Saturday 20th of April 2024

the launch went very well...

launch

arrogant and full of it...

 

 

 

 

Malcolm Turnbull's attack on independents 'remarkably arrogant', say senators

Prime minister described as disrespectful after saying voting for independents is ‘a roll of the dice’ at campaign launch



Gabrielle Chan


 

 

 

Independents have hit back at Malcolm Turnbull’s attack during his campaign speech, describing the prime minister as misleading, arrogant, disrespectful and part of the political elite.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Turnbull described a vote for independents as “a roll of the dice” and specifically urged people not to vote for senators Jacqui Lambie, Nick Xenophon, Glenn Lazarus and the Queensland Senate candidate Pauline Hanson.

The prime minister and the treasurer urged a vote for stability, particularly after the UK decision to leave the European Union.

 

 

 

But polling has showed Lambie could win two Senate spots in Tasmania at the expense of the Liberal tourism minister, Richard Colbeck. Lambie’s running mate is the Devonport mayor, Steve Martin.



read more: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2016/jun/27/malcolm-turnbulls-attack-on-independents-remarkably-arrogant-say-senators


 

 

 

a capitalist system in long term decline...

There are lessons for Australia from the Brexit vote but they have little to do with economic "stability" as Turnbull and the Coalition would have us swallow, writes ​John Passant. 

Malcolm Turnbull is using the British exit vote to spruik stability and, of course, urging us as a consequence to vote for his Liberal rabble.

You know, that unified party of Turnbull and Abbott, seeing eyeball to eyeball on everything, not to mention the inclusive Cory Bernardi waiting in the wings and the other ragtag of wingnuts in the Liberal and National Parties.

The claim to stability is nonsense, of course. The Coalition are no better or worse economic managers of the anarchic capitalist system than the ALP. That anarchy is obvious in the market panic over "Brexit", for example, wiping $3.6 trillion in value overnight. Nothing changed other than investor perceptions, with wild guesses about the future of the global economy driving the actions of the junk jockeys.

When the GFC hit, the Rudd Labor Government launched a Keynesian style program and pumped money into the economy. Australia was one of the few developed countries that did not go into recession and the spending program was a contributor — along with the mining boom and the continued strong growth of the Chinese economy in those days.

The then Turnbull-led Opposition opposed these Rudd Government initiatives. Good managers providing stability, eh?

There are other lessons for Australian capitalism and the Australian working class coming out of the Brexit vote and they are not the ones about stability and good economic managers that Turnbull and his lacklustre lackeys want us to swallow.

Facing an uncertain future after #Brexit, @AlanTheAmazing reckons on Brits staying calm and carrying on. https://t.co/uwQpFOCylB

— IndependentAustralia (@independentaus) June 25, 2016


It looks as if many workers voted to leave the EU as a protest against neoliberalism and their exclusion form prosperity. Of course, some of this was couched in terms of xenophobia and racism but British workers have been force-fed that diet for decades. So it should not surprise us when some of those workers misidentify the real enemy, or follow the parties that openly express that cruder expression of xenophobia and racism such as Nigel Farage and UKIP.

The real enemy? The problems British workers face are much the same as those Australian workers face — unemployment, wage cuts, falling living standards, inadequate public transport, underfunded health and education systems, to name a few. It is not migrants or refugees or their children who caused these problems.

It is the logical expression of a capitalist system in long term decline.

The fact that some British workers have voted to leave Europe will not stop the bosses’ and politicians’ attacks on their wages, jobs and social spending on them.

It is the same in Australia. Refugees and asylum seekers are the target for the bosses and both Labor and the Coalition, yet they do not have a deleterious impact on wages, jobs or spending on health and education. The employers and the politicians do but have distracted us with propaganda and lies about protecting our borders. It resonates with many workers, especially when Labor here is but an echo of the Coalition on asylum seekers.

In the UK, the rise of socialist Jeremy Corbyn to the leadership of the Labour Party has offered hope to the millions of disaffected workers looking for a political solution to their real problems and issues. It was, in my view, a mistake for Corbyn and Labour to campaign for "Remain", especially alongside Cameron. Here was an opportunity for someone with real respect among workers to make a left wing case for exit as part of a wider campaign against austerity, precarious jobs, unemployment and attacks on living standards.

