The LDP believes government foreign aid, other than short term humanitarian relief, should cease.  ...
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Lifestyle Choices

Adults must be free to make their own lifestyle decisions, including marriage, without interference by the government or any need for its approval. ...
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Assisted Suicide

The LDP believes adults have a right to end their own lives, with or without assistance, and to have access to information to help them do it. ...
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Budget

Within a small government context, the LDP believes government should fund recurrent activities entirely through taxation and balance liabilities and assets to achieve the equiivalent of zero net wort...
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Tibet (བོད་)

Tibet has struggled to remain independent of China for centuries. ...
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Deregulate and Privatise

The LDP advocates an immediate end to government ownership of business enterprises including the ABC, SBS, Australia Post, Medibank Private, electricity generation and public transport services. ...
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Free Speech - No Compromises

The government wants to control the media while regulators and the courts inhibit the expression of opinions. But freedom of speech is one of our most fundamental rights and central to a free, democratic society.

Current Events

National Conference 2013

The 2013 National Conference of the Liberal Democratic Party was held on 20 January in Sydney.

Formal business included reports, consideration of policies and a new constitution, and election of National Executive members. There were also two guest speakers. 

Cassandra Wilkinson:  author of the book "Don't panic - nearly everything is better than you think".  Her articles feature in The Australian newspaper and she is a regular guest on current affairs programs. She was a senior public servant and former senior adviser to the New South Wales premier Kristina Keneally.  She is married to a former Labor MP. A longstanding member of the ALP, she is nonetheless a confirmed libertarian. 

Brian Bedkober: a graduate in medicine from the University of Sydney who has spent the bulk of his working life as a family practitioner.

He has also spent a lot of time campaigning against government intrusion in the health system. - most significantly as president of the Australian Medical Centres Association and for the last several years as president of Private Doctors of Australia. He has written widely on health care and related issues, was editor of Australian Private Doctor from 2003 to 2008 and in 2009 authored "Problems in Health Care Delivery: government as cause not cure".

Their presentations are shown here: 

It's not enough to disapprove

alt Everyone disapproves of things that others do. But if we prohibit all the things we disapprove of, nobody will be free.

Smoking, drinking, gambling, eating and certain recreational activities are good examples. While they might be entitled to give advice about the risks, regulators are increasingly taking personal choices away from individuals based on disapproval of the choices they might make.

You Pay Too Much Tax

The Liberal Democratic Party is Australia's only party that does not appeal to voters based on the claim that it is better at spending our taxes.

The LDP believes Australians pay far too much tax and wants to see them substantially reduced. Since 1996, per capita taxation has increased by more than a third after allowing for inflation, not including the GST.  As a share of GDP, taxes (federal and state) are 75% above what they were in 1972, when the Whitlam government was first elected.

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The Private Realm

Around 508 BC, when the Athenians established democracy, they recognised there should be a distinction between the public and private realms.

Aristotle described the public realm as the site where people consent to or contest the laws, contracts, covenants, or principles of community that govern personal and social conduct. The private realm was defined by the hearth and home, remaining the place of family, comfort and individual identity in which the government had no role.
 
The distinction still exists. We acknowledge that some issues are the legitimate responsibility of the government while others belong in the private domain and are not the government’s business.
 

The carbon tax - useless and pointless

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Whether or not the world is getting warmer, and whether humans are contributing, the proposed Carbon Tax is bad policy. The Liberal Democratic Party believes there will be far less misery if society is simply encouraged to adapt to the changing climate, allowing market responses to proceed and providing support to any people or countries that are genuinely adversely affected.

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Current Events

Wed Jun 05 @ 6:00PM - 08:00PM
LDP SA Meeting
Wed Jun 12 @ 7:00PM - 09:00PM
LDP Victoria Branch Meeting
May 2013
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The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me. Ayn Rand

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There are two categories of membership - honorary and financial. Financial membership costs $70 ($35 concession). All members may attend party events. Financial members may vote and be elected to positions of responsibility.

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Party Registration

The LDP is registered as a political party for federal elections. It is also registered for elections in the ACT, State elections in South Australia, local government elections in NSW and is eligible for registration in the NT. 

It cannot run in other States until it achieves registration. This mainly requires sufficient members. You can help achieve State registration by joining.

About the LDP

The Liberal Democratic Party stands for lower taxes, small government and individual responsibility.

It believes people should make their own choices and not rely on the government. It supports both economic and social liberalism.

The LDP is anti-left, anti-right, pro-liberty.