Two Weeks (and a bit) That Were – March 24 to April 10

The Liberal Party ended up winning the NSW election – just. They’re going to have a margin of two seats. Michael Daley, the Labor leader said he would stay on as leader, but within days he was announcing a leadership ballot for after the federal election (so as not to distract from Federal Labor, who are looking really good in the lead up to the federal election), and then announced that he wouldn’t contest the ballot. This makes Daley the shortest serving Labor Opposition Leader in nearly 100 years in NSW.

One Nation is also in hot water after an undercover investigation by Qatari news network Al Jazeera English (AJE) revealed that One Nation had approached the National Rifle Association to see if they could provide financial and strategic support. The AJE journalist Rodger Muller spent almost three years pretending to be a pro-gun activist and befriended Pauline Hanson’s chief of staff James Ashby (currently banned from Parliament House after having a punch-up with Brian Burston) and One Nation’s Queensland Leader Steve Dickson. They travelled to the USA where they met with the NRA and other pro-gun groups, explaining that donating millions to the party would help One Nation gain 8-20 seats in parliament and would allow them to negotiate what they wanted from the government of the day.

The NRA donations never came to fruition, as foreign donations to political parties are now banned. Regardless, Hanson, Ashby and Dickson are very upset that they were duped and caught out and have accused Al Jazeera being an agent of Qatari interference in Australian politics. They’re also a tad annoyed at the ABC, who broadcast the Al Jazeera investigation on Australian TV. It should be noted that the ABC had no involvement in the program – they just bought the rights to broadcast it in Australia.

Meanwhile, Labor has begun to furnish its war chest in preparation for the election. They’re reiterating their promise to change the rules around negative gearing, announcing that any investment property bought after January 1, 2020 would not be eligible for negative gearing. They’ve also announced they will legislate a minimum wage, but haven’t said what that will be – and small business are concerned as to whether they’ll be able to afford a legislated minimum wage.

The government is being asked to prove that the NDIS has been underfunded, after announcements from some NDIS providers that they were going to increase their fees. They’re increasing their fees in part because they’re only being paid to see their clients but not to fill in all the paperwork that comes with it. There has also been concerning revelations about abuse in the disability sector – with a Royal Commission announced to look into the abuse in the sector. However, Greens Senator Jordan Steele-John, who uses a wheelchair, has concerns that two of the commissioners have worked in the sector and have a conflict of interest. He’s also helped reveal that in NSW and South Australia alone there have been almost 1,500 reports of abuse to the NDIS watchdog, 62 of which have been sexual abuse claims.

There are also calls to for the government to help the children of now-deceased ISIS fighter Khaled Sharrouf, who are stuck in a camp in Syria after fleeing the now defunct caliphate. While the eldest daughter is now an adult, she and her four siblings (although two have died in Syria) were all underage when their parents took them to Syria with them when they went to fight for ISIS around five years ago. Their grandmother, Karen Nettleton, wants the government to provide the children (and the eldest daughter’s toddlers) safe passage to Australia. However the government hasn’t said much about it because they don’t want to be seen to be supporting terrorists but they also don’t want to be seen to be mean because they won’t help a couple of children.

We also had the Budget, where Josh Frydenberg announced that Australia is “back in black”, which isn’t exactly right. For the financial year 2018-19, there is a deficit of $5.2 billion and the surplus for 2019-20 of $4.1 billion is prospective, and based not on particular savings within the budget but the government’s savings account and the Future Fund, which is supposed to help pay public service pensions.

Meanwhile the Opposition’s Budget in Reply, announcing that their budget would invest in health and education, as well as $2 billion to reduce, if not eradicate the out-of-pocket costs of the tests, consultations and treatments for cancer. They’ve also announced that they will provide incentives for companies to make more electric vehicles by 2030, so that half of cars on sale by then are electric – which led the government to blatantly lie to the public, saying Bill Shorten was going to take their utes away.

So began what I call the Budget Grand Tour, where the government and the opposition travel around the country, selling their budget, or their alternative budget.

Except given the election could be called at any minute, it’s also like a pre-election campaign…..

