Thursday 2nd of May 2024

dirty grass roots of the liberal (CONservative) party......

Disinformation group Advance Australia has been pouring advertising money into supporting the Liberals in the Dunkley by-election. Its funding includes over $1 million from a company whose ownership structure may be illegal. Anthony Klan reports.

Despite their claim to be a ‘grassroots’ movement of ‘ordinary Australians’, Advance Australia is bankrolled by a handful of wealthy families and individuals. According to the annual disclosure by the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) on 1 February 2024, the largest donation to Advance Australia was $1.025M, but the AEC does not know the legal source of those payments.

The payment was also the second biggest individual political donation in Australia in the financial year.

After being alerted to it by this writer, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has confirmed that they are now investigating the ownership structure of the company behind the $1.025M donation, Hadley Holdings Pty Ltd.

The use of a complex and highly unusual company ownership structure, which also repeatedly exploits a notorious Australian regulatory black hole, means it is impossible to verify the true source, or sources, of the money. Further, the ownership structure appears to be illegal — the company at the top of the “ownership” chain claims that it “owns” itself.

The revelations come as the Advance, which has repeatedly been caught spreading disinformation and is a “false flag” operation run by fossil fuels and other vested interests, is aggressively targeting the Melbourne electorate of Dunkley ahead of Saturday’s Federal by-election.

It also comes as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese this week in Federal Parliament pointed to the “billionaires” behind Advance as to why donation law reform was needed — although he has announced zero changes since being elected almost two years ago.

The secretive Advance ran an aggressive campaign of disinformation ahead of the October 14 Indigenous Voice to Parliament referendum, which it is now replicating in a bid to prevent the election of ALP candidate Jodie Belyea.

Dunkley, currently held by the ALP on a margin of 6.3 per cent, became vacant after the ALP MP Peta Murphy died of breast cancer in December.

Hadley Holdings Pty Ltd

Hadley Holdings Pty Ltd is connected to a relatively unknown 95-year-old Perth businessman called Brian Anderson, who has been widely reported as the source of the two donations totalling $1.025M.

A wealthy former car salesman and mining investor whose fortune was bolstered selling engineering products in the resources haven of Western Australia, Anderson has publicly stated he is the source of the money or at least some of the money.

Yet Anderson’s statements raise more questions — and the retired businessman has repeatedly refused to comment when contacted by us.

In a February 2 article, the AFR reported that Anderson had been “struck by No campaigners Jacinta Nampijinpa Price and Nyunggai Warren Mundine” and “wanted to do what he could to support them.”

“My motives were because I thought the argument for the No case was correct, that [the Yes case is] divisive, and I wanted to support two of the Indigenous proponents, Jacinta Price and Warren Mundine,” Anderson is reported as saying.

Yet the payments were made in November 2022, which was not only almost a year before the referendum,

months before either Price or Mundine joined Advance’s “No” campaign against the Voice.

The two directors of Hadley Holdings Pty Ltd are Anderson and Perth accountant and tax agent Lena Hilton, 77, who owns accounting firm Hilton Partners.

Hilton has repeatedly refused to respond when approached by The Klaxon.

The Hadley Holdings AEC donor disclosure form was filed and signed two months ago on December 20 by Siva Paramalingam, who is also an accountant and tax agent at Hilton Partners.

He also refused to respond when approached for comment.

The ‘address’ for Hadley Holdings Pty Ltd stated on the AEC form is PO Box 1236, West Perth

Investigations show that while the directors of Hadley Holdings are Anderson and Hilton, the true ultimate owner, or owners, of the entity is hidden, even from authorities.

Opaque company structure

First, the $1.025m payments have been declared as made in two payments by a shell company, Hadley Holdings, which is 100% “owned” by another shell company, Anderson Nominees Pty Limited, which is 100% “owned” by another shell company, Yardia Pty Ltd.

Second, the “beneficial” owners, as in the actual owners of each of the three companies, are hidden.

Finally, the company at the top of the structure, Yardia Pty Ltd, claims it is 100 per cent owned by Yardia Pty Ltd.

