The Week That Was – May 7 to May 13

First, apologies for the sudden few weeks off, but when your internet dies and the family ends up having to use a pocket wi-fi device for two weeks, you end up having to decide what is the best use of what little wi-fi there is available.

But I came back in time for Budget Week! Yay! I’m not normally a fan of maths and economics and finance, because it makes my head hurt, but in the last couple of years I’ve warmed to it. Modern technology also helps, as people can now make graphics to simply explain “winners and losers”.

The theme for the budget this year was “Fairness, Opportunity and Security”, with the aim of differing between good and bad debt (borrowing for paying bills = bad; borrowing to build infrastructure = good) and making things fairer. The big things in this budget include the funding for Snowy Hydro 2.0, Gonski 2.0, Badgery’s Creek Airport and other infrastructure. The AFP will get a $320 million boost in funding, and

There will also be an increase in the Medicare levy to pay for the NDIS, as well as an increase in tax for most, if not all, taxpayers. There is also a restructure to schools funding, which is causing a bit of drama, because several schools will lose some money. In NSW (because that’s what version of ABC News I get) several independent and public schools will lose between $500,000 to $2.5 million in funding in 2018, making the State Education minister, as well as the NSW Department of Education boss Mark Scott (who used to run the ABC) very mad – although more about the public schools than the independent ones.

The ‘big four’ banks (ANZ, NAB, Commonwealth Bank and Westpac) are going to be taxed by the government, with the aim of rasing $6.2 billion over the next four years. The banks are not happy, and walked out of meeting with the government this week, convinced the tax is unworkable. Scott Morrison and Malcolm Turnbull have both encouraged the banks to take the pain and not pass on the costs to the consumers. There is also a plan to allow first-home buyers to salary sacrifice money into their super in order to help them afford the deposit on a home. There are still no mentions of changing negative gearing.

The government has also decided to randomly drug test Centrelink recipients, which has been met with mixed reviews. Some support it, mainly in areas where the jobs involve drug testing in order to be allowed onto site, while others are concerned it will push those on the dole who may be just barely getting by into homelessness when their payments are cut off. Jacqui Lambie has decided that she will only support it if politicians are drug tested as well (which will be unlikely in my lifetime).

Bill Shorten and the Labor party are in a bit of hot water this week after an advertisement touting Labor’s plan to ‘hire Australians first’ – with a cast of, well, white people in work uniforms. The party has been criticised for not reflecting the diversity of the country, with Shorten and the party apologising for the advert, which will likely never be played again ever.

Finally this week, the Prime Minister has revealed he is considering an American request to send more troops to the Middle East, a decision he will be making without Dennis Richardson, a long-serving public servant and advisor, who retired on Friday; and the death of ABC radio journalist and presenter Mark Colvin shocked and saddened politicians and the media.

Tweet of the Week

Things I’ve Been Looking at Online

Leigh Sales’ tribute to Mark Colvin – ABC Online

ABC journalists remember Mark Colvin – ABC Online

How Brigitte Macron is different from other French presidential spouses – ABC Online

The Week That Was – December 7 to December 13

Tony Abbott still wants his Paid Parental Leave (PPL) Scheme to go ahead, although he may have to lower the cap again, with money saved going to childcare, but won’t share too many details other than the fact that he would prefer “in-home care” – i.e. nannies – and there is disquiet among the Coalition to do with city vs. rural mothers and how much money they get. In case you were wondering, the Labor party’s PPL is paying every primary carer 18 weeks at minimum wage (source here).

The Government is using taxpayer money to pay for advertising to convince people of the benefits of their plan for higher education funding. The government says that it is an “information campaign focused on facts”, while Glenn Lazarus has called the ad campaign “expensive propaganda for dud reforms”. The thing is, the bulk of students (including me), whether at uni, or planning to go in the next few years, still have an issue with the legislation, and it isn’t the fact that the interest on HECS is going up.

The $7 co-payment is technically gone. However, they are cutting $5 from the rebate doctors get from Medicare, meaning that if doctors want to make that up, they are going to have to raise their prices. There is an exemption for children, pensioners, veterans and concession card holders, however there is concern about chronically ill patients or patients needing long-term or ongoing care who are adults, as they will not be reprieved, and it may also lead to clogged Emergency Departments. This policy is yet to be introduced to Parliament, so it may not even get through, but people are worried anyway. Bill Shorten also had some choice words that scared a few people.

This is not a back down by the Abbott Government, this is a GP Tax that Tony Abbott can’t bring through your front door so he is going to bring it through your back door.

