Wednesday 27 April 2016
Australian Federal Election 2016: Tony Abbott sings the 'I did it my way but I'll mend my ways' song again
Remember the promise to be “more consultative” after an “injudicious” knighting of Prince Phillip? Recall the promise of no more captain’s picks and to run a more "collegiate" party room in future? What about the promise after the first “chastening” Libspill that “good government starts today”?
Former prime minister and MP for Warringah Tony Abbott has been admitting his mistakes and promising to do better – over and over and over again – and now he’s doing it once more and still expecting to be believed.
His latest siren song has silly lyrics and he is singing off key.
The Australian, 23 April 2016:
A contrite Tony Abbott, in a unique exercise in self-criticism, has conceded a long list of mistakes and misjudgments in relation to policy, public opinion and dealings with colleagues that were instrumental in costing him the prime ministership.
Mr Abbott’s admissions constitute a deep personal reassessment. He pledges to try to rectify in his future public life the lessons from his inadequacies as prime minister.
He concedes that the Abbott government failed to rise to the challenges of “greater fairness, more thoroughgoing justice and deeper empowerment”.
The litany of admitted failures, large and small, has no parallel as a public confession for a deposed prime minister, even though most are made in hindsight. Mr Abbott says: “I made some unnecessary enemies and left too many friends feeling under-appreciated.
“I can’t let pride in what was achieved under my leadership blind me to the flaws that made its termination easier, even if claims were exaggerated or exploited in self-serving ways.”
He concedes “there were some issues the Abbott government could have managed better or not pursued at all”.
Mr Abbott’s comments are made in an article, obtained by The Weekend Australian, to be published in the May issue of Quadrant magazine. It is the third and last in a series reviewing his government….
Signalling a willingness to remain in public life, Mr Abbott says that he hopes to address his failures “in my future public life”….
Tuesday 26 April 2016
Human Rights Commission President Gillian Triggs on the ignorance, guile and bully boy tactics of Australian politicians
Excepts from an interview with President of the Australian Human Rights Commission, Professor Gillian Triggs, in The Saturday Paper on 23 April 2016:
Ramona Koval Did you think it was going to be this hard when you started at the commission?
Gillian Triggs [laughs] No! I had absolutely no idea. I rather naively thought if you’d been dean of a law faculty you could manage anything. I was unprepared for dealing with senior political figures with no education whatsoever about international law and about Australia’s remarkable historical record which they are now diminishing. We’ve got senior public servants who will roll their eyes at the idea of a human right. They say, “Look, Gillian, you’re beating a dead horse.” It’s not going to work, because they can’t talk to the minister in terms of human rights. We’ve had, in my view, very poor leadership on this issue for the past 10 to 15 years, from the “children overboard” lie. They’ve been prepared to misstate the facts and conflate asylum-seeker issues with global terrorism. What I’m saying applies equally to Labor and Liberal and National parties. They’ve used this in bad faith to promote their own political opportunistic positions…..
RK You’ve said, “When I was younger I thought one could build on the past. But I have learned that we need to be eternally vigilant in ensuring human rights in a modern democracy.” Is that a sense of an idea of conservatism, building on the past, not letting go of good things that have been achieved? And feeling that confidence in that idea has been shaken?
GT A shocking phenomenon is Australians don’t even understand their own democratic system. They are quite content to have parliament be complicit with passing legislation to strengthen the powers of the executive and to exclude the courts. They have no idea of the separation of powers and the excessive overreach of executive government.
RK Sisyphus comes to mind.
GT Well, it’s quite true. One can be astonished at the very simplistic level at which I need to speak. Our parliamentarians are usually seriously ill-informed and uneducated. All they know is the world of Canberra and politics and they’ve lost any sense of a rule of law, and curiously enough for Canberra they don’t even understand what democracy is. Not an easy argument to make, as you can imagine: me telling a parliamentarian they need to be better educated. [laughs] But it’s true.
RK Have you done that?