Tweets of the Fortnight

Things I’ve Been Looking at Online

Annabel Crabb on the Budget – ABC Online

First Dog on the Moon on the Budget “Lock-Up” – The Guardian

 

The Week That Was – February 10 to February 16

This week saw Parliament return, and what a week it was. The government released classified security information to the public that suggested that if all the Manus Island and Nauru detainees were deemed unwell by the medical team that they could all be transferred to Australia within weeks. Labor made an amendment to the legislation that means that the laws would only apply to those currently on Manus Island and Nauru, and they convinced the Greens and cross bench MPs to support this change.

So the government lost a vote on legislation, which is something that has not happened for around 80 years, and it sort of led to some sort of Trump-like transformation in the government, with suggestion that people with criminal histories would get into the country. This is despite the fact that the government hasn’t actually confirmed that any of the asylum seekers in detention have a criminal background. The government is also laying the foundations to blame Labor for any new boat arrivals, should they come.

Barrie Cassidy from ABC’s Insiders program had a great explanation about the whole issue.

This week was peak ridiculous from the government, and is exactly the reason that people switch off. People are getting annoyed with politics because the opposition to policy has become more about who was introducing that policy, rather than the policy itself. Labor has begun to recognise the change in public sentiment when it comes to humane treatment of asylum seekers, and it appears the government either hasn’t recognised the change, or they are simply ignoring it.

It also probably doesn’t help that it is an election year as well. Despite there being no date yet (but we know it has to take place by May), the pre-election policy announcements have begun, mostly from the Government. The Coalition are focusing on national security, something they see as one of their traditional strengths, which may have played into how they were dealing with the asylum seeker issue.

Meanwhile in the Senate, the Senate President Scott Ryan has banned Pauline Hanson’s chief of staff James Ashby from entering parliament for “the time being” after he provoked Senator Brian Burston (formerly of One Nation, now part of the United Australia Party), leading to an altercation between the two. Burston also smeared blood on Pauline Hanson’s office door in the aftermath but it’s unclear whether that was on purpose or by accident, although I’d put my money on it being the former, even if Burston claims he can’t remember it.

The government also tried to avoid a vote on a Royal Commission into abuse in the disability sector. It passed the senate on Thursday, but the government kept Question Time going for an extra two and a half hours, so that the vote couldn’t be brought on in the Lower House. Labor accused the Coalition of running down the clock, which Scott Morrison denies, but Christopher Pyne didn’t.

This week also saw the start of the Royal Commission into Aged Care Safety and Quality in Adelaide. Most of Australia’s 1.3 million aged care clients are in home-based care (in a retirement or nursing home). During this week’s hearings we learned that there are not enough qualified nurses to fill nursing roles, meaning some roles are being filled by people who are unqualified, and that this issue, combined with a general lack of nursing staff has left those working in aged care facilities spread too thin, leading more nurses to quit, which adds to the nursing problem facing the sector. We also learned that there are a large number of patients with complex issues, such as dementia, being over-medicated. It’s thought that only a small fraction of those with dementia on anti-psychotic medication actually benefit from it, and that for those who don’t really need these medications it could be doing more harm than good.

Divisions in the seat of Gilmore are starting to show, with the Nationals holding a pre-selection for a candidate in the Southern NSW coastal electorate. It looks as if former NSW State MP and minister Katrina Hodgkinson will win that pre-selection and join the race against the parachuted Liberal candidate Warren Mundine, the originally pre-selected Liberal (and now independent) Grant Schultz, as well as the Labor candidate Fiona Phillips. Gilmore is an extremely marginal seat, and if the Liberal and National parties split the first preference vote, they may find neither party wins Gilmore.

Also this week, Hakeem al-Arabi was released from a Thai prison and returned to Australia. He’s likely to get his citizenship application fast-tracked from what Marise Payne and Scott Morrison were saying.

