on 01-06-2013 10:29 AM
Labor must be on the nose for their one eyed supporter Laurie Oakes to take to them with his baseball bat
Interesting opinion written by Laurie, very true though.....
Julia Gillard's Labor government financially broke, morally bankrupt, writes Laurie Oakes
Laurie Oakes :The Daily TelegraphJune 01, 201312:00AM
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/opinion/julia-gillards-labor-government-financially-broke-morally-bankrupt-writes-laurie-oakes/story-fni0cwl5-1226654815636
THE death throes of Julia Gillard's government are not pretty to watch.
Christopher Pyne's appeal to independent MPs to put it out of its misery will strike a chord with many voters.
Gillard and her team have clearly abandoned all hope of surviving in office. They are preparing for defeat. The grubby cash-for-votes deal with the Coalition, which fell apart under the weight of public anger on Thursday, was evidence of that.
Further indication the government has thrown in the towel is the behind-the-scenes talk about who will lead Labor after Gillard is dispatched by the voters. This entered the public domain on Thursday with reports that Bill Shorten as opposition leader would not allow a Tony Abbott government to abolish the carbon tax without a fight.
Then there is the way excuses are being prepared in advance for the electoral day of reckoning. Gillard's supporters are trying to make the case that it's not all her fault.
Who is to blame, then? Kevin Rudd, of course.
There was an article in the May issue of The Monthly, titled The Saboteur, for example. It contained no new information or insights, but the timing was seen as significant.
Donations to Labor are drying up as its hold on power weakens, and things will get a lot tougher after the election. The dollar-per-vote proposal was about getting access to taxpayer funds to keep a desperate party afloat financially in opposition.
And the PM's blame-shifting attempts were reflected in a front-page newspaper article just a few days ago headlined "Team Rudd accused of sabotaging shaky PM".
The report said Gillard backers were even blaming Rudd for inflaming the row over the planned diversion of millions of taxpayer dollars to political parties.
The funding deal debacle was as clear an indication as you'd get of what is wrong with the Gillard
government and why it will feel the wrath of the electorate on September 14.
It has nothing to do with Rudd or leadership destabilisation.
The plan was hatched in secret, with no attempt to explain or justify it to voters. It involved backroom horse-trading with the Opposition that was always going to look sleazy.
"As crook as Rookwood," is the way one angry Labor MP - not a Rudd supporter - put it.
There was no consultation with people who might have pointed out the political folly of the scheme, particularly Senator John Faulkner, the Labor elder statesman who had drafted proposals for principled political funding reform when Labor came to office in 2007.
Diverting taxpayer dollars to pay political party administration costs had very little to do with principle, and a great deal to do with ALP self-interest.
And the timing displayed astonishing stupidity. Here was the government feathering the nests of political parties at a cost of $60 million immediately after a Budget that saw taxes increased, benefits cut and the Treasurer warn about shrinking government revenue.
Even a total political nong would realise the level of community outrage that would generate - but Gillard apparently did not. And, confirming the defectiveness of her political antenna, she continued to defend the deal.
Another of federal Labor's unfortunate characteristics, a gutless caucus, was also on display. MPs felt the public backlash but - apart from Faulkner and one or two others - they made no attempt to alter the course their leaders had embarked on.
It should be said that Abbott did not cover himself with much glory either. He has now admitted that signing a secret letter to Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus endorsing cash-for-votes and promising Coalition support for the bill in parliament was an error of judgment.
It seems that only Liberal Party federal director Brian Loughnane, Abbott's chief of staff Peta Credlin (Loughnane's wife), and opposition spokesperson Bronwyn Bishop knew about the letter before the government released it. Even deputy leader Julie Bishop was kept in the dark.
Coalition front and back benchers and officials were not as dumbly compliant as their Labor counterparts. Abbott and Loughnane faced a rebellion.
On Wednesday night, after Abbott argued in favour of the deal in a telephone hook-up of Liberal federal executive members, every state president of his party told him he was wrong and it should be stopped.
