This was going to be the scheduled North Coast Voices post title today: "Dodgy duo Dom Perrottet and Paul Toole are hoping that NSW residents, ratepayers and voters will forget this act of political bastardry once the state parliament goes into recess until February 2023. How wrong they will be in many a coastal council area".
But then, with an eye to his political legacy, retiring NSW Christian Democrat MLC Fred Nile spoke out.....
The Sydney Morning Herald, 14 December 2022:
The NSW government has been forced into a humiliating backdown in the latest koala wars after Christian Democrat MP Fred Nile refused to back its native forestry bill, guaranteeing it would have failed on the floor of parliament.
Agriculture Minister Dugald Saunders confirmed late on Monday that the Nationals would pull the hugely divisive bill in a bid to avoid an embarrassing loss for the Coalition in the final sitting week of parliament before the March election.
The death knell for the bill came when Nile ruled out support for changes to native forestry laws, which would have made it easier for landholders to remove trees.....
Without Nile’s support, the bill could not have passed the upper house and it was also likely to fail in the lower house because Nationals MP Geoff Provest told Nationals leader Paul Toole on Monday that he would not support the bill. Liberal MP Felicity Wilson also ruled out supporting the bill.
Millionaire businessman and environmental crusader Geoff Cousins, who waged the high-profile campaign to stop the Gunns pulp mill in Tasmania during the 2007 federal election campaign, also delivered a blistering warning to the NSW government, saying he would “do everything I can to run a major campaign against the Perrottet government in the next election” in response to the bill.
“I would liken the sort of campaign I would run to the Gunns pulp mill campaign,” Cousins, a former adviser to John Howard, said. “If they want to go up against that, that’s fine. But it would include a major advertising campaign and I would do everything I could to bring down a government that would put forward legislation like this.” .....
In addition to dissenting members of the NSW Parliament, it was obvious that individuals and communities all along the est. 1,973km long NSW mainland coastal zone and, as far inland as the Great Dividing Range, were prepared to resist the Perrottet Coalition Government's attempt to lock in destructive legislation ahead of the March 2023 state election. In what looked suspiciously like an erstatz insurance policy for their timber industry mates - just in case the Coalition lost the forthcoming state ballot.
Somewhat predictably, in this approach the Perrottet Government was aping the failed former Morrison Government and, thereby doing itself no favours.
BACKGROUND
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Newly minted NSW National Party Leader & Deputy Premier Paul Toole and newly minted NSW Liberal Party Leader & Premier Dominic Perrottet. IMAGE: ABC News, 14 October 2021
Following in the footsteps of a disgraced Liberal premier and a disgraced Nationals deputy premier (both of whom resigned office and left the NSW Parliament) it seems no lessons were learnt......
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The
Sydney Morning Herald,
14 November 2022, p.1:
NSW
Premier Dominic Perrottet faces a damaging internal battle in the
final week of parliament as Liberals threaten to cross the floor over
the revival of the so-called koala wars which almost tore apart the
Coalition two years ago.
As
NSW parliament sits for the last time before the March election, the
bitter issue of protecting koala habitat could split the Coalition,
with Liberals who face challenges from teal candidates fearing it
would ignite a backlash against the government.
The
Nationals have introduced a bill to make it easier for landholders to
clear private native forestry without duplicate approval processes
between state and local governments. However, critics have warned it
could water down environmental regulation and destroy koala habitat.
Climate
200 founder Simon Holmes a Court described revisiting the koala wars
as a "gift" for the teal movement in NSW, which would seize
on the NSW government's position in northern Sydney seats.
Holmes
a Court said Perrottet had made three significant environmental
missteps in recent weeks, which included committing to raising the
Warragamba Dam wall and appointing former Sydney Hydro boss Paul
Broad as a special adviser.
Broad,
who was appointed by Perrottet while Energy Minister Matt Kean was
overseas, has been a critic of NSW's energy road map, which provides
long-term contracts for renewable generation and grid services. Broad
has called the plan, devised by Kean, "fundamentally flawed".
He also backed the former federal government in its push for a large
new gas-fired power plant in the Hunter Valley.
"Until
recently, it's been hard for the teals to find strong differentiation
in states with almost-good-enough environmental credentials like
Victoria and NSW," Holmes a Court said.
"Dominic
Perrottet has handed the movement a gift through deciding to flood a
UNESCO site with many significant Aboriginal sites, reopening the
koala wars and putting Angus Taylor's gas man in the Premier's
office."
Asked
yesterday about Broad's appointment, Perrottet said he was "highly
regarded, and his experience in water, engineering and infrastructure
is second to none in this country".
Perrottet
said Broad's remit included raising the Warragamba wall and ensuring
the $3.5 billion Narrabri gas project was online as soon as possible.
The
Coalition battled internal warfare over koala planning laws in 2020,
when former deputy premier John Barilaro threatened to take his
Nationals MPs to the crossbench if proposed new rules to protect an
increased number of tree species home to koalas were adopted.
Then
premier Gladys Berejiklian stared him down and Barilaro withdrew the
threat.
The
bill to change planning laws for private native forests will be
debated his week and is likely to be particularly problematic for
Liberal MP James Griffin, who is environment minister and holds the
seat of Manly, which has a very active independents' group.
Several
senior government sources said other at-risk Liberals, including
North Shore MP Felicity Wilson and Port Macquarie MP Leslie Williams,
are considering crossing the floor or abstaining. Nationals MP for
Tweed Geoff Provest could abstain.
Wilson,
Williams and Provest were contacted for comment.
In
an indication of how damaging Wilson thinks the bill could be, she
gave a private members' statement to parliament last week when she
wanted her "support for a plan to transition the native forestry
industry towards sustainable plantations" placed on the record……
Opposition
environment spokeswoman Penny Sharpe said Labor would oppose the
bill…...
Local
Government NSW president Darriea Turley said the bill had been rushed
into parliament without any consultation with local government.
"This
bill undermines the crucial role councils play in the regulation of
private forestry operations," Turley said. "It will have
devastating impacts on native habitats, particularly for koalas and
many threatened species."