Tuesday 5 January 2016
How will Minister for Agriculture and Water Resources Barnaby Joyce & Nationals MP Kevin Hogan handle local opposition to Turnbull Government's move to lower penalty rates?
Electorates in Northern New South Wales, such as Page and New England have an long-established tourism component in their local economies.
Both full-time, part-time and casual retail and hospitality workers play a big part in the tourism industry in these rural and regional areas, so it is interesting to note that local opposition to the Turnbull Government’s less than subtle move against weekend penalty rates in the retail and hospitality sectors is obviously on the radar of local voters.
Polling in key Liberal and National Party seats shows strong opposition to reducing Sunday penalty rates for retail workers, according to new ReachTEL polling commissioned by The Australia Institute.
Polling conducted across the electorates of Page, New England, Warringah and Dickson on 17th December shows that between 65% and 79% of people in these electorates want Sunday penalty rates in the retail industry kept the same or increased.
“The research underscores the political difficulty any Government faces if they allow Sunday penalty rates to be cut,” said Ben Oquist, Executive Director of The Australia Institute.
“Furthermore the consequences for lowering Sunday penalty rates for the macro economy need to be considered. Lowering the take-home pay for many low paid employees, who are more likely to spend most of their income, could lower the amount of spending in the economy with negative flow on effects for economic growth and employment,” said Mr Oquist.
Page MP Kevin Hogan initially called these local concerns a beat up.
However, with media reporting the possibility that Page and Richmond workers losing a minimum est. $12.2 million and $11.8 million in total income respectively, this was perhaps not the wisest choice of words to use in an election year.
Given that in his own electorate 74.6 percent of all those of all those surveyed and 56 per cent of those Nationals supporters surveyed wanted penalty rates to increase or stay the same, attempting to brush aside valid concern in this way looks foolhardy to say the least.
Hogan appears to have realised this by 29 December and changed his tune when speaking to a Daily Examiner journalist: "I'm very cognisant
that penalty rates are very important to many people who don't earn a lot of
money….For a lot of people any extra benefit they get is very important to
them. I'm yet to be sold there is an economic benefit in cutting penalty
rates."
A statement that only the gullible would accept at face value, as his parliamentary voting record shows that he has never once voted against Abbott or Turnbull government legislation or spoken up strongly in the House of Representatives against their policies.
The Minister Agriculture and Water Resources, Barnaby Joyce, takes a different tack by saying that any changes to workplace laws including penalty rates would be taken to an election.
With 70.7 percent of all those of all those surveyed and 56.9 per cent of those Nationals supporters surveyed wanting penalty rates to increase or stay the same, he will have to work hard to convince his own electorate that reducing these rates is not going to hit the New England economy hard.
Across rural New South Wales a partial abolition of penalty rates in the retail and hospitality sectors would result in workers losing between $118.9 million p.a. and $220.0 million p.a. with a loss in disposable income of between $53.8 million p.a. and $106.2 million p.a. to local economies, according to research conducted by The McKell Institute.
Stocktake of waterbirds in eastern Australia has shown the lowest breeding level on record
ABC
News 27 December
2015:
A stocktake of
waterbirds in eastern Australia has shown the lowest breeding level on record.
The annual aerial
survey, conducted by the Centre for Ecosystem Science at the University of NSW,
confirmed a dramatic long-term decline in the number of waterbirds.
Director Richard
Kingsford said that over 33 years of counting, average numbers had fallen more
than 60 per cent.
The trend continued in
2015 with a further drop compared to the previous three-to-five-year period.
"This is the second
lowest number of waterbirds we've seen in that 33-year period and it's
symptomatic of the real impacts of this drought that's occurring across the
eastern half of the continent," Professor Kingsford said.
The survey covered all
the major rivers, lakes and wetlands from Queensland down through New South
Wales, Victoria and South Australia, including the Murray-Darling Basin and the
Riverina.
The team found the
Macquarie Marshes and Lowbidgee wetlands were only partially filled, most
rivers in the Murray-Darling Basin were also relatively dry, with little
wetland habitat on their floodplains, and all the large lakes in the Menindee
system were dry.
The Lake Eyre and Cooper
Creek wetlands were mostly dry except for a small area to their east, while
important wetlands in the Lake Eyre Basin including Lakes Galilee, Yamma Yamma,
Torquinnie and Mumbleberry were dry.
Waterbirds were
concentrated in relatively few important sites, with only four wetland systems
holding more than 5,000 birds: Lake Killapaninna, Lake Allallina, Paroo
overflow Lakes and Coolmunda Dam.
Most alarmingly, the
total breeding index of all 50 species combined was the lowest on record and
well below the long-term average……
Professor Kingsford said
climate change also needed to be taken into account.
"For these
wetlands, they rely on that water staying around so animals and plants can go
through their life cycles, but if you've got less of the water actually coming
in at the top end and when it gets to the wetland there's a high evaporation
rate then it's really challenging in the long term as well," he said.
"So a whole series
of targets have been set and the big challenge is: did we get enough water for
the environment over the next 15 to 20 years?"
