*** Welcome to piglix ***

Science Party (Australia)

Science Party
Leader James Jansson
Founded 2013 (2013)
Headquarters New South Wales
Ideology Utilitarianism
Techno-progressivism
"Bright green" environmentalism
Technocentrism
Australian Republicanism
Cornucopianism
Political position Radical Centre
Website
www.scienceparty.org.au

The Science Party, known as Future Party until March 2016, is an Australian political party established in 2013.

The Science Party believes that technological development is a positive force in human affairs and values the cultural, economic, and technological benefits of modernism. It believes in freedom of expression, and has a positive view of the power of free markets, and the benefits of high density cities. The party seeks to promote high quality science research and education.

Science Party policies include the following:

The Future Party was registered with the Australian Electoral Commission on 2 July 2013. It is led by Dr James Jansson, who was a PhD student studying at the Kirby Institute when the party was founded. It changed name to the Science Party, with the new name registered by the Australian Electoral Commission on 22 March 2016. The Science Party is run as a single federal entity without individual state branches.

At the 2013 federal election the party ran two candidates in the senate in NSW and one candidate in the NSW seat of Kingsford Smith, and another in the QLD seat of Moreton.

The party has been involved in Glenn Druery's Minor Party Alliance, though refused to engage in any large scale preference deal.

The party is a member of the Alliance for Progress.

In the 2016 federal election the Science Party fielded two senate candidates in each of New South Wales and Tasmania, and one in Victoria. To avoid being in the ungrouped column, the Victorian candidate shared the column with the candidate from the Australian Cyclists Party. It also supported ten candidates for the House of Representatives, all for seats in New South Wales.


...
Wikipedia

...