Humble servant of the Nation

The NEG lottery winners and losers

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It is said lotteries are a tax on people who are too stupid to understand probability. The chances of winning the $100 million Powerball draw last night were 134 million to one. Yet it seems buying a lottery ticket is a better investment than AMP super.

An AMP executive admitted at Royal Commission hearings in Melbourne yesterday that an investor who ponied up with $100,000 would find his nest egg whittled away eventually to nothing. Adding interest minus commissions and fees, the unlucky punter would have lost almost $500 after three years.

Australia’s largest wealth manager has promised to provide some 12,500 existing investors a share of $5 million in compensation.

Meanwhile two unidentified people who are too stupid to understand probability pocketed a breezy $50 million each.

The Turnbull government was dragged kicking and screaming to announce the Financial Services Royal Commission. In the end it was left to the big banks to give it the green light. In public hearings where bank and finance company executives have been forced to make admissions of chronic malfeasance if not downright criminality, have shown not only that this Royal Commission was necessary, but that it should have happened years ago.

The Great Barrier Reef Foundation experienced the mother of all windfalls when it was handed $443 million by the government. The only difference is the GBRF did not actually buy a ticket in this lottery, nor did it excitedly flip through the back of the paper looking for the numbers.

The foundation’s chair, John Schubert, chairman of the Garvan Medical Research Institute, a former Esso CEO, former chair of the Commonwealth Bank and previously a director of BHP Billiton and Qantas, merely turned up to a meeting in Sydney on 9 April in an office where the only other two attendees, Malcolm Turnbull and Environment and Energy Minister, Josh Frydenberg, cut him a cheque.

At face value, it smacks of a Turnbull captain’s choice. The reasons for the almost half billion-dollar one off largesse, however, are more complicated and go to a $716 million spending commitment the Turnbull government made to UNESCO last year to ensure the Great Barrier Reef retained its World Heritage listing.

In other words, the Turnbull government can say the money or most of it has left its coffers although not a brass razoo has yet been spent on saving the reef and in all probability, the GBRF will have to contract government departments to assist in providing services.

Maybe the government’s best and perhaps only chance of re-election is to give $443 million to everyone who didn’t ask for it.

18 months ago, at Bill Leak’s wake, I had a discussion with two political observers of some note over a beer. I asked them how long they expected the Liberal Party to remain in its current form, structure and with the political muscle it has historically enjoyed. One, who is closer to the Liberal Party than the other, remained silent. The other suggested five to ten years. Two, I told them. And then I told them why.

The Liberal Party today is not the party of Menzies nor even of Howard. It is a party laced with intrinsic ideological conflict combined with toxic personality rivalries. These stresses and strains were going to be sorely tested over the same sex marriage issue but taken to the point of explosion over energy policy.

And here we are.

The amusing thing is voters haven’t got a clue what all the fuss is about.

One of the points of anger is that Turnbull has not sold or even adequately explained what the NEG is and how it will work within his own party room. What is even more bizarre is the people who vote them in or out have been wilfully left ignorant.

Whenever prime ministers and ministers of the crown babble in acronyms, the battle is already lost. One can almost the feel the eyes of a nation glaze over, the aggregated shifting of arse cheeks on couches and the collective reach for the remote.

Acronyms are a politician’s worst enemy, the tool of the lazy and/or uncertain. The punters may not oppose the policy. They simply have no idea what is being proposed. In the case of the NEG, all they will see is an unseemly brawl within the government. They may see resignations of cabinet ministers, they may see the prime minister toppled and replaced by a person they barely know.

They may witness a fully blown schism within the Liberal Party either before the next election or directly in its wake. I can virtually guarantee it.

The internal feud over energy policy is not just another nail in the coffin of the Turnbull government’s re-election prospects. It is a 15-centimetre long, galvanised, zinc-coated roofing nail that will keep the lid firmly shut. There will be no beyond the crypt Karloffian reanimations here.

We could trace the Liberal Party’s decline back many years. Suffice to say, it began in earnest on 14 September 2015 when Turnbull rolled a sitting prime minister. The stated reasons for doing so made no sense then and even less now.

Turnbull has failed to connect with voters, and if you asked any one of them what the Turnbull government is about, what it stands for, and what its agenda is, they could not tell you. That’s not the voter’s fault, by the way. The Turnbull government is bereft of purpose or direction.

The disconnect was reinforced in Turnbull’s awful performance in the 2016 election where Tony Abbott’s enormous majority was hacked back to just one.

Turnbull was outcampaigned by Shorten, routinely outplayed and outsmarted.

The double dissolution election that Turnbull faithfully assured the nation would sort the Senate out once and for all did precisely the reverse, and left the Upper House the sort of rolling freak show that the election of the Bearded Lady or Lobster Boy would only have raised the tone of the joint.

In the recent ‘Super Saturday’ by-elections, we saw Turnbull wagging his finger at voters, more interested in winning arguments than votes.

Bill Shorten already has a copy of the NEG draft legislation while Turnbull’s own partyroom does not. That tells you everything you need to know about where Turnbull’s best chances of survival lie. Labor will be disinclined to throw him a lifeline. Anyone who has witnessed Labor’s conduct over the last 20 years knows it regards the national interest as falling a long way back in second place to its own.

It is in Labor’s interests to stand back and watch the government tear itself apart.

You know, some days Shorten must feel like he’s won the lottery.

This column was first published in The Australian 17 August 2018. 

291 Comments

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    This topic shows 70 comments posted as at 7.43pm 19/8. Seems to be 43 comments “missing”. (34 “older comments” and 3 comments for 19/8) ??

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Gee Carl Wakey wakey, this is a test, the Da Vinci Code of blogging. Look at the numbers man! You could have won a slice of that 100 mill if you ‘d athunk outside of the box.