At the same time, Loughnane's deputy Julian Sheezel attended a regular weekly meeting of Liberal marginal seat-holders and first-term MPs at Parliament House and he was left in no doubt about their hostility to what was proposed. "Julian was run over by one-way traffic on this issue," said an attendee. "He must have felt like he'd been dropped 10m from a helicopter on to a freeway."
Abbott's leadership group was against him, and he was told he did not have the frontbench numbers or in the party room, so he took the only course possible.
He broke his agreement with the government, hoping that credit for killing off the unpopular measure would more than compensate for damage to his credibility. And it did.
When MPs complained about a leader failing to keep his word, talkback jocks gleefully put to air Gillard's most famous sound-bite.
"There will be no carbon tax under a government I lead."
Laurie Oakes is political editor for the Nine Network. His column appears every Saturday in The Daily Telegraph.
on 02-06-2013 06:22 PM
^^ The Guardian, AU edition.
on 02-06-2013 07:48 PM
Why Julia Gillard is not our worst PM
The loved and loathed
June 2, 2013
Paul Strangio
As Julia Gillard stares down the barrel of election defeat, where will her leadership rank in history?
...The ''worst prime minister in Australia's history leading the worst-ever government'', asserted one veteran columnist, not concerning himself with any serious comparison between Gillard and the 26 previous occupants of the office.
....My hunch is that history will treat Gillard with more sympathy than her legion of contemporary detractors.
The rankings indicate that policy footprints matter most to prime ministerial reputation, and on this criterion measures such as the first serious response to climate change, a national disability insurance scheme, national broadband infrastructure and a new education funding system have the makings of a substantial legacy that has been eked in the unfamiliar and inhospitable conditions of minority government.
Posterity will better judge this reform program's significance and weight it against her incapacity to parlay the measures into electoral favour.
And, of course, there is Gillard's pioneering status as the first woman in the office: a distinction forever hers. How much her gender has coloured the reception of her prime ministership is another thing we will only properly understand with hindsight - perhaps not until the next woman enters The Lodge.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/the-loved-and-loathed-20130601-2niau.html#ixzz2V3D3ub1A
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/the-loved-and-loathed-20130601-2niau.html#ixzz2V3C2BZzD
on 03-06-2013 08:50 AM
am3, I was referring to your countless c&p posts & now you are doubling up c&p'ing the Guardian rag on here as well on other conservative posts.
When a non luvvie does this you all scream & shriek, bp like mad. Lets see you put your head above the parapet, make an opinion & put it , & post a link not the boring scrollers you are so fond of, nobody wants reads them.
Wonder how long this will last?
on 03-06-2013 08:59 AM
Jabba: a perjorative used to describe Laurie Oaks was started in the Whitlam govt. Jabba the Hut, because of his looks & weight. He's still called it today & I noticed it was used last night on Whitlam ABC program by a contempory commentator.
Sometimes I wonder why many of the luvvies even bother to comment on all things political when they have no historic memory or don't bother to educate themselves past the 24hour news cycle.
on 03-06-2013 09:41 AM
he's the old jabba, Gina's the new Jabba because she has the appearance as well as the character.
on 03-06-2013 09:42 AM
per'aps you mean jabba the hutt :^O
wot's the story, 'ere http://www.thedeadlynewt.com/the-turnbulls-and-an-investment-in-the-nbn/#more-625
on 03-06-2013 09:57 AM
per'aps you mean jabba the hutt :^O
wot's the story, 'ere http://www.thedeadlynewt.com/the-turnbulls-and-an-investment-in-the-nbn/#more-625
gosh, the turnbullas are never slow to cash in. i don't think he ought to be there (in the portfolio)
on 03-06-2013 10:25 AM
gosh, the turnbullas are never slow to cash in. i don't think he ought to be there (in the portfolio)
The Turnbulls are going to double dip cash in.
Not only will they reap reward from the FTTN fraudband rollout, they will then double up and cash in on the FTTP rollout that follows.
They have been investing is FTTP around the world and fighting to stop our own.
By stopping our own they are positioned to profiteer twice from the Australian people.
on 03-06-2013 12:27 PM
yeh, as crook as rookwood