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.
Oi! …. forcing a sitting conservative (?) Prime Minister out of his job is fair cop. But even suggesting a Labor union leader (?) should be forced out of his party is a biff too far.
If only this Nation had an agile innovative government like Norway. Oh wait that was the last con. the PM wants us all to be Livin on a prayer and hold onto to what you got.
https://tinyurl.com/ydadvhkp
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lDK9QqIzhwk
Fair go Dismayed. All very well for the descendants of Vikings, we are largely forelock tugging Anglo stock. We are subservient to colonial masters out of habit, it is an honour and a privilege to get taken to the cleaners by those born to rule. The Norwegians will never understand the beauty in that.
Blessed be the meek! For they shall inherit the earth. Well six feet of it anyway, suckers.
Taxpayers are reported to have footed more than $6000 for Barnaby Joyce and his partner Vikki Campion to attend a forum supporting live sheep exports in Western Australia-GULP!. Can somebody please find out for me if his Mistress is still on full paid sick leave for ‘stress’ as well as maternity leave? For that matter has she EVER worked? I am sure this will enhance Joyce’s electoral chances !
Last I checked the Fibs said they would ban live sheep exports for at least three northern hemisphere summer months.
I couldn’t care less about Joyce gaming the system, they all do it in plain sight, but if those sheep are again subjected to the same filth, distress & deaths we all felt sick over, then politicians like Joyce & Littleproud prove what inhuman monsters they really are.
https://www.2gb.com/live-sheep-trade-to-the-middle-east-put-on-three-month-ban/
If climate change was real we would have seen some big changes by now but there hasn’t been any.
Thanks Scoot.
https://skepticalscience.com/evidence-for-global-warming.htm
Give ’em heaps.
Scooter, Scooter, Scooter. Surely you mean ‘haven’t’?
Glad you agree with me Not Finished Yet we are two of a kind
Nice work, Scooter. As if bushfires, storms, tornadoes, droughts, floods etc, etc are man made inventions. But we treat the vulnerable and silly types as equals on here.
Dumb and dumber
We also treat as equals here our deliberately obtuse AGW deniers because even the wayward and illogical types, well, they too have their story Scooter. 🤐
correct
Dumb, dumb and really dumb.
Corelogic today released a report which states house prices have suffered their biggest drop since the GFC. Labors negative gearing and capital gains tax policies will exacerbate this to a large degree. The Coalition have some fertile ground to till here.
Add; Boats, Franking credits, RET and surplus and the win will be nowhere near as large as predicted. Once the boats start again they have one term.
Try and get some sleep then. It’s only one term Buttercup.
Yes all you cons have is more dishonest divisive fear campaigns. Nothing to offer the Nations in leadership or uniting the country. No Surprises fair dinkum. Hold on to what you got.
Whilst I agree with the overall sentiment of your comments Razor, but there’s still some time to throw the towel in mate.
And the young homebuyers who are trying to get into the market?
They will never live long enough to pay them off.
Keep going with the Global warming we’ll be dead in 10yrs alarmism JB. People like Gore and yourself only help those of us who believe this is more about western elites pedalling guilt than any real urgency. It’s fashionable at the moment I grant you that but every dire date your mob, including the IPCC, has predicted catastrophe has passed without problem. Every time the IPCC release a report they tell us their modelling was wrong and has had to be wound back! Gore tells us about ‘torquing up’ some of the report. Scientists at the University of East Anglia caught out fudging the figures. China saying one thing and building coal fired power stations like they’re going out of fashion! The manufacture of the components for renewables mainly done in China. Manufacturing jobs no longer available in Australia. Homogenised temperature data. Relying on the observations made on dodgy scientific instruments 200 years ago. The climate is changing. It always has. Are we adding to it? Possibly . Is it at the amount your mob bullshit on about? I doubt it. The phrase natural variability rarely gets a mention. Why? Because big green, across the world, relies on billions of dollars in government handouts to keep the machine rolling. I think it incredibly laughable a confirmed leftist / anarchist is part of a group of people who is being manipulated by big corporates.
How many shadows and conspiracy theories can you fit into one comment. It seems 2 drinks is definitely your limit by 6.28pm. Delusional stuff.
well fxxx them i got mine
Bullshit comment TV. It’s always hard to get in. Was in my day. 17% interest rates. We bought a 2 bedroom fibro in Goodna. It’s about starting at the bottom or wanting to start at the top.