  • JackSprat says:

    So the latest from Turnbull is that he will set electricity prices blah blah

    In NSW at the moment, these are set by the NSW Government.

    • Bella says:

      This NEG is an even bigger scam than Abbott’s Direct Action or Turncoat’s $444M GBR rescue of the resources sector.
      Jellyback Mal only cares about staying in the top job. He made a huge personal investment in the Fibs government & he’ll fold on everything he believes in to hang on to the pay-off.
      Bring out your fossils, any old fossils…….

  • jack says:

    I had a bit of a look this morning but couldn’t find any sensible explanation of what is in the NEG, all the coverage seems to be of the politics of the thing.

    I suspect that the problem they are trying to fix is that existing energy policy and incentives have had perverse consequences, making new coal fired power an uneconomic investment for one example.

    The difficulty is that a new set of incentives could have further perverse consequences and make the situation worse not better.

    That’s what you get when the government starts to over-intervene in the market.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      All I can tell you is the mix between renewables, gas and coal does not change in any significant way.

    • Dismayed says:

      the NEG was designed by the coalitions hand picked ESB. It is designed to maintain the status quo but ensures a lack of further investment in generation or generation being being built in an effort to force the big three gentailers to invest more in the ageing fossil fuel power stations and extend their life. The NEG will not reduce prices. We are at this point because the coalition have placed their internal denialist bullshit ahead of the National interest as usual. The states have been asking for the full modelling to be released, it has not. why should the states agree to something that defies logic, let alone don’t have all the information in front of them not too mention it is now changing hourly depending on the internal infighting and selfishness of the coalition party room which is as usual being put before the National interest. No surprises,

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        I say Dismayed, as the combustion product from any fossil fuel produces C02, and for a bloke who has apparently made his living out of the fossil fuel industry, your newfound repetitive contemptible scorn for such energy sources is obviously an attempt to assuage your guilt for being an accomplice in jeopardising the future of our planet.

        How about a few mea culpas on here to demonstrate you’re fair dinkum mate.

        • Dismayed says:

          dont defame me carl. I have said since the inception of this blog that Gas is the transition fuel. I said at the time the removal of the working ETS which was reducing Emissions in the cheapest way for the economy and putting over $12 Billion a year into the budget was the worst outcome for the Gas Drilling/Exploration industry in this country and I have been proven correct. I have had solar panels for over a decade and will be increasing panels and installing batteries in the next 2 years. You continue to be unable to remember or choose not remember what was said yesterday in your need for time to turn time backwards to the 50’s be that 1950 or 1850 to continue to run your dishonest agenda. move along cotc your inability to grasp actualities is boring, repetitive and dull. You cons get more hysterical and lash out at all around the closer you get to realising your mob are toxic and have blown it. No Surprises.

  • Tracy says:

    Glad I didn’t buy tickets to the Bled, the ARU has been bombarding me with emails and SMS’s for the past week, not on your life after the last waste of money.
    Watched the cricket instead

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Kohli got a few. Looked like England had made the right decision to put India in at lunch. Now, not so much. Kohli’s tour thus far has not been great leading to his demotion from the No.1 Test batsman ranking. Guess who’s on top now? Steve Smith.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Scrambled NEGS, Mr. Insider looks like that is what Turnbull has served up. Possibly a last throw of the dice for this hopeless PM. Tony Abbott and his band of wreckers are circling. Go hard big Pete Dutton, a Glove Puppet for Abbott says Labor.

  • Dwight says:

    Price caps? Price caps?
    A sure sign of panic, going all the way back to Nixon’s Wage-Price Freeze of 1971. I saw some interviews with some of Nixon’s economic advisers at the time. Everyone in the room including the President knew it wouldn’t work, but Nixon decided he must be seen to be doing something. Price caps almost invariably lead to shortages.

    As the great Yogi Berra said: “It’s déjà vu all over again.”

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    Oh bugger! I thought I was as slick as hot snot on a brass doorknob when I did three of these underwater with a single breath yesterday. Kids these days are amazing.
    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/vako-marchelashvili-solves-six-rubiks-cubes-underwater-in-single-breath-today-2018-08-17/

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Yes Smoke, but that was written over two years ago. What would her take be now? Perhaps a politically adapted text from Genesis 3.19 (King James Version).

      A clue, just for the heathens among us: “ashes to ashes, ……. etc”

  • BASSMAN says:

    Dutts declares his loyalty to Malcolm-now you KNOW it’s the end! The Looters are where they are because of their surge to the right so what do they do? They put up Dutts of the IPA to scare us to death! The hardest right winger in the tent. Dutts will take them even further to the right! In one of Paul Kelly’s rare fits of political honesty a while back, he said if the Looters go to the next election still denying climate change, renewable energy and the emissions target they will get annihilated. Why? Because poll after poll clearly demonstrates the voters embrace these issues with a passion. Every politician should have to sit an IQ test before they enter parliament! If Dutts does challenge it will be to save his seat. He feels they would not dump another Pigz arse they would!

    • Razor says:

      Actually the polls say otherwise. The voters are sceptical. I posted a link from The Guardian in the last blog.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      We QLDers will dump Dutton, BASSMAN, don’t you worry about that fellow. Cheers

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      It wouldn’t matter who they put up BASS. They too will be between a rock and a hard place.
      If Turnbull did the decent thing by humanity he would be rolled in a flash. He knows it.

      It doesn’t really matter, it will get down to how hard the industry wants to go at Labor in the run up to the next election. I don’t think the owners of the nation will give Labor another innings. Unless they want to play ball, in which case there wont be any difference between the majors apart from a bit of window dressing.

      The species is bound for oblivion, so blindsided and wilfully or otherwise ignorant that this bizarre debacle is even taking place. Our swansong, rearranging the deck chairs.

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