PM Turnbull says #Brexit vote is a reason to keep Coalition in Govt... a move labelled cynical by Labor #TheDrumhttps://t.co/StO2ESC0dQ

— ABC The Drum (@ABCthedrum) June 24, 2016
That task will now be harder as the forces of reaction celebrate "their" victory and prove themselves, in power or close to it, to be just as savage in their attacks on workers as the Cameron faction of the Tories. The task for Corbyn and the rest of the left in the UK now, appears to me, to be to unite to fight racism and xenophobia and the ongoing attacks on wages, jobs and living standards.

In Australia, we have a very faint shadow of Corbyn, with Shorten Labor in the election campaign emphasising some class differences with the Coalition, in the run up to the election. Medicare is one. Schools are another. University de-regulation is a third. Minor tax changes are another point of difference.

Shorten Labor will not go "the whole Corbyn" or even Sanders. The degeneration of the ALP is so far gone that radical solutions like taxing the rich, nationalising Arrium in Whyalla and Queensland Nickel in Townsville, turning the soon to close car plants into factories producing buses, trains and solar and wind farms and making universities free, are not on their agenda. The ALP bows down before profit and cut their Budget sails and tax and other policies accordingly.

This tentative shift to talking about "us and them" sotto voce has put Labor very much in the hunt for government. Poll after poll is showing Labor and the Coalition fifty-fifty or thereabouts on a two party preferred basis.

Yet most pollsters and commentators, with one or two exceptions, tell us the Turnbull Government will win the election with a reduced but workable majority. These are the same sort of people as their brothers and sisters in the UK, divorced from the world that working class people live in — the sort of people who were telling us that Remain would win narrowly.

Shorten should play to Labor's strengths instead of passively responding to economic probes, says Warwick Elsche https://t.co/2XwuBLlpVK

— IndependentAustralia (@independentaus) June 15, 2016
You can draw your own conclusions about whether the pollsters and commentators here in Australia are as divorced from the world you and I and all the other millions of workers live in, as their equivalents in the UK are. Yet it may be that this misplaced total confidence among pollsters and commentators about the election result, might be influencing uninterested workers. The gambling market is a good indicator of this. The ALP odds are $6 for a $1 bet. I reckon that is a massive over in a two horse race, where the polls show it is neck and neck, nationally. It does not appear rational but then again, markets are never rational.

Instead of pussyfooting around, Shorten could win this election by "doing a Corbyn" and moving much further to the left with policies to tax the rich, saving jobs by nationalising those big companies shutting up shop or sacking staff, lifting all restrictions on the right to strike, outlining a vision for moving Australia to a totally renewable energy society by 2025 and restoring all of the $57 billion Abbott and Turnbull cut from the health budget. 

Working class anger in the UK found expression in a "Leave" vote. Working class disengagement and anger in Australia is finding an expression in the large number of non-enrolled voters and the shift to other parties away from Labor and to some extent to the Greens and the minor parties and independents. Because there is no significant working class program from Labor, some of that leakage away is finding expression in racist and reactionary groups and fake centrists like Xenophon.

Palmer United was a false prophet. The Australian Democrats were false prophets. Pauline Hanson is a false prophet.  Labor could win these disaffected workers back with a left wing program instead of an essentially neoliberal one.

If Labor lose this election it won’t be because they were too left wing. It will be because they weren’t left wing enough.

John Passant is a former assistant commissioner of the Australian Tax Office. Read more by John on his website en Passant. You can also follow him on Twitter @JohnPassant.

“Most polls have #ausvotes tied or Labor just ahead, but ReachTEL gives the L/NP a 52—48 lead” — Adrian Beaumont https://t.co/WMfrYlseUA

— The Conversation (@ConversationEDU) June 20, 2016

unmentionable turdball policies

 

We’ve heard a lot about jobs and growth and Medicare and education in this election campaign – the things the major parties want to talk about. But there is also a long list of policies about which we’ve heard very little, mainly because they don’t exist.

In a range of important policy areas, both the Coalition and the Labor party have declined to tell voters their intentions, effectively putting pre-election policy development in the too-hard basket. In a few really important areas – such as the long-term funding of public hospitals – there is a tacit bipartisan commitment to figure it all out later.

