Saturday, 1 December 2018
Quotes of the Week
“Some say the Liberal Party is dead and personally I do not care whether
it is or not. Something will rise, phoenix-like, from its trust fund trash
ashes. My kids and I have survived a helluva a lot of vicious Liberal Party
policy, and will again. But if the Liberal Party is dead, I will be the first
to dance on its grave. Good riddance, horrible people.” ” [Academic
and blogger Ingrid Matthews writing
in oecomuse,
27 November 2018]
"The
parliament is part time under this prime minister, but the civil war in
the Liberal Party is a full-time occupation." [Opposition Leader & Labor MP for Maribyrnong
Bill Shorten, House of
Representatives Hansard,
29 November 2018]
Labels:
Liberal Party of Australia
Tweets of the Week
Here’s the moment where the NSW Parliament voted tonight to introduce new laws to fast track children from foster care into adoption. As the Bill passed, you could hear loud jokes from Liberal members about wanting to “hurry up so we can get out of here and enjoy Christmas” pic.twitter.com/WW1p1bTbD1— Padraic Gibson (@paddygibson) November 22, 2018
We can’t allow this trauma to be inflicted on further generations of Aboriginal kids. Help us to STOP forced adoption of Aboriginal children in NSW. https://t.co/e6FyRbl5UM— AbSec (@AbSecNSW) November 29, 2018
The #FamilyMatters Report 2018 was released yesterday, full of data from across Australia. It finds that not only have governments failed to turn the tide on #Aboriginal child removals, but the outcomes for children and families are getting worse. https://t.co/KbSgABO7Yt pic.twitter.com/eHZUOfFk53— AbSec (@AbSecNSW) November 28, 2018
Labels:
#BerejiklianGovernmentFAIL
Friday, 30 November 2018
A not so new lobbyist on the block - just tired, old Lib-Nats supporters in a poor disguise
www.advanceaustralia.org.au |
ABC News, 21 November 2018:
Australia has a new
conservative lobby group that wants to knock on your door, get in your ear and
ultimately swing your vote.
Advance Australia's
named with a nod to our anthem and the hope it can rival the powerful left-wing
lobby Get Up!
It has some prominent
backers and a bold mission — but can it succeed?
The group's financially
and ideologically backed by a group of prominent business leaders including
storage king Sam Kennard, businessman and former ABC chairman Maurice Newman
and the Australian Jewish Association's Dr David Adler.
Its national director is
Gerard Benedet, who was the chief of staff to former Queensland LNP Treasurer
Tim Nicholls in a previous life.
"We're not aligned
to any political party," he told 7.30.
"We're an
independent movement of mainstream Australians, who are determined to protect,
advance and defend mainstream values and freedoms."
Get Up! National
Director Paul Oosting says that's rubbish.
"Advance Australia
is a group of rich white men on a campaign to make themselves richer," he
said.
"They want to work
on issues that are in their own self-interest, that are the vested interests of
the corporate lobby they represent."
The
Monthly, 26
November 2018:
The quest for a
right-wing opponent to GetUp has been going on for almost as long as the quest
for a right-wing Phillip Adams at the ABC – and with about as much success.
The latest wizard wheeze
come from a stratospherically elite clique of rich, bored men looking for a
hobby. It includes men like Maurice Newman, who preaches that climate science
is a fraudulent conspiracy ensuring the establishment of a totalitarian
socialist dictatorship under the United Nations, and James Power, currently
fighting to prevent women from becoming members of Brisbane’s Tattersall’s
Club.
After diligent market
research, they have settled on the unoriginal name of Advance Australia, which
is not only plagiarism but deeply misleading – the only way they want Australia
to advance is either jogging on the spot, or, preferably, stumbling backwards.
They claim to be
protecting mainstream Australian values, but just about the only ones they have
come up with thus far are maintaining superannuation tax lurks for the rich,
keeping tax deductions for those who have not paid tax in the first place, and
not moving Australia Day from January 26. To date, mainstream Australia has
resisted the urge to storm the barricades on their behalf.
The organisation’s
oligarchs are predicting that they will have a million members in time for the
federal election, but are coy about how they plan to recruit these hordes.
Perhaps they are assuming that sheer weight of money, of which they have
plenty, will suffice, much in the way that Malcolm Turnbull bought his
Wentworth preselection and, before then, Kerry Packer bought Australian
cricket.