He warned that if the
regulators did not find the right balance, the wider community would pay a
hefty price.
"We know in the
millennium drought, for example, when there wasn't enough water for the Lower
Lakes and the Coorong, governments had to put their hands in their pockets to
spend $2 billion to actually rescue that system," Professor Kingsford
said.
"We currently have
a dredge parked in the mouth of the River Murray which is trying to keep it
open — a service that the environment used to do for nothing, and that's
costing taxpayers up to $100,000 a week."
He said the birds were a
barometer, indicating declining health of the whole ecosystem.
University of
NSW, Centre for Ecosystem Science, Aerial
Survey of Wetland Birds in Eastern Australia - October 2014 Annual Summary
Report
Blogging the 2015
Aerial Survey.
Click on the survey route to read a blog post or the arrow button on the top lefthand side to access the list of blogs.
Click on the survey route to read a blog post or the arrow button on the top lefthand side to access the list of blogs.
Labels:
biodiversity,
birds,
climate change,
drought,
environment,
flora and fauna
Monday 4 January 2016
Peter Dutton - the gods' gift to the Labor Party in 2016
This has to come under the heading ‘You couldn’t make this up”, as yet another Turnbull Government minister reveals his contempt for women:
Twitter, 3 January 2016
PETER Dutton, the minister who once resigned from the frontbench via SMS, yesterday labelled a female journalist a “mad f ... king witch” in a text — and then sent it to the journalist instead of the colleague it was intended for.
The Immigration Minister last night outed himself as the MP who had sent the blistering text about Sunday Telegraph political editor Samantha Maiden after reading her coverage of the Jamie Briggs affair.
The text message ended a horror week for the government after Mr Briggs was forced to resign from the frontbench for allegedly trying to kiss a junior public servant during a boozy night in a Hong Kong bar while on official ministerial business. The text was supposed to be sent to Mr Briggs after Maiden’s story outing the dumped minister for sending photos of the public servant he had taken on his phone, to colleagues.
Mr Dutton, who immediately apologised to Maiden after he realised he had sent the message to her, outed himself in a bid to avoid other colleagues being listed as suspects after Maiden refused to reveal the author of the text.
The minister, successful in protecting Australian borders, said he would cop the incident on the chin.
“I apologised to her straight away, which she took in good faith,’’ he said. “Sam and I have exchanged some robust language over the years so we had a laugh after this. I’m expecting a tough time in her next column.”
Maiden said she had accepted Mr Dutton’s apology and was “not offended by his mobile phone malfunction”. The pair have known each other for more than a decade.….
UPDATE
Prime Minister Turnbull not amused by Dutton’s latest blunder……
The Sydney Morning Herald, 4 January 2016:
Senior cabinet member Peter Dutton has apologised for calling a female journalist a “mad f. king witch” over her coverage of fallen junior minister Jamie Briggs’s exploits in Hong Kong.
The Immigration Minister yesterday admitted that he sent the message to the political editor for News Corp Australia’s Sunday papers, Samantha Maiden, after she reported Mr Briggs had sent colleagues a photograph of the diplomat who complained about his behaviour at the Stormies Bar in late November.
It is understood Mr Dutton accidentally sent the text message to Maiden instead of Mr Briggs in what was intended as a show of support for the besieged South Australian MP…..
Malcolm Turnbull is understood to regard the derogatory comment more seriously, describing it privately as “completely inappropriate”.
Maiden’s reporting was highly critical of Mr Briggs and his supporters, and also revealed that the former cities minister had accepted first-class flights and gifts of champagne and wine during his parliamentary career. While denying he sent the photograph of the diplomat and his chief of staff, Stuart Eaton, at the Hong Kong bar to the media, Mr Briggs said he had shared it with some colleagues before and after the complaint in an attempt to highlight the “informal” nature of the night.
The Community and Public Sector Union said the breach of the woman’s privacy was “disgraceful”.
Australian Health Minister and Liberal MP Sussan Ley has some explaining to do
It is bad enough that women in rural and regional areas comprise one third of all female cancer suffers and have on average poorer cancer survival rates than their metropolitan counterparts, now they face this as well...........
Perth
Now, 27
December 2015:
WOMEN
with breast cancer are being denied a Medicare rebate for expensive MRI scans
which others with football injuries, headaches and back pain receive.
The
rebate — rejected recently by the government’s Medical Services Advisory
Committee (MSAC) — contributes to the bills of up to $30,000 many women face
for their breast cancer.
“MSAC
did not support public funding for these indications due to of uncertain
clinical effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and financial impact” the committee
ruled.
It
reckoned approving a rebate for the test — worth up to $2000 — would cost the
health system around $9 million.
It’s
the latest example of Medicare failing cancer patients when they need it most….
Breast
surgeon Professor Christobel Saunders one of the surgeons trying to obtain a
Medicare rebate for MRIs says around one in 10 women have tumours that can’t be
properly seen on mammograms or ultrasound….