Put another way, the biggest donor to Advance is a shell company owned by another shell company, which is owned by a third shell company; the “beneficial” (actual) owner of all three companies is hidden; all the directors of the three companies are refusing to talk; and, the company at the top of the structure claims it owns itself.

At the heart of Australia’s financial system is a black hole that allows the true owner, or owners, of any registered entity to remain entirely hidden. And it’s perfectly legal.

In what has drawn international condemnation from groups such as Transparency International, Australia has no register of “beneficial owners”.

That means the true ownership of any company can be hidden by naming a legal owner, who is different to the actual owner or owners.

That proxy owner has no rights to the company or its assets and must only act in accordance with the instructions of the actual owner/s.

ASIC investigates

We alerted ASIC on February 3 and asked how it could be legal,  or even possible, for a company to be the stated owner of itself. On February 7, ASIC said it was looking into the matter further.

“I need to clarify a few things but it would appear a company, can, in some very limited circumstances, own shares in itself as outlined in [Corporations Act] section 259a & 259b,” an ASIC spokeswoman responded.

“However, those acquired under 259a must be cancelled immediately after the transfer, and ASIC notified…and those acquired under 259b have 12 months to cease the shares.”

When we asked in response, repeatedly, whether Yardia Pty Ltd fell outside those laws, ASIC did not respond.

Investigations show that even if Yardia Pty Ltd meets other “very limited circumstances”, it fails to meet either Section 259a (that such a structure is replaced “immediately”) or Section 259b (that it is removed after 12 months) of the Corporations Act.

The legislation states: “If, at the end of the 12 months (or extended period), the company still holds any of the shares (or units of shares), the company commits an offence for each day while that situation continues”.

Yardia Pty Ltd became the owner of Yardia Pty Ltd on 30 June 2021 — more than two-and-a-half years ago.

Twelve months from then was 30 June 2022, more than 600 days ago.

ASIC filings show Yardia Pty Ltd has four shares, each with a stated value of $1, and on 30 June 2021 those four shares were all transferred to Yardia Pty Ltd itself. (The ASIC form detailing the “ownership” change was filed by Hilton).

We have now been made aware the matter has been substantially escalated, with investigations now in the hands of specialist teams within ASIC.

Anderson, who turned 95 earlier this month, lives in a multi-million-dollar waterfront home in the exclusive inner Perth suburb of Dalkeith. It is possible that he is the (hidden) “beneficial owner” of all three companies. It is also possible Anderson is the only “beneficial owner” of all three companies.

But the central issue, and point of serious concern for Australian democracy more broadly, is that there is no way of knowing.

AEC disclosure limitations

On February 2, we asked the AEC whether it knew the “identity/identities of the beneficial (and so actual) owner of Hadley Holdings Pty Ltd” and, if so, who that was.

“We administer the Commonwealth funding and disclosure scheme detailed in the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918, this includes publishing disclosure data that is provided to us,” a spokeswoman responded. “These questions are outside of our remit as the AEC.”

The AEC doesn’t know the legal source of the payments.

Advance activities

Advance claims to be a “grassroots” movement of “ordinary Australians”, and uses the imagery of exhausted-looking blue-collar workers and campaigns against the “elite” and the “inner-city woke.”

“More of us are worried about what woke politicians and inner-city elites are doing to our country,” it declared ahead of the Voice referendum.

In fact, as previously reported, it is bankrolled by a handful of the mega-wealthy – the super-elite.

Of the Advance’s ten disclosed donor entities in 2021-22, all have fortunes in the tens of millions of dollars, and at least seven have estimated fortunes of $100m or more, including billionaire Sam Kennard, owner of Kennards Self Storage.

Most are so wealthy they appear in published media “rich lists” naming Australia’s wealthiest people.

Advance claims to be non-politically aligned, despite aggressively campaigning against the ALP in favour of the Coalition.