I dont know how hard it was for you to “get in” in 1936 Razor, but things have got much tougher recently.
https://www.businessinsider.com.au/chart-australian-wages-house-prices-2018-3
Disagree. House prices were and still are high across the board.
They vote.
Jobs for young Australians! How good is this!
https://www.couriermail.com.au/business/qld-coal-mine-to-hire-350-workers/news-story/56bb87d984b6548fc9bd11df3fc199c1
10,000 people working in Renewables in QLD today and growing.
So where are the ongoing decades long jobs in renewables? You never address this aspect. You just cherry pick. Ongoing employment is important to provincial Qld not construction jobs.
“A stouch is brewing”
https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/am/adani-points-blame-at-qld-govt-as-major-mine-delayed-again/10680842
Let’s see if Adani breaks the law & the Qld government allows them to.
As for bankrupting an outspoken truthful Indigenous activist, well, Adani’s dodgy business operations are now on full display.
A stoush, ouch!
Bella,
You need to read more widely. The local indigenous people voted 294 to 1 in favour of the mine. Adrian is the one. The anti Adani mob backed him. Now their backing away. Who took advantage of Adrian? I know you won’t reply to this Bella but at least think about it.
Rubbish. The busloads of indigenous Adani bussed in changed their minds and voted against the mine.
Actually no! The final vote is as I quoted. You’re incident happened before the final vote. Read the addition to your Westy piece!
What do you mean I won’t reply?
Tell me who lied about traditional owner voting. Adani are frauds.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-12-02/adani-accused-of-paying-people-to-stack-meeting-on-deal/9218246
I’m disgusted by the tactics this dodgy company will stoop down to but then they’ve had form since the beginning.
You know it & i know it. You just need to read something other than the Oz mate.
It will be interesting to see where this all lands up, Bella.
Bob Brown reckons it will be a bigger stoush than the Franklin.
And they’ll be producing clean coal, so they shouldn’t be blacklisted. Aussie heroes that’s for sure.
Clean coal? You mean they are not going to burn it? Er, what do you mean by “clean coal” Carl?
Without going into a bizarre strangulation of logic if poss.
POTUS Trump showed excellent judgment in not giving the “Salt Lake Kid”, aka Mitt Romney ANY position in his Administration despite Mitt previously begging for a “gig”.
Mitt, just sworn in as a Senator, has come out sledging Donald so he will remain in the political wilderness for a long time yet imho.
A Snake is a Snake is a Snake.
Aw Milton. Werent that Mitt your favourite boy back one time? You must be so disappointed.
“A Snake is a Snake is a Snake”
Finally, you’ve nailed it on Trump. Good for you Henry!
https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/28557-Storeria-occipitomaculata
Happy New Year to all, and congrats to Bancroft, Smith and their advisers, the have pulled off the impossible, they have made Dave from the suburbs the most sympathetic character in the whole soap opera.
I know some will criticise the advisers for simply borrowing the idea of the worlds most embarrassing sporting interview, thanks Tiger, but just think of the pressure they were under, they probably knew keeping quiet, playing a bit of cricket and basically doing nothing was the best plan, but how can you charge a fee unless you suggest the client does something?
Yes, mate. Adam ‘An older boy made me do it’ Bancroft and Steve ‘I was only in charge at the time’ Smith have put their heads together much as they did with the press conference in South Africa. I didn’t think the ball tampering incident was so bad to warrant a nine or 12 month ban but lying in the press conference ratcheted the misdemeanour up to a felony. Dave from the Suburbs might have handed the lad the sandpaper but he has handled himself extremely well since. I saw Ch.7 referred to Dave as ‘controversial cricketer Dave Warner’ when the birth of his third child was announced. Controversial? Really? We have the lost the ability to forgive in this country and that is far worse than scratching away at a cherry with the no.4 emery paper.
it should have been a two Test ban, but that’s all too late now.
it was never a hanging offence, as it wasn’t for Athers, Dravid, Faf, etc, etc, and the three miscreants should be picked again if they are good enough, but two of them might want to fire their agents and start again.
I think Gideon Haigh made some good points re selection.
If one compares the loss of income that Davy has foregone because of the incident as a fine, it runs into the millions.
Now compare the sandpaper incident with all the rorts, banking rip offs, political cronyism, dodgy high rise developments, tax evasion, corruption etc – all of which we know goes on but is left unpunished.
