The final sitting day in the parliament yesterday provided a timely reminder that Labor has a long and illustrious history of finding itself in golden situations only to totally stuff them up.
Forget the next three years, Bill Shorten and Labor could turn the dumpster fire that is Canberra at present into an inferno that could engulf it and everyone in the general vicinity in less than 12 weeks.
In other, brighter circumstances it might be the kind of efficient service delivery the punters expect from government.
Presuming Shorten and Labor win the next election (and that requires a sizeable leap of faith if not logic after yesterday’s shenanigans), one can only speculate what disasters will come its way in government. My best guess is Shorten will do a Nick Greiner, establish a federal anti-corruption commission only to find multiple members of his cabinet and ultimately himself, ensnared in it, providing an alternative meaning to the term “conviction politicians”.
In what stands as an extraordinary political achievement, Labor managed to disappoint everyone across the political spectrum yesterday — people who vote Labor, people who don’t and people who were thinking of voting Labor but now probably won’t.
It was as if the tactics committee met, handed Shorten a ball-peen hammer and told him to belt himself over the head with it, on the basis that it would feel better when he stopped.
The telecommunications access and assistance bill became law yesterday, passing through the Senate 44 votes to 12, after being waved through the House with bipartisan support.
It is, of course, a bill of the government’s making. It is a disaster, created by legal minds with little or no apparent expertise in technology. The problems with it are numerous but the biggest lies in the fact the law would require technology companies to target a single device or small number of devices, but only in a way that does not introduce a “systemic weakness” that impacts all users.
The techs I have spoken to say this is all but impossible and may lead to tech companies feeling obliged to leave the country rather than run afoul of this putrescent law. One of our most prolific and profitable industry sectors may leave our shores in droves. Well done, everyone. Throw another log on the dumpster fire.
The other major problem with the bill is it is yet another intrusion into the privacy of the citizenry. Predictably the response from the government and the opposition is of the tedious, “if you done nothing wrong, you have nothing to worry about” kind.
Labor’s favourite urger on Twitter, member for Gellibrand, Tim Watts, lectured a clearly unnerved Twitterdom on Tuesday night in an effort to bring some calm. “Wait and see our amendments,” the young MP promised. In the end Labor dropped its amendments altogether and waved the bill through.
It is a dreadful piece of law and by Labor’s own admission will need to be amended early next year, leading to the obvious question, and one that remains unanswered, why wave it through the lower house at all?
Timidity and cowardice
The old maxim that any day when the political debate turns to border security is a bad day for Labor seems to have Bill Shorten and his front bench spooked.
Labor is everywhere and nowhere on this issue. Jelly nailed to a wall.
Timidity and political cowardice are never far away with this mob.
The day started with Prime Minister Morrison facing a humiliating defeat in the parliament, with Labor and the Greens supporting a crossbench bill which would leave the decision on refugee repatriation to Australia entirely in the hands of those with medical expertise. Instead it was Shorten and Labor who were left pink-faced in embarrassment as the bill was filibustered to within an inch of its life in the Senate.
Everything Labor sought to achieve did not happen and everything it did not want to happen came to pass.
News reports today indicating Labor has softened its policy stance on refugee policy lends strength to the prevailing view that Labor is soft on border control while Shorten et al have simultaneously upset Labor voters who were hoping for a more humane policy response.
Faced with the prospect of multiple triumphs in the parliament in the morning session, all Shorten could do was lament the scoreboard at the end of the day. Win-win had become lose-lose.
As the House adjourned for the Christmas break, it was difficult to determine who felt more relieved — Scott Morrison or Bill Shorten. The only good news for both men is the parliament will sit so rarely in the New Year, they may as well call in the caterers and hire out both chambers for weddings, parties, anything. Maybe a funeral or two.
The focus in recent times has naturally been on the Morrison government and its travails. There appears to be no way out for the government, that is until we pause and turn our gaze to Bill Shorten and the Labor opposition.
And when we do, we are drawn to the conclusion that it would be madness to underestimate Labor’s capacity for political self-harm.
This column was first published in The Australian on 7 December 2018.
Bella says:
DECEMBER 14, 2018 AT 11:36 PM
Has Pell been removed from the gold palace in Rome then?
So sick of these scumbags being given a slap on the wrist.
BASSMAN SAYS:-doubt if he will do any time….knows too many pollies.
Francis has wiped him….and to think this bloke was on the list to
be Papa.
He has been found guilty of a crime. A contemptuous crime.
One rule for some but not for others. It stinks mate but so does the catholic church & I always wonder how many of these same sub-humans have not yet been busted.
BASSMAN
On a completely different note (intentional pun!), how many fingers do you have?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KbEJjuJJzhg
Someone has too much time on their hands. But I would like to see an octopus jamming on that.
I told you your octopus would never figure out how to play the bagpipes.
Play it! Just let me figure out how to get the kilt off this hottie and I’m going to roger it senseless.
Have tried all avenues with Vodaphone and NBN today to find out why (as of tomorrow) we have had no internet………sound of crickets🦗
Really nice to receive the bill from Vodaphone for one months “service” in advance
Seriously, what politician in their right mind would use an internet dating site for a bit of slap and tickle on the side?
God, are there any brains at all in that place? (Canberra,I mean)
All of ’em
Alas not a brain in sight. I’ve seen smarter sheep.
Well Bassy it would appear your ‘NO CONVICTIONS’ mantra has come to an end…………
https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/crime-and-justice/exunion-boss-david-arthur-hanna-awaits-verdict-on-document-destruction-charge/news-story/1f60142965971b4684aac21c62c6fb79
Worth 60 million?
Every cent if it means they have to watch their backs and do the right thing. Just like the banking RC.