Not a pleasant thought, but I guess that’s the point.

NAPLAN is in the news again as it turns out that parents are pulling their kids out of school on NAPLAN day at record rates, because students are pressured to do well, or schools tell parents to keep their kid away in order to make the school look better when the NAPLAN results come out. This leaves an incomplete picture about how students are doing at schools.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko is in Australia at the moment, meeting with Tony Abbott, who is apparently one of the most popular foreign heads of state in Ukraine. Abbott said that it was nice to be popular, even if it was in Ukraine, and that “shirt front” must have translated well into Ukrainian. Poroshenko wants more help from Australia to fight the separatists and also wants energy resources from Australia. Abbott has also been invited to come to Kiev on a visit, which could happen next year.

In the run-up to the Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO), it has been announced that up to 200 agencies could be axed, including a LGBTI working group and a Returned Servicemen group. The government needs to save $500 million dollars, and the fact that mining revenues are down, as is the petrol price, Australia is not getting as much revenue as it was.

Finally this week, Tony Abbott has suggested those in the Coalition who are complaining about Peta Credlin are sexist, which has led to people calling Abbott a hypocrite…

…Australia will contribute $200 million to the world Climate Fund, unemployment has risen to a 12 year high, making Joe Hockey’s life more difficult and Nick Xenophon has started his own party.

Tweets of the Week

https://twitter.com/MarkDiStef/status/542852661507137536

Things I’ve Been looking at Online

The 20 Reasons 2014 was the Year of Lee Lin Chin – BuzzFeed

Explaining to American why Australian shops banned GTA5 – Polygon.com

An academic paper by Maggie Simpson and Edna Krabappel got published – Vox.com

The Last One…

Sorry this is a tad late, but hey, we’re at the end, and we’ve find out who is leading our country…finally.

Wednesday saw the aftermath of the previous night’s Lateline on the ABC, when Roger Corbett, a Fairfax board member and member of the Liberal Party made some comments about Kevin Rudd – they weren’t nice, and the media got into a frenzy. Doug Cameron said that Corbett should “do the right thing and quit,” and Christine Milne doesn’t think it was very nice either.

The ad blackout began on Thursday morning at 12am, so there are no more political ads!

Speaking of which, the Coalition decided that this was when they should release their costings. They will decrease foreign aid by AU$4 billion and put that into infrastructure. They will scrap public transport plans and put more emphasis on roads. There is also that repetitive spiel of “cut the mining tax, cut the carbon tax, cut the waste” which drove me mental.

There was also a bit of a brouhaha in Sydney after there was a stabbing. One of the people involved is a refugee, and Scott Morrison, the Shadow Minister for Immigration decided that he could politicise it, which was probably not the best thing to do, and Tony Burke said that we should be able to make up our own minds.

The last day of the campaign, Friday. Everyone got a bit paranoid – Labor could lose 10-20 seats apparently. Tony Abbott plus one daughter spent time with some cute guide dogs – not that dogs should sway anyone, but the puppies were so cute!

Anyway, Kevin Rudd made one last push, saying that his government has plans and Tony Abbott doesn’t. He may have said something along the lines of “we’ll all be doomed” if Abbott does come to power. Tony Abbott thinks Kevin Rudd is getting desperate and scaring people and doesn’t have a plan – which was a bit mean.

Oh well, no more election campaign! Yay!

Banning the Bookies

So, TV channels just agreed to stop airing live odds during televised sports matches. About time.

This only became an issue last year when it started, and there has been a bit of backlash.

This is what i am talking about:

Here is an example given by the ABC.

And here is Tom Waterhouse (Racing trainer Gai Waterhouse’s son) on Channel 10

I think this decision is fantastic. Along with others, I agree that it is inappropriate for live odds to be broadcast while children are watching, and that if we really want to prevent kids from betting we shouldn’t broadcast during the G and PG time slots. I think it is distracting and annoying, and while I may not like NRL or AFL a whole lot, nor do I love Rugby (I’m mainly cheering on Australia or enjoying looking at the players I find attractive), I do think that the betting companies have crossed a line.

Right now, betting companies are still allowed to advertise during “scheduled breaks in play” – i.e. before the game, quarter time and half time – as long as there isn’t wall to wall advertising. I honestly could not stand 5-7 minutes of things like this:

Or this:

Although, if The Chaser (a very controversial comedy group) took over, they might play these and I would be very, very happy…..Warning: There is swearing. I warned you!

What do you think?