GT Oh, I have. And I have to say that some parliamentarians, and surprising ones, a Nationals MP, says “Come and give us a seminar.” Another one asked me to come up and work in parliament with the members of a particular committee that she was on. Terrific! But they listened to me and do you know, the response of some of them was, “Well, we had no idea Australia had signed up to these treaties. We should withdraw from them!” So backward steps! You still hear people say we must withdraw from the Refugee Convention or we must withdraw from the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights……
RK I was astonished listening to him – how could the chair of the committee say he hadn’t read the report with such pride?
GT I know. So I could have reacted very angrily to that and I am quite articulate and I can be very strong if I need to be: I could have used those skills, but I determinedly did not. It’s an environment in which I must be respectful, so frankly I thought as a lawyer I’d lose my case if I did [react angrily]. There was a point when I thought, “I’ve had 50 years as a reasonably respectable and quite conservative lawyer, how on earth do I find myself in this situation?” [laughs] But in the end I just had to get through the moment. But there were some lovely little side things, like the public servants behind the scenes, coming around with bowls of Jelly Snakes and Jelly Babies and mini Mars bars. Because we’d had nothing to eat, and they wouldn’t get us any food. The senators and members of the committee were all going off and having lunch. We’d had no breakfast, no morning tea and no lunch and I thought I’d faint, but these wonderful people were coming in and we were grabbing the food and eating it and they were saying [sotto voce], “You do realise that we are not responsible for this, don’t you?”, because some might think the secretariat had fed them these questions.
RK But it was all the senators’ own work?
GT With the attorney-general sitting next to me and encouraging it. And he was writing the questions which would be taken by his staff up to one of the senators, so feeding them the questions – an extraordinary experience. People were hugely supportive afterwards. Flowers were coming in. Each one brought a cheer from the staff and eventually it was so full that I couldn’t get in the room anymore. It was almost as though I had died the week before, and I’m thinking I must have missed something because I’m still standing here…….
RK The extent of the hostility and the personal nature of the attacks must have shocked you.
GT To use those terrible words that the prime minister and especially the attorney-general used: “We have no confidence in Gillian Triggs.” The words reverberated around my head for a very long time. It was a very cruel and unjustified comment and the attempt to get me to resign for another position was a disgraceful thing to do, but it was exposed by the questions in senate. I could have had other options, the possibility of criminal prosecutions of the attorney.
RK I wondered why you decided against pursuing that avenue?
GT The AFP did consider it. They dealt with it extremely professionally. They were courteous but I made the decision that the greatest recognition of this wrongdoing was in the senate itself, when the senate censured the attorney for the first time in about 80 years and I felt that this issue was much more political than it was legal. I also wanted to move on, and I think that this underlies a lot of cases that don’t proceed……
RK I see that you have not let the 2015 experience cower you. You have made many comments on matters that you have proper concerns in – from marriage equality and Safe Schools programs to calling for monitoring of conditions for asylum seekers and refugees in offshore detention centres to concerns about counterterrorism laws. It looks like, if the government thought they could bully you into submission, they made rather the wrong call.
GT I’ve just turned 70 and I’ve been doing this for a long time and I’m so confident about the law and about the evidence for the law not being respected that I feel very sure-footed in going forward on these other issues. My resilience and determination and experience for a long time in the law give me the determination to get through the remaining 15 months to continue to speak out. When you see that you are being bullied by people who you know are not coming from a good place, you know you don’t have to give in to them. They are cowards and the moment you stand up to them they crumble, and they did crumble. And several now have been seen off long before me. They’re not used to a woman aged 70 standing up to them. They can’t quite believe it. If I were 40 looking for a career opportunity, I probably wouldn’t do what I’ve done because it would have queered the pitch for me professionally. But why do I care now? I can do what I’m trained to do and they almost can’t touch me. And I’ll continue to do that work when I’ve finished with this position.
Read the full article here.
Something you may have missed in this month's news cycle
Before he entered federal parliament in 2004 Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Bligh Turnbull was Chairman and Managing Director of Goldman Sachs Australia from 1997 to 2001 and a Partner in Goldman Sachs and Co from 1998 to 2001.
In 2009 it was reported that Goldman Sachs made a confidential settlement on his behalf in the matter of the HIH collapse.
