Diary of our stinking opposition

Labor frontbencher Andrew Leigh shifts position on previous support for a GP fee

Labor's shadow assistant treasurer Andrew Leigh was once a strong supporter of a compulsory fee for visits to the doctor - a policy now slammed by the opposition as a “GP tax” that would hurt the community’s most vulnerable.

 

But in a 2003 Sydney Morning Herald article Dr Leigh, then a PhD student in economics at Harvard University, argued a Medicare co-payment was “hardly a radical idea”.

 

“As health researchers have shown, cost-less medical care means that people go to the doctor even when they don't need to, driving up the cost for all of us," Dr Leigh and co-author Richard Holden wrote.

 

“But there's a better way of operating a health system, and the change should hardly hurt at all.

 

“As economists have shown, the ideal model involves a small co-payment - not enough to put a dent in your weekly budget, but enough to make you think twice before you call the doc."

 

Dr Leigh argued the fee should be enough to deter “frivolous GP visits”, but not enough to limit genuine preventive care. The fee should apply to everyone, including pensioners, except those who are chronically ill, he wrote.

 

Dr Leigh, who has opposed the proposal in media appearances over recent weeks, told Fairfax Media: "Since 2003, a lot has changed in the health care system, and I've changed my view on co-payments.

 

 “A GP co-payment was originally a Hawke government proposal led by Brian Howe, a member of the Left faction,” he said.

 

“As long as it is applied fairly across the community, a co-payment is a perfectly valid policy measure. If Andrew Leigh, before he had to toe the party line, recognised that then I welcome his contribution to the debate. I respect Andrew Leigh as a sensible economist.”

 

On Saturday, Dr Leigh, a former professor of economics at the Australian National University, distanced himself from an article he wrote in 2004 supporting fee deregulation for universities – another policy opposed by Labor.

 

http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/labor-frontbencher-andrew-leigh-shifts-positio...

 

Yes, it’s the very well respected ALP whey-faced Dr Andrew Leigh who virtually declared his previous books and speeches as mere works of fiction. This brings into sharp focus Dr Leigh's economics degree.

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BATTLE OF THE 4rse HOLES

 

Bill Shorten: "I'd really like to get into your pants."

Tanya Plibersek: "No thanks. There's already one 4rsehole in there."

 

Daniel Frank Katz's photo.
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LOL.....no self respecting woman would have anything to do with this poor excuse....then again Woman Wink

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BILL SHORTEN & TANYA PLIBERSEK GO TO THE MOVIES.

 

Shorten: Can I have two tickets please?

 

Clerk at movies: For Romeo and Juliet?


Shorten: No, for Tanya and me.

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AWU scam: Shorten refuses to be drawn on Cesar Melhem allegations

 

Bill Shorten today refused to be drawn on how much he knew about the alleged backroom dealings of political ally Cesar Melhem which saw low-paid workers being sold out for political power.

 

Embattled Labour MP Mr Melhem, a long-time union figure who succeeded Mr Shorten as state secretary of the Australian Workers’ Union, this morning stood down as Victorian government whip over claims he was behind a deal that saw worker entitlements being traded away in return for phantom members.

 

The royal commission heard the AWU, under Mr Melhem, gave away $6 million in entitlements for cleaners in return for $75,000 and signed up the phantom members by charging fees of more than $225,000 disguised as payments for safety training.

 

Mr Shorten today repeatedly refused to answer if he knew about the scam and would only say he had “zero tolerance” for corruption.

 

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/industrial-relations/awu-scam-shorten-refuses-to-be...

 

How very edifying. These are the people that the Mafia refused to provide a job for.

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Bill Shorten apologises for lying to Neil Mitchell about his role in Julia Gillard's downfall

 

Bill Shorten has conceded he lied to 3AW Mornings in 2013 about his role in Julia Gillard's downfall.

 

Neil Mitchell realised he'd been misled while watching The Killing Season, which detailed a meeting between Mr Shorten and Kevin Rudd during the Midwinter Ball on June 19, 2013.

 

Narrator: Kevin Rudd used the cover of the night for a secret meeting with Bill Shorten.

 

Former Rudd advisor, Patrick Gorman: Kevin makes an early exit ... and heads up to Richard Marles' office where Bill Shorten is.

 

Mr Rudd: There was no way in the world I was going to move unless Bill Shorten was going to come with me.

 

Two days later, in a heated interview with Neil Mitchell, Bill Shorten said he wasn't interested in leadership gossip and denied he had met with Mr Rudd.

 

"I haven't spoken to Kevin Rudd about the leadership," Shorten said.

 

"I continue to support our Prime Minister, full stop."

 

On Wednesday, Neil Mitchell said Bill Shorten had to come clean about what he said.

 

http://www.3aw.com.au/news/neil-mitchell-if-the-killing-season-is-right-bill-shorten-lied-about-his-...

 

Not only is the Mafia shaping the ALP we now have a liar who is pretending to be Her Majesty's Opposition Leader. What has happened to the once mighty ALP?