The outfit has heavily exploited Australia’s lack of truth in political advertising laws. Ahead of the 2022 federal election, Advance was caught lying by falsely claiming independent candidates David Pocock, now a federal senator, and Zali Steggall, now a federal MP, were actually Greens candidates in disguise.

https://michaelwest.com.au/advance-australia-secrecy-disinformation-dunckley/

 

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dirty strategy.,...

The byelection is a major test of Peter Dutton’s outer suburban seat strategy, which (despite his claims to the contrary) eschews challenging for the teal seats lost at the last election in favour of winning over the bigger cohort of voters who populate Australia’s sprawling capital cities.

 

The argument is that if the Liberal Party can’t win Dunkley, then where in Victoria can it win?

For Anthony Albanese, Dunkley is also a major test: Was his decision to break a key promise and refashion the stage 3 tax cuts so that more money flows to low and middle-income earners a wise one, or will it backfire?

Both leaders made lightning visits to the seat on Friday, jostling for underdog status on a final frantic day of campaigning that saw former prime minister Julia Gillard throw her support behind Belyea as a “strong local voice”. Psephologists and political strategists will pore over the poll result for months to come.

Labor has zeroed in on Dutton as a key weakness, with attack ads plastered across the electorate reminding people that a vote for Conroy represents a vote for the federal opposition leader. Likewise, the Liberal campaign has homed in on Albanese, with claims he has done nothing to address cost-of-living challenges.

But for Labor, the poll comes at a tricky time. Byelections present voters with a different choice than general elections. They are not so much about changing the direction of the country, but rather present voters with a choice between supporting the status quo or sending the government a message.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/will-dunkley-give-albanese-a-birthday-gift-or-back-dutton-s-suburb-strategy-20240301-p5f910.html

 

NO MENTION OF THE LIBERALS (CONSERVATIVES) DIRTY TRICKS IN THIS ARTICLE ABOUT THE BY-ELECTION.....

 

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a aussie spy.....

SEE: https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/22204

The mass media got itself into a flap this week (28, 29 Feb & 1 March) over ASIO Director, Mike Burgess’ claim that a former Australian politician “sold out their country, party and former colleagues” after being recruited by spies of a foreign regime.

 

Foreign agents have infiltrated our most secret government establishments    By Paul Malone

 

“Name the traitor,” former Treasurer and former Ambassador to the US, Joe Hockey, thundered. And discussion over this call became the major media talking point over the following days. The Herald SunThe Australian and The Age all carried denials from former Labor senator Sam Dastyari and former NSW Labor politician Ernest Wong, who both said Burgess was not referring to them.

Crikey political editor, Bernard Keane tried to recall relevant cases and also came up with the usual fare:

“Who can forget Labor’s Sam Dastyari and his relations with billionaire Huang Xiangmo and other China-linked donors? he asked.

But he then added NSW Upper House Labor member, Shaoquett Moselmane, who has never been convicted of any crime, but is regularly pilloried for openly expressing his opinions on China and the Middle East.

If Moselmane’s case is to be mentioned, it must surely be raised as a prime example of a monumental, public, ASIO blunder. In 2020, with the media alerted, ASIO and the Australian Federal Police raided Moselmane’s home, generating a blaze of publicity and resulting in his suspension from the Labor Party. No charges were ever laid and Moselmane was later reinstated by Labor.

Keane also mentioned former Liberal trade minister, Andrew Robb, for taking a consulting job with Chinese-owned Landbridge straight after leaving Parliament. Keane has a point here. There should be restrictions banning former ministers from cashing in on their government inside knowledge and connections.

But Keane also believes that Robb has no right to challenge claims that China is a threat to Australia, or criticise his former colleagues for damaging Australia’s relations with China. China, according to Keane, must always be presented as the enemy.

Politicians who have links with Israel also cop a serve from Keane.

But in discussing foreign agents of influence, he and other media commentators leave out the elephant in the room: the ubiquitous presence in Australia of American agents of every type and shade.

There were times – you have to go back to the Whitlam and Gorton governments – when those in power thought of themselves firstly as Australian leaders.