To this day he still invests with Goldman Sachs and, this month that investment bank paid US$5.06 billion in civil penalties for serious misconduct which contributed to the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2008.
Department of Justice
Office of Public Affairs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, April 11, 2016
Goldman Sachs Agrees to Pay More than $5 Billion in
Connection with Its Sale of Residential Mortgage Backed Securities
The Justice Department, along with
federal and state partners, announced today a $5.06 billion settlement with
Goldman Sachs related to Goldman’s conduct in the packaging, securitization,
marketing, sale and issuance of residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS)
between 2005 and 2007. The resolution announced today requires Goldman to
pay $2.385 billion in a civil penalty under the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery and Enforcement Act (FIRREA) and also requires the bank to provide
$1.8 billion in other relief, including relief to underwater homeowners,
distressed borrowers and affected communities, in the form of loan forgiveness
and financing for affordable housing. Goldman will also pay $875 million
to resolve claims by other federal entities and state claims. Investors,
including federally-insured financial institutions, suffered billions of
dollars in losses from investing in RMBS issued and underwritten by Goldman
between 2005 and 2007.
“This resolution holds Goldman Sachs
accountable for its serious misconduct in falsely assuring investors that
securities it sold were backed by sound mortgages, when it knew that they were
full of mortgages that were likely to fail,” said Acting Associate Attorney
General Stuart F. Delery. “This $5 billion settlement includes a $1.8
billion commitment to help repair the damage to homeowners and communities that
Goldman acknowledges resulted from its conduct, and it makes clear that no
institution may inflict this type of harm on investors and the American public
without serious consequences.”
“Today’s settlement is another
example of the department’s resolve to hold accountable those whose illegal
conduct resulted in the financial crisis of 2008,” said Principal Deputy
Assistant Attorney General Benjamin C. Mizer, head of the Justice Department’s
Civil Division. “Viewed in conjunction with the previous
multibillion-dollar recoveries that the department has obtained for similar
conduct, this settlement demonstrates the pervasiveness of the banking
industry’s fraudulent practices in selling RMBS, and the power of the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act as a tool for combatting this
type of wrongdoing.”
“Today’s settlement is yet another
acknowledgment by one of our leading financial institutions that it did not live
up to the representations it made to investors about the products it was
selling,” said U.S. Attorney Benjamin B. Wagner of the Eastern District of
California. “Goldman’s conduct in exploiting the RMBS market contributed
to an international financial crisis that people across the country, including
many in the Eastern District of California, continue to struggle to recover
from. I am gratified that this office has developed investigations, first
against JPMorgan Chase and now against Goldman Sachs, that have led to
significant civil settlements that hold bad actors in this market
accountable. The results obtained by this office and other members of the
RMBS Working Group continue to send a message to Wall Street that we remain
committed to pursuing those responsible for the financial crisis.”
The $2.385 billion civil monetary
penalty resolves claims under FIRREA, which authorizes the federal government
to impose civil penalties against financial institutions that violate various
predicate offenses, including wire and mail fraud. The settlement
expressly preserves the government’s ability to bring criminal charges against
Goldman, and does not release any individuals from potential criminal or civil
liability. In addition, as part of the settlement, Goldman agreed to
fully cooperate with any ongoing investigations related to the conduct covered
by the agreement.
Of the $875 million Goldman has
agreed to pay to settle claims by various other federal and state entities:
Goldman will pay $575 million to settle claims by the National Credit Union
Administration, $37.5 million to settle claims by the Federal Home Loan Bank of
Des Moines as successor to the Federal Home Loan Bank of Seattle, $37.5 million
to settle claims by the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago, $190 million to
settle claims by the state of New York, $25 million to settle claims by the
state of Illinois and $10 million to settle claims by the state of California.
Goldman will pay out the remaining
$1.8 billion in the form of relief to aid consumers harmed by its unlawful
conduct. $1.52 billion of that relief will be paid out pursuant to an
agreement with the United States that Goldman will provide loan modifications,
including loan forgiveness and forbearance, to distressed and underwater homeowners
throughout the country, as well as financing for affordable rental and for-sale
housing throughout the country. This agreement represents the largest
commitment in any RMBS agreement to provide financing for affordable housing—a
crucial need following the turmoil of the financial crisis. $280 million
will be paid out by Goldman pursuant to an agreement separately negotiated with
the state of New York.
