SPECIAL ELECTION EDITION! - Australian Family Party
Source: https://australianfamilyparty.org.au/special-election-edition
Archived: 2026-04-23 17:09
SPECIAL ELECTION EDITION! - Australian Family Party
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J is for …
In Hebrew it is the
“
ha
meat hamachazik et hamerube”
– ‘the little that holds a lot’.
It is referring to the 10
th
letter of the Hebrew alphabet: ‘yud’, the most important of all the letters. The name of God starts with a yud – YHWH – Jehovah in English. It is also the smallest letter in the alphabet – the size of a small comma – and yet every letter in Hebrew contains a yud, because the moment the pen touches the paper, there it is.
In English, yud is the equivalent of our letter ‘J’, which is also the 10
th
letter of our alphabet. The number 10 is very profound in Scripture. From the first chapter of Genesis in which God creates 10 things – light, sky, land, sea, plants, sun, moon, stars, living creatures and finally humans – to the 10 plagues of Egypt; to the commandment to give a tenth of one’s income (the tithe); to Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year – the 10
th
day of the 10
th
month; to Abraham’s 10 tests; and, of course, the 10 Commandments.
At this election, every voter is asked to cast two ballots – one on a small green ballot paper for the House of Assembly (the Lower House) and the other on a very large white ballot paper for the Legislative Council (the Upper House).
The House of Assembly ballot paper is quite straightforward – simply number the candidates (usually around five or six of them) in your order of preference.
The Legislative Council ballot paper however, is not so straightforward.
For a start, it is nearly a metre long and contains 19 registered political parties or groups above the red line and over 50 individual candidates below the red line.
Voters can choose whether to vote above the line or below the line, but not both. Voters can also choose whether to number any amount of boxes above the line – from just one box to all 19 of them. If voting below the line, a voter must number a minimum of 12 boxes.
The Australian Family Party has drawn box
J
on the white ballot paper. Box No 10. How’s that for divine providence! J for Jehovah, J for Jerusalem, J for Joshua, J for Joseph, J for Joanna, J for Judges and, of course, J for Jesus.
We are recommending voters vote above line and follow our how-to-vote card by placing a
1
in the box marked
J
, then a
2
in the box marked
M
for One Nation, and then a
3
in the box marked
A
for the Liberal Democrats. Both One Nation, led in South Australia by the phenomenal Jennifer Game and the Liberal Democrats’ highly respected leader Kenelm Tonkin have conducted themselves impeccably throughout this election period. Their pro-life, pro-family, pro-freedom stance has been exemplary, and I cannot speak highly enough of both of them.
Click
here
to view seat by seat how-to-vote cards.
All we need now are a few more
V
for volunteers to hand out the how-to-vote cards and we’re done.
Authorized by Bob Day Australian Family Party 17 Beulah Road, Norwood SA 5067
Primary Sidebar
Bob Day AO, Federal Director Profile
Profile is
here
.
Subscribe to our Mailing list!
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Skip to primary navigation
Skip to main content
Skip to primary sidebar
J is for …
In Hebrew it is the
“
ha
meat hamachazik et hamerube”
– ‘the little that holds a lot’.
It is referring to the 10
th
letter of the Hebrew alphabet: ‘yud’, the most important of all the letters. The name of God starts with a yud – YHWH – Jehovah in English. It is also the smallest letter in the alphabet – the size of a small comma – and yet every letter in Hebrew contains a yud, because the moment the pen touches the paper, there it is.
In English, yud is the equivalent of our letter ‘J’, which is also the 10
th
letter of our alphabet. The number 10 is very profound in Scripture. From the first chapter of Genesis in which God creates 10 things – light, sky, land, sea, plants, sun, moon, stars, living creatures and finally humans – to the 10 plagues of Egypt; to the commandment to give a tenth of one’s income (the tithe); to Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year – the 10
th
day of the 10
th
month; to Abraham’s 10 tests; and, of course, the 10 Commandments.
At this election, every voter is asked to cast two ballots – one on a small green ballot paper for the House of Assembly (the Lower House) and the other on a very large white ballot paper for the Legislative Council (the Upper House).
The House of Assembly ballot paper is quite straightforward – simply number the candidates (usually around five or six of them) in your order of preference.
The Legislative Council ballot paper however, is not so straightforward.
For a start, it is nearly a metre long and contains 19 registered political parties or groups above the red line and over 50 individual candidates below the red line.
Voters can choose whether to vote above the line or below the line, but not both. Voters can also choose whether to number any amount of boxes above the line – from just one box to all 19 of them. If voting below the line, a voter must number a minimum of 12 boxes.
The Australian Family Party has drawn box
J
on the white ballot paper. Box No 10. How’s that for divine providence! J for Jehovah, J for Jerusalem, J for Joshua, J for Joseph, J for Joanna, J for Judges and, of course, J for Jesus.
We are recommending voters vote above line and follow our how-to-vote card by placing a
1
in the box marked
J
, then a
2
in the box marked
M
for One Nation, and then a
3
in the box marked
A
for the Liberal Democrats. Both One Nation, led in South Australia by the phenomenal Jennifer Game and the Liberal Democrats’ highly respected leader Kenelm Tonkin have conducted themselves impeccably throughout this election period. Their pro-life, pro-family, pro-freedom stance has been exemplary, and I cannot speak highly enough of both of them.
Click
here
to view seat by seat how-to-vote cards.
All we need now are a few more
V
for volunteers to hand out the how-to-vote cards and we’re done.
Authorized by Bob Day Australian Family Party 17 Beulah Road, Norwood SA 5067
Primary Sidebar
Bob Day AO, Federal Director Profile
Profile is
here
.
Subscribe to our Mailing list!
Recent Posts
Remembering Al Capone
State Dogged by Political Circus
Seven Voices, One Clear Choice
Soccer, Sin and a State Election
Aussie Osborne – AUKUS 2026 Part 2
Aussie Osborne – AUKUS 2026 Part 1
Cult Fiction
The State vs the People
‘Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?’
Which is Witch in ’26?
Christmas 2025
Never Again?
Bounce Back Better
The 44% Alarm Bell