But mass campaigning
does not work that way; buying up a rent-a-crowd is hardly likely to move
swinging voters. You need a grassroots movement of enthusiasts and idealists,
and for that you need not a top-heavy pyramid, but a bottom-up structure based
on volunteers – like GetUp.
Labels:
lobby groups,
Queensland LNP
Call to protect infants from dangerous infectious disease, whooping cough
The Daily Examiner, 27 November 2018, p3:
NSW Health is urging all
pregnant women and new parents to be aware of the symptoms of whooping cough
and to ensure they and their children are vaccinated on time.
Despite almost 95 per
cent of infants in NSW now vaccinated against the disease, outbreaks still
occur every three to four years as community immunity wanes, and recent high
numbers indicate an outbreak might be on the way.
Dr Vicky Sheppeard, NSW
Health’s Director of Communicable Diseases, said that in October 2018 almost
800 people in NSW were notified with whooping cough (pertussis), the highest
number since October 2016.
Acting director of North
Coast Public Health Greg Bell said a similar situation was emerging in Northern
NSW where there have been 36 cases of whooping cough reported in the past four
weeks.
While these levels of
whooping cough across Northern NSW are similar to the averages of the previous
five years, pertussis notifications are trending upwards.
The latest Australian
Immunisation Register quarterly report shows that at September 2018 90.4 per
cent of five-year-olds and 88.9 per cent of 12-month-olds in Northern NSW Local
Health District were fully vaccinated.
These figures represent
an increase on vaccination rates in 2010 under the-then North Coast Area Health
Service, when 84.9 per cent of children aged 5 and 87 per cent of 12-month-olds
were fully vaccinated.
Even in highly
vaccinated populations it is not possible to eliminate whooping cough…..
“The aim of whooping cough control is to
protect infants, who are at highest risk of severe disease or death if they
contract whooping cough. Whooping cough vaccination is effective in preventing
severe infection.”
Labels:
children,
disease outbreak,
health,
New South Wales
Thursday, 29 November 2018
This is the man Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison admires because of his trade policies
Almost
everyone could see this coming except US President Donald Trump and he had been
repeatedly warned that his imposition of tariffs, using anti-globalisation
sentiment as an excuse, would spring back and hit American manufacturing where
it hurts.
Almost
everyone – but not Australian Prime Minister and Liberal MP for Cook Scott Morrison who on 17 September 2018
was
quoted thus:
Spruiking the kind of
populist credentials that swept Trump to power, Morrison said many people in
both the US and Australia feel left behind by the powerful economic forces of
globalisation, which have brought massive wealth to some but left others
feeling poorer and disenfranchised.
“That’s what we get. The
president gets that. I get it,” the prime minister told the Times columnist
Maureen Dowd.
Morrison described Trump
as “very practical” and as someone “who’s not going to waste a day”.
“I like that about him.
I like that about him a lot, actually.’’
Here
is that oh so “very practical” Donald Trump this week.
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
27 November 2018:
On Monday local time,
the iconic carmaker announced it would close assembly plants in Ohio, Michigan,
Maryland and in the Canadian province of Ontario. The cuts amount to almost 15
per cent of the General Motors workforce.
A big part of Trump's
appeal in the so-called "rust belt" in the midwest was his promise to
bring back stable and well-paying manufacturing jobs, especially in the auto
industry. The General Motors plant at Lordstown, Ohio, is located in a county
that recorded a 29 percentage point swing towards Trump at the 2016 election.
So before heading to
Mississipi for a campaign rally, Trump said he had expressed his displeasure to
General Motors Chief Executive Mary Barra.
"I was very
tough," Trump said. "I spoke with her and I said, 'This country has
done a lot for General Motors – you'd better get back in there soon.' That's
Ohio.
"They say the Chevy
Cruze is not selling well. I say, 'Well get a car that is selling well and put
it back in' ... I'm not happy about it."
Trump said he expected
General Motors to start manufacturing another type of car in Ohio and that it
"had better" do so.
In an interview
with The Wall Street Journal on Monday, Trump said he told General
Motors: "You’re playing around with the wrong person."
Trump will this week
travel to Argentina for G20 meetings, where he will hold a highly-anticipated
meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping focussed on trade.