The settlement includes a statement
of facts to which Goldman has agreed. That statement of facts describes
how Goldman made false and misleading representations to prospective investors
about the characteristics of the loans it securitized and the ways in which
Goldman would protect investors in its RMBS from harm (the quotes in the
following paragraphs are from that agreed-upon statement of facts, unless
otherwise noted):
- Goldman told investors in offering documents
that “[l]oans in the securitized pools were originated generally in
accordance with the loan originator’s underwriting guidelines,” other than
possible situations where “when the originator identified ‘compensating
factors’ at the time of origination.” But Goldman has today
acknowledged that, “Goldman received information indicating that, for certain
loan pools, significant percentages of the loans reviewed did not conform
to the representations made to investors about the pools of loans to be
securitized.”
- Specifically, Goldman has now acknowledged
that, even when the results of its due diligence on samples of loans from
those pools “indicated that the unsampled portions of the pools likely
contained additional loans with credit exceptions, Goldman typically did
not . . . identify and eliminate any additional loans with credit
exceptions.” Goldman has acknowledged that it “failed to do this
even when the samples included significant numbers of loans with credit
exceptions.”
- Goldman’s Mortgage Capital Committee, which
included senior mortgage department personnel and employees from Goldman’s
credit and legal departments, was required to approve every RMBS issued by
Goldman. Goldman has now acknowledged that “[t]he Mortgage Capital
Committee typically received . . . summaries of Goldman’s due diligence
results for certain of the loan pools backing the securitization,” but
that “[d]espite the high numbers of loans that Goldman had dropped from
the loan pools, the Mortgage Capital Committee approved every RMBS that
was presented to it between December 2005 and 2007.” As one example,
in early 2007, Goldman approved and issued a subprime RMBS backed by loans
originated by New Century Mortgage Corporation, after Goldman’s due
diligence process found that one of the loan pools to be securitized
included loans originated with “[e]xtremely aggressive underwriting,” and
where Goldman dropped 25 percent of the loans from the due diligence
sample on that pool without reviewing the unsampled 70 percent of the pool
to determine whether those loans had similar problems.
- Goldman has acknowledged that, for one August
2006 RMBS, the due diligence results for some of the loan pools resulted
in an “unusually high” percentage of loans with credit and compliance
defects. The Mortgage Capital Committee was presented with a summary
of these results and asked “How do we know that we caught
everything?” One transaction manager responded “we don’t.”
Another transaction manager responded, “Depends on what you mean by
everything? Because of the limited sampling . . . we don’t catch
everything . . .” Goldman has now acknowledged that the Mortgage
Capital Committee approved this RMBS for securitization without requiring
any further due diligence.
- Goldman made detailed representations to
investors about its “counterparty qualification process” for vetting loan
originators, and told investors and one rating agency that Goldman would
engage in ongoing monitoring of loan sellers. Goldman has now
acknowledged, however, that it “received certain negative information
regarding the originators’ business practices” and that much of this information
was not disclosed to investors.
- For example, Goldman has now acknowledged that
in late 2006 it conducted an internal analysis of the underwriting
guidelines of Fremont Investment & Loan (an originator), which found
many of Fremont’s guidelines to be “off market” or “at the aggressive end
of market standards.” Instead of disclosing its view of Fremont’s
underwriting, Goldman has acknowledged that it “[u]ndertook a significant marketing
effort” to tell investors about what Goldman called Fremont’s “commitment
to loan quality over volume” and “significant enhancements to Fremont
underwriting guidelines.” Fremont was shut down by federal
regulators within several months of these statements.
- In another example, Goldman was aware in
early-mid 2006 of certain issues with Countrywide Financial Corporation’s
origination process, including a pattern of non-responsiveness and
inability to provide sufficient staff to handle the numerous loan pools
Countrywide was selling. In April 2006, while Goldman was preparing
an RMBS backed by Countrywide loans for securitization, a Goldman mortgage
department manager circulated a “very bullish” equity research report that
recommended the purchase of Countrywide stock. Goldman’s head of due
diligence, who had just overseen the due diligence on six Countrywide
pools, responded “If they only knew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .”
