But new research shows the public did not share the negative view of Andrews portrayed by the media. Isentia has found that when the media discussed Andrewsâ handling of Covid-19, 75% of coverage was critical and 29% openly positioned him as incompetent.
However, when the Australian public was asked what they thought of Andrewsâ leadership, 42% said heâd been a good leader.
Victorian premier Daniel Andrews. Photograph: Luis Ascui/AAP
Inside the state itself the picture was even rosier, with 53% believing he had done a good job as leader.
The premierâs satisfaction rating never dropped below 50% across Essential, Roy Morgan and Newspoll polling.
You re a fraud mate : AFR s Phil Coorey steamed up over gas power msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Transcript
Steve Lewis:Previously on Inside the FBI, we looked back at the investigation that led to the arrest of Ted Kaczynski, better known as the Unabomber one of the nation’s most notorious domestic terrorists.
When the FBI closed the UNABOM case in 1996, it didn’t tuck it away in a closet.
The investigation taught us lessons that are still evident in today’s FBI. The UNABOM task force brought together personnel from counterintelligence and criminal investigations, a successful combination that helped inform the makeup of the FBI’s dedicated counterterrorism unit when it was created in 2000.
The Unabomber also helped the FBI better understand the lone offender a threat that has continued to grow in the decades since his arrest.
Lewis was sent to Kansas to train in the U.S. Army’s 9th Horse Cavalry, the all-Black unit that distinguished itself over decades of fighting. The Buffalo Soldier units formed during the Civil War and were disbanded when President Harry S Truman issued an order to integrate the armed forces in 1948.
The horse cavalry training was a rude awakening for Lewis.
“I had never been near a horse,” Lewis, 99, said in a recent interview. “They gave me a horse and I had to learn to ride a horse and I had to do everything a cavalryman did, ride the horse, feed the horse.”
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People pictured enjoying themselves at Little Wind Street Pop Up in Swansea (Image: Liam Blackmore)
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