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2016/jun/28/plenty-of-noise-about-jobs-and-growth-and-medicare-but-deathly-silence-on-so-much-else

 

 

Credit to Bill Shorten for big, bold policy platform

 

 

During this campaign Labor released costings laudably early. Its budget repair plan would reduce deficits more slowly than the Coalition's at first, allowing the Coalition to scare voters by saying Labor adds $16.5 billion to deficits in the next four years. But Labor has had the courage to tackle structural problems, such as capital gains tax and negative gearing.

The Herald also believes many of Mr Shorten's policy offerings are superior to Mr Turnbull's.

Labor's more future-proofed National Broadband Network fits well with jobs of the future and productivity increases. Labor has a more green-friendly climate plan, although we believe the Coalition will soon adopt a price-based mechanism for emissions reductions. Labor's housing affordability policy is superior and we support its call for a banking royal commission.

On social issues, we worry about political extremes in the Coalition. Labor is more progressive and closer to Mr Turnbull's instinct.

We see defence, infrastructure and childcare plans as roughly equal. There is little difference on border protection save for Mr Turnbull's support for temporary protection visas and the likelihood that Labor would focus on third-country resettlement deals and stronger safeguards for detainee safety.

On schools, Labor is cleary superior with its pledge on the Gonski needs-based funding model. Labor's technical training initiatives and focus on maths-science teaching are worthy, too.

Labor has very positive policies for health. With such a clear advantage, it is particularly disappointing Mr Shorten has tried to make this election a referendum on Medicare privatisation.


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/smh-editorial/credit-to-bill-shorten-for-big-bold-policy-platform-20160626-gpshw4.html#ixzz4CotgoGMS
Follow us: @smh on Twitter | sydneymorningherald on Facebook


The privatisation of Medicare is on the Libs (CONservatives) agenda. If not the "privatisation, the DESTRUCTION thereof. This is not new and Turnbull can scream all he likes that he is not going to privatise medicare, his mates will. He will do a Tony Abbott in April 2005: Get rich quick; mug the sick!


handdy


 

 

tax cut for the overseas...

Coalition’s company tax cuts: more than 40% of benefit flows overseas, report finds

UTS report reveals $2.18bn a year of government’s $48bn tax cut will flow offshore to shareholders of multinational corporations and foreign tax authorities

read more: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2016/jun/28/coalitions-company-tax-cuts-more-than-40-of-benefit-flows-overseas-report-finds

pontius pilatus malcolmus shitus washes his hands...

 

Turnbull suggests Australia is not responsible for asylum seekers held offshore

‘Those centres are managed by the respective governments, PNG and Nauru – that’s a fact,’ PM tells Four Corners


Lenore Taylor Political editor
Malcolm Turnbull has suggested his government does not bear responsibility for the 2,000 asylum seekers held in Australian-funded detention centres on Manus Island and Nauru but was seeking to resettle them as quickly as possible.

The prime minister said he had been “horrified” when two asylum seekers on Nauru self-immolated in May. “You’d have to have a heart of stone not to be moved by that,” he said in an interview on the ABC’s Four Corners program.

But he said he “disputed” whether the “terrible abandonment of hope” that would lead someone to take such a step was the responsibility of his government.

The worst I've seen – trauma expert lifts lid on 'atrocity' of Australia's detention regime

Asked whether the camps were the Australian government’s responsibility, he said: “You have to remember that those places are … those centres are managed by the respective governments, PNG and Nauru. That’s a fact.”

read more: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2016/jun/28/turnbull-suggests-australia-is-not-responsible-for-asylum-seekers-held-offshore

 

MALCOLM! This takes the cake of irresponsibility and hypocrisy... You IDIOT! Is not Australia paying the bill?

 

macolm sits on the fence of a conscience vote...

 

Election live: PM plays down concerns on same-sex marriage plebiscite as Senator pledges to abstain

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has moved to calm concerns over the proposed same-sex marriage plebiscite as a Coalition senator says he will abstain from a vote if the public support gay marriage.

ACT Liberal Senator Zed Seselja has indicated he would sit out of a parliamentary vote on same-sex marriage if a plebiscite carries the measure...

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-06-28/election-live-blog-june-28/7548400