- Meanwhile, as Goldman has acknowledged in this
statement of facts, “[Around the end of 2006], Goldman employees observed
signs of uncertainty in the residential mortgage market [and] by March
2007, Goldman had largely halted new purchases of subprime loan
pools.”
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Colleen Kennedy
and Kelli Taylor of the Eastern District of California investigated Goldman’s
conduct in connection with RMBS, with the support of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency’s Office of the Inspector General (FHFA-OIG) and the Office of
the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP).
“Goldman Sachs had a fiduciary
responsibility to investors, which they blatantly side stepped,” said Deputy
Inspector General for Investigation Rene Febles of FHFA-OIG. “They
knowingly put investors at risk and in so doing contributed significantly to
the financial crisis. The losses caused by this irresponsible behavior
deeply affected not only financial institutions but also taxpayers and one can
only hope that Goldman Sachs has learned the difference between risk and
deceit. Two Federal Home Loan Banks suffered significant losses so we are
pleased to see both entities receive a portion of this settlement. We
will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to hold those accountable
who have engaged in misconduct.”
“Goldman took $10 billion in TARP
bailout funds knowing that it had fraudulently misrepresented to investors the
quality of residential mortgages bundled into mortgage backed securities,” said
Special Inspector General Christy Goldsmith Romero for TARP. “Many of
these toxic securities were traded in a taxpayer funded bailout program that
was designed to unlock frozen credit markets during the crisis. While
crisis investigations take time, SIGTARP is committed to working with our law
enforcement partners to protect taxpayers and bring accountability and
justice.”
The settlement is part of the ongoing
efforts of President Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force’s RMBS
Working Group, which has recovered tens of billions of dollars on behalf of
American consumers and investors for claims against large financial
institutions arising from misconduct related to the financial crisis. The
RMBS Working Group brings together attorneys, investigators, analysts and staff
from multiple state and federal agencies, including the Department of Justice,
U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, the FBI, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), HUD’s Office of
Inspector General, the FHFA-OIG, SIGTARP, the Federal Reserve Board’s OIG, the
Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board, the Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network and multiple state Attorneys General offices around the
country. The RMBS Working Group is led by Director Joshua Wilkenfeld and
five co-chairs: Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Mizer, Assistant
Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell of the Justice Department’s Criminal
Division, Director Andrew Ceresney of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, U.S.
Attorney John Walsh of the District of Colorado and New York Attorney General
Eric Schneiderman. This settlement is the fifth multibillion-dollar RMBS
settlement announced by the working group.
Learn more about the RMBS Working Group and the
Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force at www.StopFraud.gov.
Monday 25 April 2016
Australian Federal Election 2016: is Nationals MP Kevin Hogan in trouble in Page?
Echo NetDaily, 22 April 2016:
A ReachTel survey conducted in Page on Tuesday night shows sitting Nationals MP Kevin Hogan in serious trouble, with ALP contender and former incumbent Janelle Saffin ahead by 56 to 44 per cent on a two-party preferred basis.
But the news gets worse for Mr Hogan, with as many as 33 per cent of Page voters saying they would be more likely to vote against the Coalition if the parties don’t re-endorse the Gonski education reforms……
Australian Federal Election 2016: can the Turnbull Government afford to aggravate aged pensioners in an election year budget?
Meme found on Twitter*
With less than a month to the release of the 2016-17 federal budget papers the Guvmin Gazette begins to use the tired old ploy of pointing a finger at the working poor, unemployed, single parents, aged and disability pensioners.
Using the journalist’s own calculation of the number of persons “wholly dependent” on Centrelink and Dept. of Veterans’ Affairs cash transfers reveals an unimpressive 27.8% of the 16,405,465 citizens the Australian Electoral Commission calculated were eligible to vote on 31 December 2015 and, even if one reworks the journalists numbers based on citizens who had actually registered to vote by the end of December, the percentage only rises to a still unimpressive 29.2%.