Great numbers announced by Frydenburg today! Six years ago Chris Bowen set the government some targets and they have achieved every one of them inspire of the mess and mining downturn they inherited.
Labor will win but it won’t be as big as they think;
Franking Credits
Negative Gearing
Boats
RET
Our Surplus
The above should be the mantra!
Debt has more than doubled. Is that what you are celebrating? I see you are promoting a coalition campaign based entirely on dishonest misinformation campaigns. that is all you cons have lies and divisive misinformation. No surprises fair dinkum Hypocrites.
I think parading that far toad Rudd ( has he put on weight) in front of the conference and hence national TV is worth a 5% swing against Labor.
He lambasts Murdoch while thinking nothing of spending $1 billion a year of taxpayers money on Labor’s mouth piece – the ABC.
Talk about a hypocritical, sleazy, double talking little creep – and I am not talking about Murdoch.
The joke is Rudd forgets Chris Mitchell, whilst editor of the OZ, unashamedly endorsed him in 2010 against Howard, but lets not let the facts get in the way of a good old anti Newscorp rant.
Over the years I have known and socialised with numerous Newscorp editors and reporters, both current and ex and they have all said at no stage were they ever asked to tell a story in a certain way or spike a story. A couple in particular had every reason to dislike the company but all agreed they had journalistic freedom.
Dont thinks so. Howard was long gone by 2010. see selective comprehension.
Obviously U dnt listen to Radio National…Swan and other Labor pollies have been given hell
by Fran’s replacement (who is much better I might add). No, the soft gifts the Liberals get on 2 GBiased and in the Oz, The Hun and The Terror where they can do no wronng is total bias.
I listen to RN every day on the way to work.
Er don’t get too excited Raze:-Josh Fraudenberg says:-“The Mid-Year Economic & Fiscal Outlook confirms the Budget will return to surplus in 2019-20 & the economy is growing”.
He has forgotten to tell you that what his MYEFO figures REALLY show is:- growth down, investment down, wages growth down, FDP growth down and consumption growth down. The only thing that is up is terms of trade which is a sign of the strength of the global economy…..not Australia’s!
Fraudenberg’s excitement is built all around the iron ore price and a high tax take of $100billion. There will be no budget surplus in 2019-20 if the iron ore price drops just $5 a tonne lower than it is now.
Only one quarter Bassy.
Facts always undo the dishonest cons.. Oh and another $130 million cut from research. No such thing as a clever con. No Surprises. Fair dinkum
https://theconversation.com/more-mirage-than-good-management-myefo-fails-to-hit-its-own-targets-108830
Whilst NZ brings in FREE Uni the Liberals here CUT it!
It was the Hawke/Keating govt who re-introduced fees Bassman.
Well Howard and Fraser left them a debt of 10% of GDP to find son!
The delightful Sharri Markson doing well on Sky, Mr. Insider, with her Show at 7 pm called “Sharri” on tonight (Monday)
I am a tad smitten. She is the 34yo daughter of Advertising Guru, Max Markson.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_X0g2d5iIdw&t=75s
Sharri is having a Baby this Friday so will be on leave for a few weeks roll on 2019.
It’s interesting, Jack.
Top page says 375 comments. But if you go back to older comments it changes to 407 – and varies btw the two numbers as one goes back down.
I’m thinking that the total number of comments updates if there has been a Reply on the particular page – that then updates the total. But the top page, and others where there have been no additions, may stay unchanged?
So moral of the story is – if you go in and think there have been no comments added – go back a page and you’ll find new comments or replies to comments.
There must be some big update you do periodically that then updates the whole thing?
Not really, no and the comment count discrepancy remains a mystery.
no mystery at all
I feel it is most elementary. Dutton wrote the code so the app cant fkn count… simples
more strife to come. Macron is toast Le Pen to benefit
https://www.politico.eu/article/why-are-france-yellow-jackets-so-angry-fuel-tax-emmanuel-macron/
The yellowjacket protests are confusing to say the least, and people in the thick of it that I’ve spoken to are none the wiser. Every political group from the far left to the far right is claiming them as their own. Some want to end immigration, others want to end capitalism, some want cheap petrol, others want wealth taxes. Everyone seems to be protesting whatever they’re pissed off about, all they seem to have it common are the jackets.
One lesson seems to be that if you want to get what you want by protesting, you better smash plenty of shop windows and bus stops.
No. They started on the theme of the fuel tax. Why do you think that was the first thing he folded on? Don’t conflate facts with how you would like things to seem. May work well in summing up but the judge will send the jury out and give you a smack
Macron folded on fuel tax _and_ minimum wage. Doesn’t fit the Left narrative nor the Right, as much as you might want it to. This is not a simple situation where you can metaphorically beat up the facts, plant drugs on them, and charge them with possession and assault police, like in the old days.
Well as a new lawyer you actually wouldn’t know what the old days were. You can only stand off the shoulder of some drunken barrister and pretend you were there. But keep chipping away that pay rise and 60K are just around the corner.
Was it worth it at your age? I suspect not.
“The old days”, especially as practised up around your way, were obvious to any casual observer, and are now a matter of public record. And on that, funny you should pick the figure of $60K — apparently that was the Qld Police’s average monthly share of protection money back in the heyday of “the Joke”.
TJF, as they say. I can thoroughly recommend a career change, at any age.
Great to see the NDIS is looking after the people it should. NOT!
…….and NEVER forget the Liberals took millions away from the RC into kiddy fiddling and used it to fund the banks RCommission. A real Sir Galahad is Show Mo.
Mr Henry Blofeld Esq.
Dear Henry, please find attached footage of a “glitch” moment when the astronauts were planting Old Glory on the moon.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIR9SdlIbDE
Kind regards, yours in wide eyed acceptance.
LOL, Mr. Baptiste, you wag you. Cheers