At the height of the
Global Financial Crisis, General Motors received a government bailout that eventually
cost US taxpayers $US11.2 billion ($15.5 billion in today's money).
But the President has
slapped a 25 per cent tariff on imported steel from China, which automakers
said has already increased commodity costs, and threatened more including on
auto parts. Car manufacturers said earlier in the year that tariffs could bring
job losses.
Trump has since boasted
about a renaissance in the industry thanks to his tax cuts and the removal of
environmental regulations put in place by his Democratic predecessor Barack
Obama.
In a tweet about
Michigan in August he said: "Lots of car and other companies moving
back!"
In 2017 he said
high-quality manufacturing jobs were no longer leaving Ohio.
"They’re all coming
back," he said at a rally in the state. "Don’t move. Don’t sell your
house."
Labels:
#ScottMorrisonFAIL,
anti-globalisation,
industry,
jobs,
trade,
US policy
Australian Politics 2018: let's leave the premises as fast as possible and don't show our LNP faces in parliament until after the federal election
It's official - The Morrison Coalition Government is a lame duck federal government incapable of functioning.
Why?
The Australian Parliament goes into end of year recess on 6 December and does not come back until February 2019.
After the opening Parliament on the later than usual date of 12 February 2019, the House of Representatives will probably sit for no more than seven days in total. There appears to be no plan to conduct parliamentary business after that except perhaps to table the 2019-20 Budget Papers between 2- 4 April.
The Senate is scheduled to sit for two days (11th or 12th and 14th) with four estimates hearings beginning on the 18th. The senate does not sit in March and only sits for one day in early April.
Parliament needs to be dissolved sometime in early April to comfortably meet the requirements of a 2019 national election timetable for the joint election of the House of Representatives and half the Senate.
Parliament needs to be dissolved sometime in early April to comfortably meet the requirements of a 2019 national election timetable for the joint election of the House of Representatives and half the Senate.
As it appears from the article below that interim Prime Minister and Liberal MP for Cook Scott Morrison is ready to go to a general election in May, the parliamentary timetable looks suspiciously as if Coalition Government MPs and senators intend to hide from national scrutiny as much as possible before polling day.
Given that the Morrison Government is now two MPs shy of a majority (having only 74 MPs in the 150-strong House of Representatives), closing down parliament in this way also means that the Labor Opposition and cross benches will not have an opportunity to pass legislation in their own right in a parliament the Lib-Nats government of the day no longer controls.
Given that the Morrison Government is now two MPs shy of a majority (having only 74 MPs in the 150-strong House of Representatives), closing down parliament in this way also means that the Labor Opposition and cross benches will not have an opportunity to pass legislation in their own right in a parliament the Lib-Nats government of the day no longer controls.
The West Australian, 27 November 2018:
Scott Morrison has effectively
revealed the date of the next election just as one of his backbenchers
announced she was leaving the Liberal Party to sit on the parliamentary
crossbench.
In a dramatic 20 minutes
in Canberra, the PM confirmed the Federal Budget would be brought forward and
handed down on April 2 next year.
Saying “you can do the
maths”, the date means the Federal election will be held on either May 11 or
18. May 18 was the last available date for a full House and half Senate
election.
Mr Morrison said the
Budget would show a surplus.
In this year’s Budget,
the Government was already expecting a small $2.2 billion surplus for the
2019-20 financial year.
However, a surge in tax
revenue and a tight rein on spending is expected to show a bigger than expected
surplus. That should be confirmed in the mid-year Budget update that will be
released on December 17.
Wednesday, 28 November 2018
The climate change risk coastal towns and villages don't discuss enough
Financial
Review, 15
November 2018:
Insurance giant IAG has
warned a failure to reduce greenhouse gas emissions could result in a world
that is "pretty much uninsurable", with poorer communities likely to
bear the brunt of the effects.
In Australia, IAG said
temperature increases of more than 3 degrees would expose greater swaths of
Queensland to cyclones and flooding, while a rise of more than 4 degrees could
make the risks to insurers prohibitive.
Timaru Herald, 26 May 2018, p.7:
Anyone now considering a
coastal property should know what sea level rise is.
If they already own one,
they shouldn't be surprised if buyers expect to know how it might affect them.
