Thursday, 28 February 2008
Sick to the back teeth: Iemma. Ditto: NSW voters
Wednesday, 27 February 2008
Pollies spend up big on travel before leaving office
The Times reported:
Pollies spend up big on travel before leaving office
They were on the way out but they went up, up and away at our expense first.
Retiring politicians fill nine of the top 11 places of backbenchers with the heaviest use of taxpayer-funded overseas travel for the first half of the 2007 election year, according to Department of Finance figures.
Those leaving Parliament (seven MPs and two senators, who do not go until June 30 this year) shared in a total of more than $2.5million spent by federal politicians on overseas travel between January 1 and June 30, 2007.
Leading the retirees' pack (five Coalition, three Labor and one Democrat) was the former Liberal minister Senator Kay Patterson at $37,082.24.
Then came Labor's Ann Corcoran, already rolled for preselection for the safe Melbourne seat of Isaacs when she racked up $30,659.12.
She was followed by Liberal Kay Elson, who retired from the Queensland seat of Forde, at $28,540.14, ahead of NSW National Ian Causley, at $28,382.24. Mr Causley was deputy speaker in the last parliament.The 13 government front-benchers totalled $1,663,673.74, well over half the $2,568,277.31 spent by all 226 federal Members and senators.
The portfolios that commanded that their ministers travel led the way, with former foreign minister Alexander Downer at $380,853.64, followed by former trade minister Warren Truss at $305,773.66, former prime minister John Howard at $238,809.55 and former defence minister Brendan Nelson at $222,056.04.
Read the report at:
http://canberra.yourguide.com.au/articles/1191186.html?src=topstories
What do I say to Iemma's plan to privatise NSW electricity supplies?
That loud enough for you, Mr. Iemma? Get the picture yet?
Penny Wong rolls up her sleeves and gets on with the job
I just know that the 2020 Summit will bomb - Rudd's invited Tim Costello!
Tuesday, 26 February 2008
Kevin Andrews proves just how dumb the Libs are
- JOHN Howard wanted to limit unfair dismissal laws to businesses with more than 200 employees and abolish all minimum wage classifications.
- Coalition MPs were also collectively blind to the political danger of a policy that potentially tore away entitlements.
- On the day the package was presented to the joint party room meeting, Mr Andrews received a standing ovation.
- Mr Andrews said he was not trying to blame the former PM. "(In the end) this was a cabinet decision and we discussed WorkChoices I suspect more than any other piece of legislation that I can recall," he said.
- But other senior Liberals said Mr Howard was blind when it came to WorkChoices, and in the last few months of government would "erupt" if anyone tried to suggest there was still a problem.
- Mr Andrews said some members of cabinet were more determined to push as far as possible on WorkChoices than others.
- The revelations by Mr Andrews suggest Senator Minchin was reflecting the view of the cabinet when he apologised to the HR Nicholls society early in 2006 for the government not going far enough.
Share in $1,000 by guessing the number of weeks until Brendan Nelson loses Liberal leadership
"Can you rise to the challenge? The Monthly invites predictions on how long Brendan Nelson's leadership of the Opposition will last, before being ended by any event - such as his elevation to prime minister, his resignation, or a party decision. In the second part of the question, The Monthly asks who you think will be Nelson's successor as leader of the Opposition.
Respondents who correctly forecast the answers to both parts of the question will share in $1000 cash. (A note to those who presume that the public mood can't shift dramatically: consider the unlikely ascensions of Ronald Reagan, Arnold Schwarzenegger and John Howard.)"
Enter the competition here.