But there again, Turnbull’s input to this was ““After all, our cricketers are role models and cricket is synonymous with fair play. How can our team be engaged in cheating like this? It beggars belief. ”
Thank goodness pollies are not role models.
The whole episode was a total over reaction.
I am on Warner’s side in all of this – he took his punishment like a man – not like some weepy adolescents who blame everybody but them selves.
JS,
There are no degrees of honesty. They went out of their way to cheat. F..k em. It’s all good until,someone loses an eye. We lost an eye. Australian cricket will be the better for it in years to come.
Agree Razor but the punishment should fit the crime
The boy was a victim. Damn fool handed him what looks like 120 grit, any hardware counter jumper will tell you 80 grit is the minimum if you want that sucker to swing.
40grit+1/2 can of aerogard = boomerang
Mmmmn! Cut a dashing figure with a can of Aerogard stuck down the front of yer undies!
Timely reminder that the poor pay for the rich and it’s about to get worse!
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/blogs/tim-blair/poor-subsidising-the-solarloving-rich/news-story/3884c995eb7344f5f007c2b160866878
I’m with you there Razor. No way the poor who cannot afford solar, batteries etc should have to pay higher electricity prices in order to fund the subsidies.
So you’re saying that the poor have to pay for subsidising solar?
Mate, joe battler has been paying through their noses forever to subsidise dirty coal plus the ongoing expenses associated with coal mine upgrades & ongoing maintenance so what’s your point?
Compare that with cheap solar maintenance & reduced emissions thus a cleaner environment, it’s a no brainer for most Australians.
Please don’t tell me about ‘clean’ coal cos we all know that’s just a two word scamslogan fed to us by corrupt politicians on behalf of their rich owners.
BTW Happy New Year Razor 🐳
I’m not talking about coal Bella. Spare a thought for the elderly on a pension – who go to bed to keep warm in Winter because they cannot afford to switch on a heater at night. Electricity bills are soaring. Even if they had the money to buy a subsidised solar setup they wouldn’t live long enough to recoup the expenditure.
Hysterical rubbish parroted directly from the idiot the pastor PM insisted must be pre-selected even though the locals did not want him. Bella is correct coal has been subsidised and continues to be subsidised through the entire supply chain. Power prices have doubled under your coalition.
The former SA Labor government under Jay Weatherill had Business ready to put panels and batteries onto 50,000 low income homes for nothing up front. the newly elected liberal clown put a stop to business interfering in the market. Yes that is right the Liberals stopped Business from helping those that need it most. The same old misinformation constantly from you razor. Is that from your daily talking points from the cons headquarters? All you cons have is misinformation and outright falsehoods. The rubbish about subsidisation has been debunked many time.
I take it you support Removing the 30% taxpayer funded Private Health Insurance Subsidy that has the poorest taxpayers Subsidising not only the Private Health Insurance Industry but the wealthiest Australians who receive the bulk of the benefits? This Subsidy costs taxpayer over $10 billion per year that could go directly to the Public Health system. All data, research and modelling shows that removing the Private Health Insurance Subsidy would have a Net benefit to taxpayers. You got nothing as usual but divisive misinformation. No Surprises fair dinkum. Hold onto to what you got.
Australia Day looming next Mr. Insider and what a dog’s breakfast this has become. Our Native Australians the Aboriginals call it “Invasion Day” and I can understand that.
Captain Arthur Phillip and the 1st Fleet dropped anchor in Port Jackson on 26th January 1788 however the formal establishment of the Colony of New South Wales did not occur on 26 January as is commonly assumed. It did not occur until 7 February 1788, when the formal proclamation of the colony and of Arthur Phillip’s Governorship were read out.
We are further “confused” as to who actually discovered Australia first. Of course, the easy answer is the Aboriginals.
But which white Man arrived first, was it the Dutch, the Chinese, the French?
The whole day imho needs a full review to make it more inclusive for all Peoples who call Australia Home.
WTF was this continent prior to federation?
A collection of cratonic shields, orogenic belts and sedimentary basins. Still is really.
No one discovered Australia Henry, it was never lost.
Symbolic only Henry – it would have no effect on the conditions that many live under.
Those in the Aboriginal Industry who object to Australia Day will object to any day that celebrates the first settlement of this country.
It is time to dismantle the whole Aboriginal Industry which ensures that about 10c in the $ gets to the people who need it.
A good place to start would be to abolish the Indigenous Affairs Departments in all states and the commonwealth.