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So Bill lied, back stabbed 2 Prime ministers and lied all through the killing season of that time, he was up to his neck ion it and lied and lied and lied about it. .  His track record with the female race is appalling and horrific.

 

Wonderful Bill, you are the perfect labor candidate, no wonder he has risen to the top but risen over what? the pond scum and bottom dwellers? 

 

Dead man walking and he will walk Labor over the cliff just like Rudd/Gillard/Rudd did.

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Broken Promises

Tony Abbott has repeatedly stated that he will keep his promises.

However, as Tony Abbott has already found, making promises is much easier to do when you are in Opposition and there's every chance you won't need to keep them.

Let the count start:

1. Tony Abbott's promise to the Yolngu people to spend his first week as Prime Minister on their country.

2. Tony Abbott's Gonski/Better Schools funding promise.

3. Tony Abbott's promise to be "a government of no surprises and no excuses".

4. Tony Abbott's promise to be "a government that says what it means, and means what it says".

5. Tony Abbott's "buy the boats" policy.

6. Tony Abbott and the Liberal's promise of "Download speeds of between 25 and 100 megabits per second by the end of 2016". They now say that only around 43% will have speeds of 25 megabits per second by 2016.

7. In the lead up to the 2013 Federal Election, Greg Hunt committed the Coalition Government to sending a ship to monitor Japanese whaling in the Southern Oce.... In October 2013, Greg Hunt claimed there was "no change" in their position to send a vessel to monitor .... Yet, in December 2013, Greg Hunt announced they would instead send a customs-chartered Airbus A319 aircraft. Greg Hunt, Tony Abbott and the Liberal Party had criticised the then Labor Government for not sending a vessel to monitor the Japanese whaling ac....

8. No changes to pensions.

9. No cuts to the ABC or SBS.

10. No new taxes.

11. No cuts to health.

12. No cuts to education.

13. Tony Abbott's promise that "The only party that will raise taxes after the election is the Labor Party."

14. Tony Abbott's promise "to get cost of living pressures down".

15. Tony Abbott's promise that "We are not shutting any Medicare locals" during the August 28, 2013 debate with Kevin Rudd.

16. Tony Abbott's promise that "We won't do anything that is contrary to our mandate."

17. Tony Abbott's promise that we will get an "honest" Government.

18. Paid Parental Leave has been capped from his original promise of up to $75,000.

19. Tony Abbott's promise to "modestly slim down" the public service by "12,000 through natural attrition". 16,500 jobs have been announced as going.

20. Tony Abbott claimed that the Mining Tax would be gone by July 1, 2014.

21. Tony Abbott's promise that the public service would be reduced by "natural attrition" and "that we are not talking about forced redundancies". Since the 2013 Federal Election, public servants have been forced to take redundancies.

22. Tony Abbott's promise ensuring all Commonwealth-funded projects worth more than $100 million to undergo a cost-benefit ana....

23. In the lead up to the 2013 Federal Election, Greg Hunt, Tony Abbott and the Liberals not only promised to maintain the existing funding to Landcare, but to give them access to a greater....  After the election, the Landcare budget was cut by $483.8 million.

24. In April 2013, Tony Abbott made a promise to repeal Section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act. On August 5, 2014, Tony Abbott abandoned any changes to Section 18C. On August 6, 2014, Tony Abbott went further and said that the changes are "off the table".

 

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How right you are PSA. However, we must remember that we expect such behavior from the Australian Liberal Party. It is a forlorn hope to expect the Libs to transcend grubby politics. To observe the Libs as they enforce a policy of biocidal lunacy has been likened to dabbling in abriology. Under the rule of the Libs we have a palpable experience of what life was like under the ancien regime. Parliament now resembles baboonery thanks to the Libs. Rather than attract an eclectic collection of solicitors, artists, writers, doctors, blue collar workers and the like the Libs seem to attract mere knuckling-dragging riffraff; cliquism writ large.

 

So how sad it is to observe the alternative, the Australian Labor Party; the party of ideas; the enlightened party; the workers’ friend being run by a bunch of shakedown artists. The leader has fessed up to being a liar which seems to characterize the ALP these days. What a hideous alternative the ALP presents: fresh from pushing one leader under a bus and stabbing another leader, the bird of paradox with all the style and aplomb of Judas Iscariot the party is now under the control of Bill ‘the bagman’ Shorten. Vale the ALP.

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here are a couple more 'confessions" for you VP

 

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/archive/news/dont-believe-everything-i-say-tony-abbott/story-e6frf7l6-12...

 

 

this one goes way back to 1998

 

http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/08/26/1061663794315.html

 

Workplace Relations Minister Tony Abbott last night apologised for not fully disclosing his involvement in a $100,000 "slush fund" devised in 1998 to bring down One Nation leader Pauline Hanson.

Mr Abbott strongly denied, in an ABC Four Corners interview on August 10, 1998, that he or any Liberal Party figures had been involved in funding the legal campaign by disaffected One Nation members to have the minor party declared invalid under electoral laws.

But last night's statement confirms that only two weeks after making that denial, he established a formal trust, Australians for Honest Politics, which collected $100,000 to funnel into anti-One Nation legal actions

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