“About
10 per cent of women require it and it helps us plan surgery and determine
whether we need to do a lumpectomy or a mastectomy.”
“We
know breast MRIs work. We have been using them for 20 years they are the most
efficient way of telling the full size of the tumour,” she says.
Professor
Saunders was part of a group of surgeons who made an application to the
governments Medicare services advisory committee which determines which medical
procedures attract a Medicare rebate.
She
believes MSAC may have over-estimated the number of women who would get an MRI
when deciding to reject the rebate.
MSAC
granted a Medicare rebate for breast MRIs for just two of the eight indications
requested.
It
is recommended for women whose cancer had spread to the lymph nodes where
conventional scans failed to show the source of the tumour.
And
MRI guided biopsy is also recommended in patients with suspected breast cancer
where the tumour only identifiable by MRI.
But
it rejected breast cancer MRIs for six other indications.
Besides breast MRIs the Turnbull Government has slated another 22 Medicare items for removal from the rebate list in this round of cuts: another 6 diagnostic imaging items, 9 items in ear, nose, and throat surgery; 5 items in gastroenterology services, 1 obstetrics item and 1 thoracic medicine item.
Health Minister Sussan Ley is telling all and sundry that doctors themselves recommended these items, however the medical profession does not appear to be so uniform in opinion as Ley implies.
Given that December 2015's MYEFO contained more health funding cuts, the Liberal-Nationals ideological attacks on Medicare and free access to public health services appears set to continue until they have dismantled enough of the safety net system as will enable their MPs to commence creating an inequitable U.S. style health care system.
This is the type of medical treatment just such a system delivers:
Besides breast MRIs the Turnbull Government has slated another 22 Medicare items for removal from the rebate list in this round of cuts: another 6 diagnostic imaging items, 9 items in ear, nose, and throat surgery; 5 items in gastroenterology services, 1 obstetrics item and 1 thoracic medicine item.
Health Minister Sussan Ley is telling all and sundry that doctors themselves recommended these items, however the medical profession does not appear to be so uniform in opinion as Ley implies.
Given that December 2015's MYEFO contained more health funding cuts, the Liberal-Nationals ideological attacks on Medicare and free access to public health services appears set to continue until they have dismantled enough of the safety net system as will enable their MPs to commence creating an inequitable U.S. style health care system.
This is the type of medical treatment just such a system delivers:
Barbara Dawson via Twitter
Sometimes it just takes a hug to make us realise that Australia is not a bad and dangerous place to live
Labels:
#TerrorFret,
Australian society
Sunday 3 January 2016
Global warming and climate change are very real - unless you are staunchly sticking your head in the sand
That perennial verbal
battle over the existence of climate change continued in The Daily Examiner letters
section right up to the end of last year.
These views were published on 14, 17 and 23 December 2015 and, as usual Perring and Ibbotson didn't let little things like science and historical fact get in the way:
Ted's a believer
TED Strong is that
fanatical, one-eyed believer in the IPCC version of anthropological causes for
climate change who hails from up river and John Ibbotson is the more
liberal-minded sceptic from the lower river with an open view on the science
pertaining to IPCC modelling and its overall veracity.
Ted Strong would well
know that the IPCC "bible" has been rewritten many times to cover up
some of the more elaborate porkies put forward by many of the elite scientists.
I notice Ted Strong uses
the words "almost and probably" when stating "almost every
mainstream climate scientist on the planet" and, when addressing the
matter of whether scientists can tell the difference between steam, smoke and
CO2, he says, "I think they probably can".
That is typical, never a
definite statement, always it's almost, probably, perhaps, maybe, could occur,
may happen, appears to be, and so on.
Will there ever be a
climate change disciple who will stand up on his hind legs and say the words,
"I swear on my life that I am absolutely certain beyond all doubt that
what the IPCC predicts is going to happen, will happen".
Move over Tim Flannery!
Fred Perring
Halfway Creek
Denying reality
At last, after decades
of procrastination, and despite the urging of Clarence Valley 'experts' who
assure us climate change is a 'con', the Paris climate deal has been signed and
delivered, giving us hope for a cleaner, more sustainable future.
Yet still the
anti-climate change rubbish continues to be published on your letters to the
editor page.
For example Fred
Perring's letter (DE 14/12) harangues Ted Strong for his pro-climate change
beliefs, describing him as a "fanatical one-eyed believer".
Coming from Fred, that
gave many of us a good laugh, because anyone who has read Fred's on-going
diatribes would have to put that comment in the "pot calling the kettle
black" category.
Never have I encountered
anyone as one-eyed and unwilling to accept a contrary opinion than Fred, with
the possible exception of John Ibbotson, who Fred describes as a
"more liberal-minded sceptic".
For several decades,
thousands of climatologists, and scientists have contributed to the enormous
body of evidence that now exists, warning us of the realities of climate
change.
In Paris, the United
Nations, the political leaders of more than 200 countries, and the leaders of
the world's major religions, joined in accepting that scientific evidence, and
have vowed to work together to clean up our collective act.