Finally this week, Michaelia Cash appeared in the Federal Court this week to give evidence in a case related to the raids on AWU offices in Melbourne, and it looks like one of her staffers may also be giving evidence soon

Tweets of the Week

Oh, and Tony Jones announced this week he would be leaving Q & A on the ABC, as his wife Sarah Ferguson will be posted to China as the ABC’s bureau chief, which led to numerous offers to host from social media, including this one that reflects many people’s feelings when it comes to politics these days:

Things I’ve Been Looking at Online

The refugee drama distracted from a couple of other key points – ABC Online

 

The Two Weeks that Were – November 29 to December 12

I probably made the worst choice of weeks to put together, but this is what happens when you work at a by-election and help people move into apartments. Plus I missed a day of news so if I’ve missed anything that went on, that’s probably why.

Back at the end of November, Turnbull was in Malta for CHOGM, where he met the Queen, chatted about security and the economy with Commonwealth leaders before heading to Paris for the Climate Conference, where he made a speech about how Australia plans to decrease emissions by 26-28% by 2030. While in Paris, Turnbull, his wife Lucy and New Zealand PM John Key, laid flowers at the Bataclan Theatre. Since becoming Prime Minister, Turnbull has been placed in good positions in the photos of leaders at events, which shows that he’s not only making people in Australia happy, but world leaders and other important people respect him too.

With MYEFO due in the coming week, the Budget has become a focus again, with reports of a deficit continuing for some time thanks to the mining boom winding up and revenue issues. While the numbers aren’t clear yet, it does seem like the government is having trouble putting the country back into surplus. Meanwhile there are discussions again about how to change the GST, with states, especially Western Australia, wanting more money, and the concern that if they increase the rate of the GST the public and community groups would not be happy. There is also a suggestion of increasing the Medicare levy in order to pay for more healthcare, which was discussed at COAG, but no real decision was made.

Mal Brough is being hounded in Question Time, after the police came to interview him regarding Ashby-gate. It’s believed that back when Peter Slipper (remember him?) became Speaker and angered all of the Liberals, Brough asked Slipper’s staffer James Ashby to (possibly illegally) copy Slipper’s diary. Why he needed the diary is unclear, but now the police are interested so one can’t help but think it’s not good. Meanwhile, former Liberal minister Ian Macfarlane has defected to the Nationals, most likely in the hope that he can get back into cabinet, even though it’s not a given.

Malcolm Turnbull has introduced his big innovation plan, with tax breaks for investments in startups, money for research and more forgiving bankruptcy legislation. It’s Turnbull’s signature policy, with a $1 billion price tag and it appears that Turnbull has a long term plan for it. It has come with coverage showing some interesting projects that have fascinated the inhabitants of my house.

Liberal Trent Zimmerman won the seat of North Sydney, which was expected. However there has been a 13% swing. With the seat originally being a safe seat with a 15-16% margin while Joe Hockey was there, it appears that the seat is now somewhat marginal at 2-3%.

Finally this fortnight, the family court has a massive backlog of cases to get through because the government won’t replace retiring judges, Joe Hockey is off to Washington to replace Kim Beazley as Ambassador to the US, Tony Abbott’s been speaking about Islam, and Cardinal Pell has disappointed and angered victims of church sexual abuse by being to ill to appear at a Royal Commission hearing in Ballarat – with suggestions he’s not actually ill.

Tweet of the Fortnight

https://twitter.com/MarkDiStef/status/671452808520974336

Things I’ve Been Looking at Online

The Simpsons and the LGBT community – SBS Online

Who follows who in Federal Parliament – SBS Online

Leigh Sales and Malcolm Turnbull banter on the ABC

 

The Week That Was – September 7 to September 13

So, its been a year since Tony Abbott became PM, and he’s pretty happy with his government has achieved so far. Tony Abbott, having returned from South East Asia, spent time with his family. The Liberal Party released a two-minute video and a 19-page booklet, while the ALP released a video of their own and Bill Shorten spoke about how Australians shouldn’t be trusting the government.