But sadly, over the years our governments have taken foreign affairs directions from poorly informed American administrations. Think Vietnam, when Prime Minister Menzies, supported the US invasion and, in his speech committing Australian troops, foolishly argued that the war was part of a downward thrust by Communist China. No mention then of the historic enmity between the two countries.

Or take Prime Minister, John Howard’s willingness to join the “weapons of mass destruction” war on Iraq. What foreign agents misled and manipulated our ministers then?

And it’s not just coalition prime ministers. In 2010 Labor Prime Minister Julia Gillard committed Australian troops to Afghanistan for the rest of the decade telling us that this costly continued engagement would “ensure that the country would not become a safe haven for terrorists.”

Which foreign agents fed Gillard and her advisers those lines? With the Taliban now back in power, the country is as safe for terrorists as it ever was.

And now of course we have AUKUS. This manipulation of Australian politicians – government ministers and back-benchers of both Labor and the coalition – is both costly and misguided. The program is forecast to cost $268bn to $368bn between now and the mid- 2050s. But as the Independent and Peaceful Australia Network (IPAN) points out, rather than make us safer, it is a dangerous development further enmeshing Australia in the US war fighting machine.

The agents who peddle these costly and misguided policies are not targeted by ASIO.

They’re not seen as foreigners. They’re not seen as damaging Australia’s interests, even though the repeated following of their directions costs Australia far more than the damage done by the odd Australian politician talking to Chinese agents.

Australia is now so Americanised that these agents are invisible. American weapons manufacturers fund “Australian” think tanks who spout their propaganda; American government and private institutions sponsor student overseas trips; powerful energy companies promote their self-interest. And then there’s News Corp with its propaganda tentacles sprawling across Australia.

We even invite these foreigners into our most secret government establishments. American military officers have landed high-paying advisory contracts with Australia’s Department of Defence. On top of that, Defence Minister, Richard Marles announced last year that American military analysts would soon be sent to work at the Defence Intelligence Organisation (DIO) in Canberra. “You’ll get an American perspective into the American system seen from Australia. And that is not insignificant,” he said.

That’s what we need!

https://johnmenadue.com/foreign-agents-have-infiltrated-our-most-secret-government-establishments/

 

ACCORDING TO GUS'S RECORDS, ALEXANDER DOWNER IS IT.... BUT I COULD BE WRONG/RIGHT..... JOE HOCKEY COULD HAVE FITTED THE BILL, BUT HE WAS TOO DUMB AS A POLITICIAN.....

 

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labor won....

 

It would be easy to dismiss the Dunkley by-election as a non-event that changes very little in the federal political landscape.

Labor retained a seat it held prior to incumbent Peta Murphy's death and the swing against the government was on par with decades of history in by-elections. 

But while the electoral map might not have changed, the vote in the outer suburban, coastal electorate offers insights into how the next federal election might play out.

Much has been made about the state of the Liberal Party in Victoria. Be it the drubbings it's faced at recent state elections or that the party lost four seats at the last federal election, there's no secret about the issues Victorian Liberals are facing. 

While the National Party held all of its seats in 2022, the Liberals lost two to independents (Goldstein and Kooyong) and two to Labor (Higgins and Chisholm). 

And since then, it's only become worse.

Labor last year pulled off a one-in-100 years feat, winning the outer suburban seat of Aston from the opposition. 

Russell Broadbent's move to the crossbench after failing to win pre-selection last year has the party now holding just six of the state's 39 federal seats. 

Victorian Liberal and frontbencher Dan Tehan, while seeking to put a positive spin on loss on Sunday morning, made no secret of the reality his party faces in his home state if it wants to form government.

"Of course we need to win seats in Victoria," he told the ABC's Insiders program.

The Liberal battle in Victoria is not unlike Labor's challenge in Queensland, where it too needs to find seats if it's to hold onto majority government. Labor holds just five of Queensland's 30 electorates

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-03/dunkley-byelection-key-takeouts-labor-coalition-dutton-albanese/103532500

 

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