Saturday 16 February 2008

ALP increases poll lead prior to saying sorry

According to the latest Roy Morgan Research poll of federal voting intentions released on 15 February 2008:
"With much talk and anticipation surrounding the Labor Government-led apology to the stolen generation of Aborigines, ALP primary support is 54% (up 5% from the previous face-to-face Morgan Poll) and L-NP support is 33% (down 3%), the latest face-to-face Morgan Poll (conducted February 2/3 & 9/10) finds.

On a two-party preferred basis, the ALP has extended its already significant lead by 5%: 62.5% cf. 37.5%."

Wonder how the Coalition is performing if you factor in that Clayton's apology from the Opposition Leader?

A link to that IR bill which has the Coalition frothing at the mouth

Although the Opposition Deputy Leader's hissy fits at Question Time have been rather amusing, they have hardly added to our understanding of how WorkChoices will come to an end.
Here is a link for those interested.

Morrie does a mass mail-out to bail out his latest privatisation scheme

Morris Iemma has just mailed out a letter to all NSW pensioners giving them an "iron-clad guarantee" that "my Government will continue to provide the $112 annual rebate on electricity bills for all pensioners" after privatisation of the State's electricity supplies.
Well that's settled. I'm vastly reassured. Hold on there a minute?
There's no mention of the fact that Morrie's "my Government" legally only lasts until the next election (John Howard taught us that with his weasel words on the GST).
Neither is there any guarantee that power company service fees and charges will not rise, and rise substantially, in the first three years of the electricity privatisation roll-out.
Missing also is any assurance that the cost to consumers per kilowatt hour will not start a sharp upward spiral within five years.
If other state privatisations are any indication, then the annual pensioner rebate is unlikely to pay for even one quarter's electricity account in the future.
Yes, Morrie my little mate, your fine pensioner rebate promises aren't worth the paper they're printed on.  

Friday 15 February 2008

Yaegl woman named 2008 Clarence Valley Woman of the Year

It was nice to see Lenore Parker recognised for her tireless community work and longtime support of reconciliation.
On 13 February 2008 she became Clarence Valley Woman of the Year.
Ms. Parker was nominated by her daughter, well-known artist Frances Parker.
"Ms Parker was yesterday humble in her acceptance of the honour, acknowledging the contributions of other nominees and the generations of women who walked before her.
The Yaegl woman said she was honoured to accept the award, but emphasised she was doing so on behalf of all women."

Coles and Woolworths show an unexpectedly racist underbelly

With the Howard and Rudd governments' Northern Territory Intervention rapidly devolving into a punitive and racist quagmire, it is more than interesting to note that the giant supermarket chains Coles and Woolworths have enthusiastically entered into the ration book system which so bedevils and taints the recent practice of indigenous income management.
Calling a spade a spade, one would have to point out to these supermarket chains that they are knowingly colluding in institutional racism.
 
Extracts from 14 February 2008 Senate Hansard at page 76 (the bolding is my own).
Senator Siewert:
Is the government aware that income quarantining in
the Northern Territory is viewed by the community as
going back to ration days and is causing huge hardships
in the NT?.......................quarantined money is being
given to people in the form of gift cards, that aged pensioners
including a lady who has worked for 48
years, has been retired for 10 years and has raised 10
kidsare being subjected to quarantining and that parents
are unable to send food money to children who are
away attending college? How does the government see
ration cards as a new beginning? Isn't the Northern
Territory intervention an example of an old approach
which is clearly failing? Will the government commit
to immediate review of the NT intervention?...........
People are being provided with a ration card. By the
way, this is a copy of the card people are given by
Coles. This is how big it is—it is small. It says 'Coles gift
card'. What an insult to the Aboriginal people of
the Northern Territory. Mothers at the meeting yesterday
were outlining the extreme shame that they feel
when they are standing in a queue at Coles or Woolies
they are the two main places you can get a card
for. They are standing there with no cash in their hands
and they are told that they have to take some of the
things back because they cannot buy them on the card.
They are standing there with people who have cash,
and they do not. They described the deep shame they
feel. It takes them back to the ration days, when they
can remember that their parents, in some cases, were
given rations in old sugar bags. That is how these people
in the Northern Territory feel. It is outrageous."
 
On 12 February 2008 thousands of people marched in Canberra against this legislation.
Me, I'm going to make sure I spend a lot less at any supermarket chain which takes ration cards for goods and, if the Rudd Government doesn't get it's finger out and roll back this racist legislation then it won't be seeing my support at the ballot box.

Promises, promises, Mr. Hockey

I seem to remember that about three weeks out from the November 2007 polling day, Joe Hockey (then Federal Minister for Workplace Relations) flamboyantly vowed that he would quit the front bench if the Government made substantial changes to WorkChoices legislation.
Well, the Government may be of a different hue this year and Joe may be sitting on the shadow front bench, but will he keep his promise now that Julia Gillard has introduced the first bill to start dismantling WorkChoices?
Nah, didn't think so. :-) The man who tried to wish nation-wide AWAs on us all just won't go away. Even Kevin Rudd's 2008-09 parliamentary salary freeze won't shift him - the private sector job offers just aren't all that attractive yet. Or is it that he sees himself as Opposition leader?

Thursday 14 February 2008

The Brethren still have friends in high places

Question: Just how stupid is Brendan Nelson?

Answer: Very!

He provided first-hand proof of his idiocy when he spoke in reply to The Apology in parliament on Wednesday. However, confirmation that his idiocy knows no bounds has arrived in the news that he sponsored a leader of the Exclusive Brethren sect getting a special pass to Parliament, thus giving the Brethren unfettered access to the corridors of the legislature.

The Sydney Morning Herald (14/02/2008) reports that Nelson and former Tasmanian Liberal MP Michael Ferguson sponsored a pass application for Brethren elder Stephen Hales, who is the brother of the sect's Australian leader, Bruce Hales, to roam the corridors of power in Canberra.

Dr Nelson's days as Leader of the Opposition are surely numbered.

Read the Herald's report at http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/brethren-lobbyists-given-passes/2008/02/13/1202760399016.html

$50M in wasted government spending and I'm so glad

One of the most pleasing things the Rudd Government has done was to scrap the Howard Government's pseudo national identity card, the Access Card.
The government department set up to facilitate this card, which spent more than $50 million on consultants, administration and advertising, is gone.
At least 18 million Australians can rest easy until the next time this daft idea surfaces.
The estimated $1.178 billion required to roll-out the Access Card will now stay in government coffers to be spent on other policies.  
"Senator Ludwig says the money will boost savings and help fund the government's promises in education and health." A much better idea with positive outcomes.
The Access Card and Consumer Privacy Taskforce discussion papers and received submissions revealed that the card was never going to address the Coalition's favourite over-rated bogeyman, welfare fraud, or the estimated $100 million in annual 'losses' due to Centrelink administrative error.

Nelson loses it, Tuckey abuses it, Schultz who?

Personally I think Opposition leader Brendan Nelson lost it during the second half of his speech on the floor of Parliament yesterday supporting Parliament's apology to the Stolen Generations, but you may have another opinion.
 
However the most unedifying moment of the day was the churlish boycott of the apology by WA Liberal Wilson Tuckey and NSW Liberal Alby Schultz.
 
I did catch sight of the Nationals Luke Hartsuyker, local member for Cowper, as he sat on the new Opposition front bench. At least he turned up, even if he appeared rather po faced during yesterday's historic proceedings.