Because there is no clickbait story in those percentages, the final percentage figure is boosted by adding numbers allegedly representing both public sector employees and low paid private sector workers. This enabled the newspaper to erroneously headline the article as One in two voters is fully reliant on public welfare.
Excerpts from that article in The Australian on 16 April 2016:
Nearly half of voters in the looming federal election will rely entirely on government payments for their incomes, confronting Scott Morrison with a demographic and political powder keg as he frames a May 3 budget relying on spending restraint to rein in the deficit.
Analysis by The Weekend Australian has revealed that more than 44 per cent of voters, almost 6.4 million people, are either public sector employees (1.89 million) or wholly dependent on federal government pensions, allowances and parenting payments (4.48 million). The figure grows further when private sector workers who receive more in welfare than they pay in tax are added.
The Coalition holds seven of the 10 most welfare-dependent seats in the nation while Labor holds three……
The figures have emerged as Patrick McClure, whose review of the welfare system for the Abbott government called for drastic simplification of 75 federal payments and supplements, said about three quarters of his review had still not yet been taken up.
The extent of reliance on government payments for voters’ incomes has emerged as the Coalition and Labor are locked in a political battle over the Treasurer’s insistence that the government will rely on spending restraint and expanding the economy rather than lifting the overall tax burden to cut the deficit.
Ratings agency Moody’s raised the stakes ahead of the budget, declaring this week that the failure of the political system to deliver genuine spending restraint suggested the government had to consider tax increases to close the deficit gap. Mr Morrison stood firm yesterday, maintaining his position that “the government is not looking to increase the tax burden on the economy’’…..
The Nationals appear to be the most vulnerable to a crackdown on welfare and government spending.
The Weekend Australian’s analysis of social security by federal electorate shows the junior Coalition partner holds half of the 10 most welfare-dependent seats (which even excludes family tax benefit payments, which can be held concurrently with other payments). The 10 seats have between 40,000 and 50,000 wholly welfare dependent voters out of a total electorate of about 105,000 voters. Another three are held by Labor and two by the Liberals.
Those relying on
government payments in Nationals seats tend to receive age and disability
pensions while Labor seats are disproportionately home to family tax benefit
recipients. Liberal seats tend to have a higher proportion of holders of the
Commonwealth Seniors Health Card (a benefit for older Australians not eligible
for the Age Pension). The unemployed (receiving Newstart or Youth Allowance
(Other) recipients) are relatively evenly spread.....
What the article also doesn’t say is that average social assistance in cash transfers is much wider than the categories stated and government money received by individuals with their own incorporated business income comes in at est. $73 per week per person, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
On the NSW Far North Coast the largest single group of persons eligible to vote and receiving federal government cash transfers in June 2015 were aged pensioners.
Cowper (Nationals seat) – 23,261 persons
Page (Nationals seat) – 22,512 persons
Richmond (Labor seat) – 21,238 persons
TOTAL – 67,011 persons.
Australia-wide the total number of aged pensioners as of June 2015 was 2,486,195 individuals – of which an estimated 646,000 are currently receiving a part-pension.
All of these people have relatives and a significant number would be full or part-time carers of their older family member.
The Australian is right in one respect – that’s a demographic and political powder keg facing both the Prime Minister and Treasurer in an election year.
However, backgrounding the Murdoch media with ideology-based statistical spin is not going to impress voters after that particular strategy was worked to death during the Abbott leadership years.
Footnote
* It is possible (based on the American experience) that around 5% of Australian online users 65 years of age and over use Twitter.
** In the NSW Northern Rivers region aged pensioners (potentially eligible to vote in June 2015) by local government area (LGA):
Ballina LGA – 6,636 persons
Byron LGA – 3,059 persons
Clarence Valley LGA – 9,341 persons (9,304 of these individuals living in Grafton City & region, Maclean, Yamba and Iluka)
Kyogle LGA – 1,357 persons
Lismore LGA – 5,389 persons
Richmond Valley LGA – 3,778 persons
Tweed LGA – 16,229 persons
TOTAL – 40,400 persons.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)