With that overwhelming
endorsement of the science, we have to marvel at the egos of those who, with no
relevant qualifications whatsoever, continue writing letters, not
only denying the reality
of climate change, but ridiculing anyone asking that action be taken to reduce
atmospheric pollution.
John Edwards
South Grafton
Who is denying
reality?
Thank you John Edwards
(17/12) for the compliment. Top of the class. Wow!
As Einstein once
remarked that "No matter how great my theory is, if one person can
demonstrate that it is wrong then it's back to square one."
Taking six of the
AGW-green theories and see how they've stood up in practice:
The sea levels are going
to rise 12 or 25 or 100m. So far they've risen about 0.25m in the last 150
years.
In Oz it's never going
to rain again so we must build desalination plants. Oops. Lots of rain and
floods and the dams are over flowing.
Get your kids to play in
the snow because in 10 years there won't be any. Really!
The oceanic islands are
going to be swamped resulting in 20,000,000 eco refugees. So far it has been
found that most are stable or increasing in size, and number of accepted
eco-refugees stands at zero.
That there will be
worldwide famine because of all this CO2. Plants love CO2 and the world's food
production continues to grow.
Temperature: The AGW
folk rely on 100 computer models, based on green theory and CO2.
When compared to the
actual satellite temperatures (which are hard to fiddle) 99% of the models
can't get within two standard deviations of the actuals. In other words they're
crap.
I could go on with more
but you get the idea.
John, it would be
appreciated if you could respond with some of the great AGW theories from years
ago, which have actually been proven to be scientifically correct in practice.
I won't hold my breath.
And John you obviously
don't understand the difference between science, politics, religion and the
power of money, which drives this AGW shemozzle.
John Ibbotson
Gulmarrad
Labels:
climate change,
right wing rat bags
Dear Prime Minister Turnbull, You need to do a lot better in 2016 and beyond....
In 1990
Australia’s national greenhouse gas emissions were estimated at 547.7
Mt CO2-e for that year. That
represents 32.1 tonnes of CO2-e emitted for every person in a population of
17.06 million spread across approximately 7.69 million km2.
Australia’s annual
emissions for the 2014-15 financial year were est. 549.3 Mt CO2-e. Up 0.8 per cent on the year before.That’s 18.75
tonnes of CO2-e emitted for every person in a population of 23.7 million. [Australian
Bureau of Statistics, Population
Size And Growth & Greenhouse
Gases, Dept. of the Environment, Quarterly
Update of Australia's National Greenhouse Gas Inventory: June 2015, australia.gov.au]
Therefore, national
greenhouse gas emissions data showed an estimated rise of 1.6 Mt CO2-e when
comparing 1990 & 2015 and, the reason the per capita count fell appears to
have been influenced by the fact that the national total is now divided among
more residents across the country.
Basically, federal
and state governments have spent the last 25 years bringing the nation’s emissions
level back to somewhere near 1990 levels, when the reality of climate change
impacts strongly suggests that Australia should have driven the emissions level
well below that figure by now.
After all, in 2012 the European Union (EU), with land mass of approx.
4.42 million km2 and a population then estimated at 503 million
inhabitants, managed to reduce its total annual greenhouse gas emissions by est. 19.2 %
(EU28 countries) and 15.1% (EU15 countries) when compared with its 1990 levels. This represented a combined total difference of 1,731 Mt CO2-e from those 1990 levels [Europa.eu,2015 & Annual
European Union greenhouse gas inventory 1990–2012 and inventory report 2014].
The Liberal-Nationals Coalition Government went to UN COP21 in 2015 and,
in front of world leaders, merely offering to keep Australia’s greenhouse gas
emissions at between 26-28% below the 2005 level of 584.2 Mt CO2-e by 2030 is dangerously deluded behaviour [Dept.
of Prime Minister and Cabinet, 2015, Australia’s
2030 Emission Reduction Target, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Greenhouse
Gases].
Essentially
the Australian Government told the entire world it was not prepared to do anything more than window dressing in the face of a growing global crisis.
If you don't act quickly and decisively on climate change, it will be to your enduring shame Malcolm Bligh Turnbull.
Note: Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF)
emissions totals are excluded from the
national total due to relatively high levels of uncertainty at this stage of
the data collection cycle.
Labels:
climate change,
government policy
Saturday 2 January 2016
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop's cost cutting is causing problems in Iraq?
On 31 December 2015 The Australian reported on Unity Resources Group, originally registered in Australia by co-founders former special forces commander Gordon Conroy and former army reservists Martin Simich but now apparently incorporated in Dubai, and what appears to be the flow-on effect of cost-cutting by the Dept. of Foreign Affairs:
The Australian has confirmed that up to 40 Australian protection specialists will be flown out of Iraq tomorrow after accusing their employer, Dubai-based Unity Resources Group, of risking lives by scrimping on arms and protective equipment, bypassing detailed security checks and providing inferior medical support and insurance cover.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has recently awarded URG a new five-year contract, worth nearly $51 million, to provide personal protection for embassy staff from Friday until the end of 2020. Tender documents show the new contract is barely half the $101m URG was paid to provide security for the five years from January 1, 2011 to today.
