Category: General news

Managing director of Ebono Institute and major sponsor of The Generator, Geoff Ebbs, is running against Kevin Rudd in the seat of Griffith at the next Federal election. By the expression on their faces in this candid shot it looks like a pretty dull campaign. Read on

  • Thomson constituents campaign to remove him

    As Antony Green states here the seat of Dobell at 5.1 Per Cent with Craig  thomson standing is unlikely to be won by Labor. The local push is an attempt to change the numbers in Govt and the Govt itself. The coalition will no doubt field a high profile candidate and mount a strong campaign. Would Thomson stand again in the circumstances? Labor would not likely endorse him.

     

     

    Thomson constituents campaign to remove him

    Posted May 09, 2012 23:47:00

    Two local councillors in Craig Thomson’s seat of Dobell have started campaigning to have him removed early as their federal member of Parliament.

    Source: Lateline | Duration: 4min 9sec

    Topics:unions, federal-parliament, fraud-and-corporate-crime, australia, nsw

    Transcript

    TONY JONES, PRESENTER: Craig Thomson has been under the national spotlight for months, but there’s an old saying, “All politics is local”.

    Now in Mr Thomson’s electorate of Dobell there’s a local push to get him to quit his seat and force a by-election, well ahead of the federal election due next year, a scenario dreaded by the Gillard Government.

    Amy Bainbridge reports from the New South Wales Central Coast.

    AMY BAINBRIDGE, REPORTER: The region that makes up the seat of Dobell is rich in beauty, but it’s the ugly allegations linking Craig Thomson to the misspending of union funds that has the locals talking.

    LOCAL: I want to see him gone from here too, yeah. Have somebody that might be a bit more honest.

    LOCAL II: When I think about it, my blood pressure goes up, so I try not to think about it too much. I think the whole thing’s a sham and something should be done about it.

    LOCAL III: You know, it’s not very good at all, is it?

    AMY BAINBRIDGE: The electorate of Dobell faces many issues on the ground, including a high rate of youth unemployment. Many people we spoke to are frustrated at their local member, but others insist that Craig Thomson has been doing a good job.

    LOCAL IV: He’s provided a couple of surf clubs. Yeah, I think he’s generally done well for the area.

    LOCAL V: Till he’s proven guilty, I honestly believe everyone should be innocent until proven guilty. So, like I said, we all do – make mistakes, but I think he’s doing alright, yeah

    AMY BAINBRIDGE: Craig Thomson is accused of spending $270,000 of union money from his time at the helm of the Health Services Union to help him win Dobell in 2007. The now independent MP is also accused of using HSU money to pay for prostitutes.

    CRAIG THOMSON, MEMBER FOR DOBELL: Quite frankly, we’re getting enormous support in the electorate. And while the media and myself spending a lot of time talking about “Did he or didn’t he,” quite frankly the people in the electorate are focusing on what I am doing for the electorate.

    AMY BAINBRIDGE: But the local business council says the sector is now under-represented by its federal member.

    KEN BAKER, PRESIDENT, CENTRAL COAST BUSINESS CHAMBER: Craig was very visible in his first term, and in this term he’s almost been invisible except when there’s publicity, promotions about.

    AMY BAINBRIDGE: Against a general trend in 2010, the seat of Dobell swung to Labor, with Craig Thomson clearing a margin of 5.1 per cent.

    ANTONY GREEN, ABC ELECTION ANALYST: The 5.1 per cent, you’d normally call it a comfortable seat for Labor, but given the current state of polling and the circumstances surrounding Craig Thomson, it would be extremely difficult for Labor to hold at either a by-election or a general election.

    AMY BAINBRIDGE: Some don’t want to wait to until next year’s election to get rid of Craig Thomson.

    Tonight, independent councillors Greg Best and Doug Eaton moved a motion against Mr Thomson at Wyong Council, calling for him to resign from Federal Parliament. The motion was ruled out of order, but they say it sends a message.