You may remember at the end of last week’s post, that the media at ICAC were annoyed about the possibility of a suppression order on some pretty good stuff in ICAC evidence – in fact, some of them had seen it. The suppression order was rejected, and so we now know that Peta Credlin was mentioned at ICAC this week. A company wanting to donate to the NSW Liberals (illegal under NSW law) who is believed to have given money to the Free Enterprise Foundation (the Liberal Party’s federal fundraising arm) which was then funnelled to the NSW Liberals. The former NSW Liberal boss emailed Peta Credlin about the company’s CEO and how he was a fan of the Party and Credlin is believed to have contacted him. However, despite this mention in evidence, she is unlikely to be called to appear at ICAC as it is believed that she only contacted him and had no idea about any donations or the funneling into NSW.

The US has begun to plan what it will so about Islamic State (ISIS/ISIL) insurgents in Iraq and Syria, with Australia likely to help with airstrikes in regions held by Islamic State. However, the concern is that with this offer to help, Australia could be seen as siding with nations with Shia regimes.

The outgoing head of ASIO, David Irvine, flagged at the start of the week that the terror threat level might be raised from “medium” to “high”. After arrests in Queensland over the last week, and the fact that it looked more and more likely that Australia would help the US in the Middle East, the terror threat level is now at high, making an attack more likely – people are being told to take the threat level seriously, even though there is no specific threat and the main concern is Australians currently in Iraq and Syria.

James Ashby is causing problems after telling 60 Minutes that before the scandal with Peter Slipper came to light he’d met Christopher Pyne three times and the Pyne had promised him a party-paid lawyer and that there would be a job for him after the scandal died down. Pyne says that Ashby misinterpreted the conversation they had. However, other than that comment, the Liberal Party has been trying to distance itself from the whole thing, and are being very difficult when it comes to questions.

The investigators of MH17 have released an interim report about the crash, which states that the flight was completely normal and that there was no emergency call before it disappeared off radar. It suggests that the flight disintegrated in mid-air and that a high-energy object was the reason the plane went down, with the report not telling us what the object was and who was responsible for the object being launched in the first place.

This week also saw Bill Shorten shouting himself hoarse in South Australia, over the possibility that submarines could be built in Japan instead of in Australia, despite promising to keep Australian shipbuilders building Royal Australian Navy vessels. The government has since said that they are considering all of the options, while Bill Shorten spoke at a union rally – going so far as to mention the Second World War and how the Japanese sunk Australian ships.

Julia Gillard appeared at the Trade Union Royal Commission regarding her legal advice to her boyfriend from twenty years ago when he was setting up a union slush fund.

Finally this week, Jose Ramos-Horta criticised the Australian government, concerns are being raised about indigenous offenders and unemployment has dropped thanks to the creation of part-time jobs, but youth unemployment is still very high.

Tweet of the Week

The ABC is setting up a mental health site called Mental As…

Things that I’ve been Reading/Watching/Listening etc

Antony Green looks at the Scottish independence vote – ABC Elections

Two 90-year-old women marry in Iowa – Huffington Post

A Year in Power – ABC Online

The Two Weeks that Were – June 15 to June 28

I had exams and family engagements in the last fortnight, which is why I’ve bunched two weeks together. It’ll be a bit long, but I will be back on my regular schedule next week.

So, Tony Abbott left the US, via Hawaii where he visited Pearl Harbor. He says that he will wait for guidance, presumably from the Americans on how to approach the crisis in Iraq, calling the situation a “security disaster”.

He’s returned to Australia, where he faced internal dissent regarding the deficit levy. It isn’t supported by Senator Ian Macdonald and Cory Bernardi. Bernardi abstained the vote because he feels the rich pay enough tax, while Macdonald voted against because he thinks that companies should be paying too. The Paid Parental Leave is also an issue dividing the Coalition.

Tony Abbott was also handed a Double Dissolution trigger by the by the Opposition. They’ve rejected the bill to remove the Clean Energy Finance Corporation. It doesn’t mean it will be used, but because of how the Constitution works – if Abbott so pleases he may dissolve all houses of parliament and put the country through yet another election. Christine Milne and the Greens have essentially dared him to do it, while the Government is planning to reintroduce it when the new Senate sits after the 1st of July….but that could be an issue too, depending on how the beholders of the balance of power decide to vote.