It is understood the majority of personnel who will leave refused to sign the new work contracts in protest, while at least three others who signalled they would be prepared to sign on again, but were known by management to have complained about conditions, have been told their positions will be filled.
Staffers who remain on the ground in Baghdad are becoming increasingly anxious and do not believe that URG will be able to follow the security protocols required by the DFAT contract in the short time remaining.
Sources claim the limited time to recruit the new protection specialists does not leave enough time to conduct proper background checks, including medical and psychological screening.
They also fear the new recruits will lack sufficient training in the protection of a diplomatic post in areas such as weapons handling and close personal protection.
"January 1st will bring in a swath of inexperience and risk at a time when Baghdad is going through chaotic and unpredictable change," one senior protection officer said. "URG HQ and local project managers' rushed intent of getting bums on seats at any cost to have the numbers for January 1 will result in deadly consequences. They will not have the right people to deliver the high-quality protection the Australian embassy staff in Baghdad rely on." URG, which was founded by former Australian special forces commander Gordon Conroy, declined to respond to detailed questions from The Australian.
DFAT responded to detailed questions by saying its longstanding practice was not to comment on security arrangements at its overseas missions. Sources in the department disputed the claim that URG was short 40 workers but would not comment on the concerns raised by URG staff.
"The Australian government places the highest priority on the safety of all its personnel, especially those in high-threat locations such as Kabul and Baghdad," a DFAT official said.
This quasi-military company has a somewhat chequered past, with the United Nations Working Group on the Use of Mercenaries in 2008 corresponding with the Australian Government over some of the company's actions and whose private military personnel allegedly shot and killed 72 year-old Australian resident Professor Kays Juma and Armenian civilians Mary Awanis and Genevia Antranick, as well as seriously wounding an unidentified man , in Iraq in 2006-2007. Additionally, this company was accused of ignoring risk factors which led to the 2008 killing of U.S. aid worker Stephen Vance in Peshawar, Pakistan.
So who is 'Mr. Apprehended Bias 2015' and what makes him tick?
Former High Court justice John Dyson Heydon AC QC presided
over the federal Royal Commission into Trade
Union Governance and Corruption.
This commission was in existence for six hundred and sixty-five days from 13 March 2014 to 28 December 2015 and, there were a total of one hundred and eighty-nine hearings days in the capital cities of five states.
The cost to taxpayers was reported as in excess of $45.9 million. Heydon's own contract as a royal commissioner is estimated as worth between $1.5-$2 million of this.
This commission was in existence for six hundred and sixty-five days from 13 March 2014 to 28 December 2015 and, there were a total of one hundred and eighty-nine hearings days in the capital cities of five states.
The cost to taxpayers was reported as in excess of $45.9 million. Heydon's own contract as a royal commissioner is estimated as worth between $1.5-$2 million of this.
Heydon produced a two volume Interim Report in December 2014 and his Final
Report ran to six volumes with thirty-five appendices - the contents of
the last approx.187-page volume (allegedly containing verifiable threats to witnesses) being kept secret from the public and only shared with the Coalition prime minister, members of his cabinet and senior staffer/s in the prime minister's office.
Heydon’s “Introduction and Overview” to
this final report ran to one hundred and sixteen pages in which he used the
qualifying word “may” one hundred and twenty-two times, based on a word check count.
Throughout the report the language used
by Heydon was sometimes highly coloured and its pages contain a number of bold assertions that do not appear to be supported by hard fact.
After all that time and money, Heydon made
seventy-nine
law reform and/or 'political' recommendations, as well as referring two
unions, two companies, thirty-five union members and and six other individuals to either the Fair Work Commission, Australian Securities and Investments Commission, state industrial relations commissions, police, public prosecutors, or a number of other federal and state agencies, for further consideration.
With the Australian Bureau of Statistics recording 1.57 million persons who were members of a union in their main job in August 2014, only finding thirty-seven 'suspect' unionists (or 0.00235% of est. union population) is not what might be called a good look for this very expensive royal commission which examined over five hundred witnesses. Especially as its findings assert the existence of an endemic culture of corruption within unions.
With the Australian Bureau of Statistics recording 1.57 million persons who were members of a union in their main job in August 2014, only finding thirty-seven 'suspect' unionists (or 0.00235% of est. union population) is not what might be called a good look for this very expensive royal commission which examined over five hundred witnesses. Especially as its findings assert the existence of an endemic culture of corruption within unions.
As one of the previous referrals flowing from
the royal commission police taskforce resulted in a
prosecution which was dropped by the ACT Director of Public Prosecutions in
October 2015 with no evidence offered, one wonders how many of those final referrals
will also dwindle away into nothing.
This particular royal commission has
had distinct overtones of political bias from the very beginning, exacerbated
by Heydon’s own unsatisfactorily self-tested apprehended bias.
So what manner of man is Dyson Heydon and how have others viewed him over time?