It's time to accept
these properties may come with some risk, and let government and other agencies
get on with the job of preparing without worrying about court battles over lost
capital gains.
It's an inconvenient
truth, but it appears that the value of flood- prone property will go down and
many coastal towns will face a new threat.
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
14 February 2018:
If any Australian
company needs to come clean over its climate risks, it’s QBE.
Not just so shareholders
can understand how secure (or not) their capital is as climate impacts
intensify.
This is about
Australians being able to see just how perilous our future has become without
urgent action to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
Last
October QBE said it expected 2017 to be the costliest year in the history of
the global insurance industry, flagging a $US600 million ($767 million) hit
to its pre-tax earnings. They weren't wrong, nor were they alone.
The triple-whammy of
hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria hitting the US and Caribbean contributed to a
record $US135 billion in payouts globally on natural disasters. Wildfires in
California made things worse and, for Australian general insurers, Tropical
Cyclone Debbie added to the pain.
Tom Herbstein, of
Cambridge University’s insurance industry-funded project ClimateWise, summed it
up in saying “climate change fundamentally challenges the existing insurance
business model.”
And understandably there
have been some drastic responses from within the industry. Hannover Re was even
forced to sell its entire stock portfolio, worth €953 million ($A1.5 billion) ,
prompted by natural disaster claims.
Costly natural hazards
are nothing new to QBE or indeed any of Australia’s big three general insurers.
Last year, individual
large claims and natural hazards cost QBE $1.7 billion, or 15 per cent of the
company’s net earned premium.
Compare this to the
seven year average of 8.1 per cent to 2010, and you get an idea why QBE called
it “unprecedented”.
Additionally, over the
past decade, IAG under-provisioned for natural hazard claims by almost $1
billion while Suncorp under-provisioned by $1.9 billion.
It appears none of our
general insurers are keeping up with the pace of climate change.
BACKGROUND
Excerpt from the
Insurance
Council of Australia’s Climate Change Policy:
The role of general
insurance is to assist policyholders to recover from losses, such as those
caused by extreme weather events. With expertise in risk management developed
over hundreds of years of operation, general insurers play a critical role in
communicating, managing and responding to the the risks that many policyholders
face today, as well as how those risks may evolve under a changing climate.
It follows that the
general insurance industry naturally supports community policy adjustments that
will enhance resilience to extreme weather, as well as measures that may assist
to reduce emissions.
Using the industry’s
expertise in the pricing, transfer and management of risk, the following
activities being undertaken by the industry are intended to assist
policy-makers and communities to address the implications of climate change:
Maintain
the strong prudential foundations underpinning the Australian market, to ensure
that the industry continues to be able to respond to large disaster events when
they occur.
Manage
the commercial, individual and community-level risks posed by climate change
via innovative risk-transfer solutions.
Ensure
that risk-transfer solutions deliver competitive price signals, through risk
based pricing, that assist communities and decision makers to recognise and
adapt to current and emerging extreme weather risks.
Assist
to increase community resilience over time by sharing industry expertise that
will help policy decision makers and the community to:
Reduce
exposures by making development control decisions for exposed locations that
are appropriate for both the location and the planned life cycle of the
development, accounting for the increased risk posed by the changing climate.
Reduce
vulnerability to natural disasters by implementing localised defensive
infrastructure where necessary to achieve an acceptable residual risk of damage
to an exposed community.
Reduce
vulnerability to natural disasters by improving building codes to ensure that
built structures remain viable following predictable events over their planned
life cycle, accounting for the increased risk posed by the changing climate.
Assist
policy-makers to understand the long term economic implications of climate
change, as well as the benefits of any appropriate emission mitigation schemes,
by providing credible data on current exposures and vulnerabilities, as
measured by the general insurance industry.
Assist
to implement practical solutions to emission reduction strategies, through the
consideration of risk-transfer products that incentivise solutions to be
brought to market by other industries.
This policy was approved
by the ICA's Board on August 4, 2016.
Coast
Adapt, 2015:
Climate change threatens
the viability of insurance in Australia and across the globe.
Despite a number of
recent ‘quiet’ years, a trend of increasing losses is apparent in Australia and
globally due to extreme weather events.
Insurers are covering at
a loss some parts of Australia that are considered disaster-prone.
Labels:
climate change,
insurance,
natural disasters,
sea levels
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