Trade with the Middle East has been put into a predicament with George Brandis announcing that Australian Government Documents will now refer to what is considered my most countries to be “occupied Israeli settlements” as “disputed”. Why? Well, apparently “occupied” is a loaded term – which I thought was the point anyway – and “disputed” apparently shows that the government still supports a two-state solution. Regardless of whether or not that’s the case, some Middle Eastern nations are not amused and are thinking of sanctioning Australia’s trade. They met with Julie Bishop and DFAT, but were not impressed.

Peter Greste, the Australian journalist held in Egypt has, along with several other Western and Egyptian journalists been sentenced to 7 years prison, essentially for doing their jobs. The Australian government had been, and still is, communicating with Egyptian authorities and ministries, and Julie Bishop will again talk with the Egyptian leadership as will Abbott in the hope of fixing the situation. Australia doesn’t have an extradition treaty with Egypt, which means he cannot be transferred here to carry out his sentence. So now it’s a waiting game for the judicial system to take its course.

Oh, and in case we didn’t have enough on our foreign affairs plate, Indonesia’s Presidential candidates have given Australia a bit of a dressing down. One of the candidates says that while he wants Indonesia to have better relations in Australia, he is under the impression that we think that they are a poor, backward country.

Ouch.

There is a huge amount of controversy at the moment, because the Government wants to change financial advice laws. They want to water down strict rules that protect the consumer including one that makes sure there are no loopholes. It comes as the aftermath of a major scandal at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) pans out involving unauthorised investments of consumer’s money that lost money a few years back. There have been calls for a Royal Commission into the CBA but Tony Abbott is resisting it, saying it was good that the scandal was exposed. There is an investigation into similar crimes committed at other banks, however it isn’t looking at the specific crime the CBA employee committed and submissions are closed anyway. Joe Hockey – whose mother was in fact a victim of this scandal – has criticised the CBA’s handling of the incident, but hasn’t said much more.

The UN World Heritage people have declined the Government’s request to reduce the World Heritage area in Tasmanian Forests. The request was denied within five minutes, and the application was described by delegates as feeble. They also declined a request to do something on the Great Barrier Reef (I don’t remember what it was). Tony Abbott is a bit disappointed about it.

Clive Palmer has been earning some comments in my house, particularly about his strategy. Palmer met with Al Gore in the last week and announced the he would support the abolishment of the Carbon Tax – as long as the savings are passed onto the people’s bills and cost of living. It will also exclude the Clean Energy Finance Corporation and there will be no “Direct Action Plan” or any moves until our trading partners move to do the same – i.e. China.

The Liberal-National Council met in the last couple of days, and there were lots of speeches from Joe Hockey, Julie Bishop and of course Tony Abbott. Abbott encouraged the incoming Senators to accept his government’s election to power as he would their election to their seat – translated as: let my changes go through the senate. There was disagreement on a party constitution change between Christopher Pyne and George Brandis. But more interestingly, there is the suggestion of giving more sovereignty to the states. Labor Premiers like Jay Weatherill are not happy, saying it means cuts to the states. Liberal Premiers, like Denis Napthine have been more cryptic, saying they’re looking forward to the definitions.

The Government is relaunching Temporary Protection visas, which they won’t get through the current Senate, but will try after July 1st. The Government has also been stopped by the High Court from trying to limit the number of protection visas that can be issued each year. There may or may not be an asylum seeker boat (or maybe two) off Christmas Island – but it’s an “on water operation” at the moment so no one will say anything.

Finally in the last fortnight, James Ashby has dropped his case against Peter Slipper, the Greens will be rejecting the fuel excise because they want more funding in public transport and not roads, and Tony Abbott thinks protesting is “un-Australian” and that we not only need to “stop the boats” but “stop the jihadists” – in reference to the Australians fighting in Syria and/or Iraq – usually for ISIS.

Tweet of the Fortnight

Cynical Sydneysiders are awesome

Things I’ve been Reading/Watching/Listening etc

Other than my revision?

A Fact Check  on how much Tony Abbott says households will save if the Carbon Tax is repealed – ABC FactCheck

A look at what different cultures consider beautiful – estherhonig.com

Graham Creed talked to a Year 3 class at the British International School in Shanghai about climate – ABC Backstory