Commencing In December 2015 and working backwards to 1999, here is a small selection of opinions:
Journalist Damien
Murphy in The Sydney Morning Herald article
Commissioner
Dyson Heydon: A man for all reasons, 30 December 2015:
He joins a short line of
judges who have delivered similar decisions against unions such as the defunct
Builders Labourers Federation, the Painters and Dockers, and the Construction,
Forestry, Mining and Energy Union.
But only Mr Heydon
achieved the singular honour of shooting himself in the foot with his own royal
commission.
On August 31 this year,
he administered the kiss of life to himself to save his own royal commission.
For 18 days he'd been
drowning in a whirlpool of his own making. For much of that time Australia had
been wondering how the former High Court of Australia justice could save
himself and breathe life back into his Royal Commission into Trade Union
Governance and Corruption.
It emerged Mr Heydon had
agreed in April to deliver the 6th Sir Garfield Barwick Address, a fundraising
event organised by a branch of the Liberal Party, and had
"overlooked" the political aspect of his dining companions.
The matter bubbled away
while Mr Heydon continued to conduct his hearings.
On August 17, Fairfax
Media reported that Mr Heydon, a former Rhodes Scholar, was on the panel that
awarded then prime minister Tony Abbott his Rhodes scholarship.
Unions went ballistic.
Four days later the
ACTU, AWU and CFMEU all made applications in the commission for Mr Heydon to
step down.
His opponents saw it as
a question of propriety. Mr Heydon, and the government who appointed him, saw
it purely in legal terms.
Known as a loner with a
love for black letter law, an aversion to computers and an apparent fear of
emails, Mr Heydon, 72, served as a justice of the High Court of Australia
between 2003-2013 after being a justice of the NSW Court of Appeal.
Previously he'd been
dean of the Sydney Law School. He'd retired from the High Court at the
constitutionally mandated age of 70 and picked up the trade union royal
commission as a retirement gig.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 15 August 2015:
The Sydney Morning Herald, 15 August 2015:
Gabrielle
Appleby and Heather Roberts writing in Bias
and the ‘black-letter’ judge: who is Dyson Heydon? [The
Conversation, 21 August 2015]:
There is no doubt that
Heydon was and is a brilliant legal mind, with a very firm grip on the
applicable law. His distinguished legal and judicial career is credit to that.
Heydon’s legal
brilliance did not guarantee, however, that he was influential while on the
High Court. His approach was increasingly out of step with the court’s other
members, particularly in the areas of implied rights and limits on government
power, which he was reluctant to extend. His dissent rates would eventually
earn him the moniker the “Great
Dissenter”, and his frustration became increasingly evident in the tone of
his judgments.
As a judge, Heydon also
exhibited a particularly visible form of independence. Constitutional law
academics Andrew Lynch and George Williams have referred to
this as his pronounced “individualism”. By 2012, the year prior to his
retirement, Heydon wrote every one of his judgments alone, even when he joined
the result of the other justices.
Also in 2012, Heydon
delivered another
speech that caused a stir in the legal profession. It went part of the
way to explaining his individualism. He referred to what he thought was one of
the most dangerous threats to judicial independence: the pressure on judges to
participate in joint judgments and the elevation of consensus as a value over
individual intellectual integrity.
There is a degree of sad
irony that, as royal commissioner, Heydon has found himself steeped in
controversy alleged to be undermining public confidence in the integrity of the
justice system. Heydon prided himself throughout his judicial career – and
rightly so – on the robust independence and intellectual integrity he brought
to the role.
It is important to be
clear that the claim made against Heydon is one of apprehended bias only. The test
for apprehended bias is whether a “fair-minded lay observer” might
reasonably apprehend that Heydon’s impartiality has been compromised by his
conduct.
It might seem
incongruous for a member of the general public to understand why
Heydon is being asked to apply the test to himself. There is a whiff of
apprehended bias in the very idea.
It is true that this
practice accords with the ordinary
legal process for apprehended bias claims. A person against whom an
apprehended bias claim is made is expected to apply the test objectively by
reference to the standards of the fair-minded lay observer. According to a
traditional black-letter approach, the individual’s personal feelings will
simply not enter the decision.
But can, as Heydon has
argued throughout his judicial career, legal tests really be objectively
applied by reference only to the law in the books – and unaffected, consciously
or subconsciously, by the individual judges’ background, interest, values and
morals? This question has given rise to some of the great ongoing debates of
legal philosophy.
Excerpts from
the pen of Allan C. Hutchinson in "Heydon'
Seek: Looking for Law in the Wrong Places" [2003, Monash
University Law Review 85]:
As already should be
clear, I am sceptical about the possibility of there being a definitive and
cogent account of the common law's operation in line with traditional claims
and ambitions. Nevertheless, I was excited to be told on my arrival in
Australia that there was a recent paper that attempted to do just that. I
eagerly obtained this essay by a former academic and now Justice of the
Australian High Court, Dyson Heydon. The title of his paper, Judicial Activism
and The Death of The Rule of Law, should have immediately tipped me off to what
was to follow.' Still, knowing little of Heydon personally or professionally
and knowing almost as little about Australian recent judicial history, I set to
reading the written version of his speech to the Quadrant Dinner in October
2002. The author was clearly a polished and sophisticated fellow who peppered
his talk with witty asides and sprightly anecdotes. Yet, beneath the gloss and
erudition, the paper offered a very radical and almost anachronistic account of
the common law. Indeed, my first reaction was to think that the date on the
paper must be wrong as it read like something from 1902 rather than 2002.
