on 07-02-2016 04:14 PM
Labor senator Sam Dastyari has warned there is something "fundamentally wrong and rotten" with Australia's entire political system, claiming there are 10 huge companies with so much power and influence they have killed proper democratic process at the federal level in this country.
In a firebrand speech in Canberra this week, delivered with the enthusiasm of someone with their eye on the party leadership, Mr Dastyari told a Politics in the Pub audience that he thought he understood power before coming to Canberra as a senator.
But his time in Parliament House has opened his eyes to the realities of the political-business nexus in Australia in a way he could not have anticipated.
"You will not find somebody who came more from the ALP machine than me," Mr Dastyari told the audience, in a recording obtained by Fairfax Media.
"I'm a product of the machine like you would not believe. I joined the Labor Party when I was 16. I took over my first branches by the time I was 17 ... [so] I thought I understood the brutality of politics simply by my time in the NSW Labor Party and my time in the NSW Labor machine."
"[But] none of that braced me for an understanding of just how concentrated, brutal and aggressive a handful of businesses operate [in Australia], and the real corporate power where it actually rests in this country," he said.
He then claimed there are 10 companies that wield the most incredible amount of power in Australia, to the point where it has stifled proper democratic and economic progress.
"Four banks, and we all know who they are – the Commonwealth Bank, NAB, Westpac, and ANZ – three big mining companies, in Rio Tinto, BHP Billiton, and Fortescue Metals, you've got your two big grocery chains, and you've got your big telco, which is Telstra," Mr Dastyari said.
They have "unprecedented concentration of corporate influence" in Australia, he said.
"The entire political debate has become so dominated by the interests that they're pushing, and the agenda that they're pushing. And [we've] ended up with this complete crowding out of a proper political discourse in this country because there is one sectional interest that is so much louder than every other voice out there combined."
Thing is, what would he do to counter the power these corporations have if the were the Leader of the ALP?
on 07-02-2016 05:11 PM
Did the Labor senator-mention the trade unions?
on 07-02-2016 05:38 PM
Icy---through the sunday ..beer goggles-noticed i have posted on a political thread.
Something i promised myself not to do again.
Im sure other political followers will post-disregard mine ..ta............Richo.
on 07-02-2016 06:33 PM
You can hope, Richo
on 07-02-2016 06:49 PM
on 07-02-2016 08:08 PM
Donations from companies / union dues .
on 07-02-2016 09:27 PM
No organisation or company should be allowed to donate to any political party. When an election is called the leader of each party should be aloowed one 15 minute spot on TV to state their platform and one full page advert in each of the major newspapers - these to be paid for out of government revenue. MP's should get one full page in the local newspaper in their electorate.Any advertsing other than that should be via public meetings and letterboxes drops and paid for by the candidtaes themselves.
on 08-02-2016 08:46 AM
Dastayri is a political gadfly, he's everywhere trying to lift his profile. He's a Labor machine man who was parachuted into parliament. He's worth ignoring.
on 08-02-2016 08:47 AM
Does that apply to unions also?