on 20-03-2015 08:17 AM
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.
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.
on 03-02-2016 08:49 AM
Bill Shorten lacks coherent Gonski plan: Jay Weatherill
Bill Shorten’s Labor does not have a “coherent” plan to fund its Gonski education plan without increasing the GST, South Australian Premier Jay Weatherill has declared, deepening the rift between the two ALP leaders.
In remarks that will inflame tensions with his federal colleagues, Mr Weatherill has continued to promote his plan to increase the GST from 10 per cent to 15 per cent.
Mr Weatherill will use a Council of Australian Governments meeting in March to lobby for his tax reform blueprint — a GST hike in return for fixed funding of schools and hospitals — to become the national model, in defiance of Labor Party policy.
Malcolm Turnbull said yesterday that a GST increase was being “actively considered” by the government, in consultation with the states.
[...]
Looks like Bill Shorten has been handed the dunce's cap. How sad to the see the once mighty ALP, the workers' friend, reduced to side-show status.
on 03-02-2016 09:16 AM
For anyone but a sadist, the Bill Shorten show is increasingly hard to watch. In the 24-hour news cycle, politics has become something of a blood sport. But even Labor loyalists and seasoned journalists have begun to wince at his cardboard delivery, tortured metaphors, grammatical howlers and limp attempts at machismo.
This is part of a stinging article about Labor and Shorten on the sinking fast thread. The one that was hijacked by the "substantiate" posts, it didn't end well for that argument.
17-02-2016 08:59 PM - edited 17-02-2016 09:02 PM
Even the 'deserting rats' think the ALP under Bill Shorten is on the nose. Why hasn't Mr Shorten fessed up and declared himself a hopeless leader? Why does he continue talking about a united ALP when the opposite is the truth? And can we ask Mr Shorten to answer truthfully: "Do you know the way to San Jose?"
Departure of WA's Labor MPs leaves a hole
Losing three West Australian Labor MPs leaves a huge hole in the party before the federal election, analysts say, and it may not have enough depth to find politicians able to sit on the front bench.
[...]
On Mr Gray's comment that Labor wouldn't win the next federal election, Prof Phillimore said the odds were against the party "but that doesn't mean it's impossible".
on 02-03-2016 04:35 PM
Can the ALP be more hypocritical than it is right now. Tanya Plibersek, the ALP politician married to a convicted drug dealer and drug user, has been calling on M Turnbull to allow members of the coalition a conscience vote on same sex marriage. Her own vile party will not allow its members the dignity of a conscience vote because they will be told to vote as instructed. The ALP's omerta is vile.
"How can I in good conscience recommend to the people that they vote for a party which is determined to deny its parliamentarians a conscience vote on the homosexual marriage question?"
"The simple answer is that I can't."
Joe Bullock quits politics.
on 02-03-2016 10:23 PM
@village_person wrote:Can the ALP be more hypocritical than it is right now. Tanya Plibersek, the ALP politician married to a convicted drug dealer and drug user, has been calling on M Turnbull to allow members of the coalition a conscience vote on same sex marriage. Her own vile party will not allow its members the dignity of a conscience vote because they will be told to vote as instructed. The ALP's omerta is vile.
"How can I in good conscience recommend to the people that they vote for a party which is determined to deny its parliamentarians a conscience vote on the homosexual marriage question?"
"The simple answer is that I can't."
Joe Bullock quits politics.
Well I guess you have to go pretty low to score on this but here's a bit of info on your target:
Michael Coutts-Trotter, an Australian public servant, is the Secretary of the New South Wales Department of Family and Community Services, since July 2013. Coutts-Trotter matriculated from Saint Ignatius' College, Riverview and the University of Technology, Sydney, with a degree in journalism.
Coutts-Trotter was appointed Director-General of the New South Wales Department of Education and Training in April 2007. He was director-general of the NSW Department of Commerce from 2004 to 2007, and chief of staff to the New South Wales Treasurer from 1998 to 2004. His appointment to lead the Department of Education and Training was criticised by opposition members of Parliament, the NSW Teachers Federation and the Public Principals Forum for his lack of experience in teaching and education. The Teachers Federation also questioned his criminal background with the Federation's president, Maree O'Halloran, saying that a teacher with his background would be unable to continue teaching.
Appointing him as Director-General of the Department of Finance and Services in April 2011, the NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell said that Coutts-Trotter's skills would allow this new department to deliver on its results. It was reported in July 2013, upon his appointment to lead the Department of Family and Community Services, that Coutts-Trotter's new role was a demotion. Following the report the NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell held a media conference to reject the suggestion.
In 2013, Coutts-Trotter was made a national fellow of the Institute of Public Administration of Australia.
In 1986, at the age of 21, he was imprisoned on a nine-year sentence for conspiracy to import narcotics At the time he was a heroin dealer and was addicted to the drug himself. He recovered from his addiction through a Salvation Army program.[1] He told the media in April 2007 that his criminal past made him more determined to do a good job.
on 02-03-2016 10:33 PM
on 03-03-2016 10:41 AM
Get ready to being labeled a "Denier" "Homophobe" and "Bigot" if you have a differeing opinion to the lunacy of the progressive labor leftist.
on 03-03-2016 10:54 AM
on 03-03-2016 11:23 AM
on 05-05-2016 07:03 AM
Budget 2016: Labor faces claim of $20 billion black hole
Labor will have to find an extra $20 billion in funding after a leaked federal budget document showed a shortfall in the opposition’s expected revenue from taxing smokers.
In a document obtained by the Nine Network, Treasury forecasts the tobacco excise will raise $28.2bn over 10 years.
That’s $19.5bn less than Labor had predicted over the decade, leaving it short on funding for its spending promises - including fully funding the Gonski school model.
Labor frontbencher Anthony Albanese dismissed the leak, saying it didn’t show what the government’s policy on the tobacco tax actually was.
[...]
As Australians cast about looking for a party to replace the coalition we witness another party unable to do simple arithmatic.The plan to fleece the smokers brings that very habit into sharp focus. What exactly were the ALP boffins smoking when they created this inchoate policy.