Heydon offered a rendition of the Rule of Law and the common law that was as
fundamentalist in its formalism as any I could remember reading in any century,
let alone the 21st century. For Heydon, judges can only fulfil their judicial
duties by scrupulously attending to the law's formal structure alone: almost
any consideration of the law's moral or political content is anathema. While I
would normally recommend that such an audacious and frankly improbable proposal
be ignored, the fact that it is espoused by the most recent appointee to the
High Court means that it warrants serious debunking and outright rejection…..
In his incendiary
jurisprudential intervention, Dyson Heydon makes it clear from the outset that
the whole project of modern jurisprudence is mistaken and a betrayal of the
common law tradition. Identifying proudly and explicitly with 'hanging judges'
of yore, he idolises 'that evil old man in scarlet robe and horse hair wig,
whom nothing short of dynamite will ever teach what century he is living in,
but who will at any rate interpret the law according to the books and ... is a
symbol of the strange mixture of reality and illusion, democracy and privilege,
humbug and decency, the subtle network of compromises, by which the nation
keeps itself in its familiar shape'. This is stirring and disturbing stuff. Heydon
leaves no doubt that '[interpretation of] the law according to the books must
be scrupulously adhered to by judges as this is the most effective 'bar to
untrammelled discretionary power? Depicting judges as wild ideological animals
who, if left unharnessed, will wreak political mayhem on an unsuspecting
public, he offers an ideal judge who is 'an independent arbiter not affected by
self-interest or partisan duty, applying a set of principles, rules and
procedures having objective existence and operating in paramountcy to any other
organ of state and to any other source of power'. This means that so powerful and reliable is
'the disinterested application ... of known law drawn from existing and
discoverable legal sources independently of the personal beliefs of the judgeI6
that it can hold in check herds of rogue officials. Moreover, so tamed and
tethered, these institutional pets can be trusted to have supreme power in the
polity….
For Heydon, the recent
history of Australian common law is a morality play in which the dark hordes of
judicial activism have begun to eclipse the established forces of legal enlightenment.
Rallying the judicial troops around a battle-cry of 'Back To The Future', he
urges that time is well past to repel such interlopers and to return the common
law to its traditional grandeur. Unless swift action is taken, the common law
is destined to be sullied by those 'using judicial power for a purpose other
than that for which it was granted, namely doing justice according to law in
the particular case'? In this scenario, the initial assault of the dark
activists forces can be traced back to the 1970s and the villains of the piece
are Anthony Mason and Lionel Murphy. Inveigling their way in to high judicial
office, these usurpers professed allegiance to the common law, but only better
to hijack it for their own political purposes. With some wit and savvy, these
ne'erdo-wells began to abandon the orthodoxies of the common law and replace it
with new credos of their own design: 'the soignt, fastidious, civilised,
cultured and cultivated patricians of the progressive judiciary - our new
philosopher-kings and enlightened despots - are in truth applying the values
which they hold, and which they think the poor simpletons of the vile multitude
... ought to hold even though they do not'." Presumably aided by a duped
band of other High Court judges, the terrible two set about abandoning old
tried-and-true rules and replacing them with newfangled and controversial
doctrines which were little more than rough distillations of their own
political agendas. Indeed, if Heydon is to be believed, Australian common law
is quickly going to political hell in a judicial handcart. It is only with a
return to traditional legal values and judicial methods that such an
ignominious fate can be avoided…..
From the Strewth column in The Australian, 20 December 2002:
From the Strewth column in The Australian, 20 December 2002:
DYSON Heydon may
have snared a prized position on the High Court following his controversial
speech contra judicial activism. He appears, however, to have peeved a few of
the blokes he pinged in the diatribe that some suggest was pivotal to his
appointment. Strewth hears former chief justices, and knights of the realm,
Gerard Brennan and Anthony Mason, will not be attending Heydon's
swearing-in when Mary Gaudron, pictured, retires in February. In the fraternity
that is the old boys' association of the High Court it is customary for all
manner of former judicial officers, friends, relatives and other hangers-on to
front for the boys' own initiation ceremony. So the absence of the two
immediate past chief justices will be conspicuous. Heydon made some
fairly pointed personal remarks about the Mason-era court of 1987-95, and did a
demolition job on the 1992 Mabo case in which Brennan wrote the lead judgment.
Yesterday Mason refused to comment on Heydon's attack on him, or whether
he would attend the swearing-in, and Brennan's chambers also delivered a firm
"no comment". Gezza and Tone aren't the only people cheesed off.
Journalist David Solomon
writing in The Courier Mail article A law
unto themselves, 19 December 2002 issue, p.15:
Heydon is the
fourth appointment made by the Howard Government, so its nominees to the bench
now constitute a majority of the court. In just three terms in office the
Government has been able to put its own stamp on the court, to reverse the more
liberal tendencies of the High Court under Chief Justice Sir Anthony Mason
(though he was first appointed to the court by the McMahon government in 1972,
and some of the appointees of the Hawke or Keating governments were far from
radical in their approach to the law).
This Government made no
secret of its intention of using its appointments to the High Court to change
its jurisprudence. Following the Wik decision in 1996, when the court
unexpectedly held that native title could exist in remote areas covered by
pastoral leases in Queensland, then deputy prime minister Tim Fischer declared
the Government would appoint "three capital-C conservatives" to the
court. It did so during the next year. And Dyson Heydon is the
fourth.
Journalist Valerie
Lawson in The Age article Library
speaks volumes for His Honour's passions, 19 December 2002:
John Dyson Heydon can't
sleep. It has nothing to do with his appointment as a judge of the High Court.
It's a habit of his years at the New South Wales bar.
He tends to begin his
day at 3 am, writing judgments, writing books, reviewing military history.
He is not alone in the
small hours. The 59-year-old works in the company of Napoleon (a marble bust),
the Duke of Wellington (a statue), and a library full of history. He can
recount any battle in detail."
His life has been as
orderly as his library since the time he swapped his rugby days as "Dirty Dyson"
(always covered with mud), to become a professor of law and a barrister….
Married to Pamela for 25
years, and father of Victoria, Christina, Alexandra and Nicholas, Justice
Heydon, QC, is the very model of a modern North Shore citizen. He lives at
Turramurra, and has a weekender at Robertson, NSW….
Valerie Lawson in The Sydney Morning
Herald article Silence on QC's rush to judgment, 11 February 2000 issue, p.7:
The State Government and
the legal profession yesterday stonewalled questions on the controversial
appointment of Mr Dyson Heydon, QC, to the NSW Court of Appeal.
Neither the
Attorney-General, Mr Shaw, nor the Chief Justice, Justice Jim Spigelman, would
comment.
But while the legal
profession publicly praised Mr Heydon's "eminence" lawyers
privately found it peculiar that he will be sworn in on Monday just three
months before his own appeal over a $7 million judgment against him is due to
be heard by the Court of Appeal.
The question on
everyone's lips was: what's the rush?
The State Government and
the legal profession yesterday stonewalled questions on the controversial
appointment of Mr Dyson Heydon, QC, to the NSW Court of Appeal.
Neither the
Attorney-General, Mr Shaw, nor the Chief Justice, Justice Jim Spigelman, would
comment.
But while the legal
profession publicly praised Mr Heydon's "eminence" lawyers
privately found it peculiar that he will be sworn in on Monday just three
months before his own appeal over a $7 million judgment against him is due to
be heard by the Court of Appeal.
The question on
everyone's lips was: what's the rush?
David Marr in The Sydney Morning Herald article Pm Brings Some PantomimeTo A Court's Silent Mark Of Power, 18 May 1999:
Dyson Heydon, QC,
arrived in a particularly dilapidated wig. He and a couple of Sydney law firms
were ordered last week to pay $21 million damages to the NRMA. The big question
at the Sydney Bar these days is: how much was Heydon's cover? As he passed
along the lines of his black-robed colleagues, they offered shy pats of
reassurance. He barely flinched. *Heydon and the law firms won on appeal on 21 December 2000 at which time he was a Justice in the NSW Court of Appeal*
the soigné,
fastidious, civilised, cultured and cultivated patricians of the progressive
judiciary – our new philosopher-kings and enlightened despots – are in truth
applying the values which they hold, and which they think the poor simpletons of the vile multitude – the great
beast, as Alexander Hamilton called it – ought to hold even though they do not.
The trouble is that persons adhering to different values or different
perceptions of need or different aspirations tend to be at risk of being
ruthlessly waved out of all decent society as enemies of the people. [my red bolding]
Last but not
least is Dyson Heydon’s view of many of his fellow judges and of all of us found at the Barnold Law blog, 2 September 2009:
Heydon sniffed in
relation to Australian Capital Television v Commonwealth (1992) 177
CLR 106 that
Labels:
John Dyson Heydon,
royal commission
Friday 1 January 2016
Arise, Sir Lizard of Oz
The Daily Mail 27 December 2015:
In 2001 then Australian prime minister, John Howard, gave Crosby the Centenary Medal "for service to Australian society through politics" and in 2005 arranged for him to become an Officer of the Order of Australia "for service to politics as federal director of the Liberal Party of Australia".
On 1 January 2016 he became a knight bachelor "for political service" to the Conservative Party.
One wonders - will the newly knighted Sir Lynton Crosby be coming back to bolster the Turnbull Government's chances of getting over the line in 2016?
Labels:
politics
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