    GREG BEST, WYONG SHIRE COUNCILLOR: We’ve heard from Ms Gillard and we’ve heard from Tony Abbott. I want the community of the Central Coast, Wyong Shire and Dobell to have a voice, and that’s why I’ve put this resolution to chambers tonight at Wyong Council so that the community is going to be able to say something on this issue.

    CRAIG THOMSON: I’m flattered by the attention that Mr Best and Mr Eaton are paying to me, but I suggest that like myself who have been out there fighting for infrastructure for the Central Coast, $340 million worth of infrastructure in the last four years, that they’re better to concentrate on fighting for things for their constituents than focusing on myself.

    AMY BAINBRIDGE: The two councillors are also gathering a petition to circulate within the community, calling for Mr Thomson to go.

    DOUG EATON, WYONG SHIRE COUNCILLOR: We’re already getting calls from businesses and the like to say, “Yep, give me one in my shop. I’ll – my customers are so annoyed about this that they will definitely sign it.” So we’re – we’ll be using every possible manner to get that petition out to the public and I believe we’ll get thousands and thousands of people to sign that petition.

    CRAIG THOMSON: With these two, everything they do is about a political stunt. They change their minds weekly on particular issues.

    AMY BAINBRIDGE: The Parliament and the people of Dobell await Mr Thomson’s comprehensive statement to Parliament later this month.

    Amy Bainbridge, Lateline.

  • Our Government and the Case for Young People Dr James Hansen

    Our Government and the Case for Young People

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    James Hansen jimehansen@gmail.com via mail64.us2.rsgsv.net
    12:14 PM (19 minutes ago)

    to me
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    Our Government and the Case for Young People
    A discussion about an important hearing that will be held in Washington, DC at 9:30 AM on Friday, May 11 can also be found on my website. If you are in the neighborhood, please consider attending.  The science rationale for the plaintiffs happens to be that in our paper The Case for Young People.

    ~Jim

  • Thompson under fire in Dobell

    Thompson under fire in Dobell

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    EMBATTLED federal MP Craig Thomson is facing a push from within his electorate to quit politics and force a by-election in his seat of Dobell.

    Two independent Wyong Shire councillors moved a motion against Mr Thomson yesterday calling on him to resign from federal parliament.

    The motion was ruled out of order, but the councillors are pushing ahead with a petition calling on Mr Thomson to go, ABC Television reported.

    Mr Thomson described the move as a “political stunt”.

    “They are better to concentrate on fighting for things for their constituents than focusing on myself,” he told ABC Television.

    Mr Thomson is accused of misusing almost $500,000 in union funds on electioneering, escorts, lavish meals and cash withdrawals when he headed up the Health Services Union.

    He has agreed to make a statement to federal parliament in the next sitting week on the allegations against him, which he strenuously denies.

    Mr Thomson concedes the scandal may adversely impact his political career.

    “Clearly if there was an election called today then (it’s) a very difficult situation, but there’s a long time till the next election,” he said.

    “(And) quite frankly the people of the electorate are focusing on what I am doing for the electorate.”

  • SYDNEY got a big boost in Tuesday’s budget.

    There is confusion as to what Pensioners will receive from this Budget. The Grey vote

    carries considerable clout at the Polls

    SYDNEY got a big boost in Tuesday’s budget.

    An extra $1830 a year for the average family with kids at school. Up to $300,000 to invest in the future for one in seven small companies.

    And funding for long-needed motorways – the M4 East, the M5 East expansion and the link between the F3 and the M2.

    In the end, a budget is all about priorities. Who you will support and which programs you will fund.

    In this year’s budget we have worked hard to support those people who need Labor’s help and to spread the benefits of the mining boom to families.

    That’s the Labor way – because we believe in fairness, in the Australian fair go, in looking after those people who need our help.

    This week we handed down a budget surplus – an achievement that cements Australia as one of the world’s strongest economies. That wasn’t easy – cutting back spending while protecting frontline services never is.

    We were determined to get the budget back into the black because that is good for the economy, and good for families and pensioners.

    There’s no clearer sign of a strong economy than a surplus.

    It shows we are on the right track. And it gives us a buffer against global developments so we can ride out tough times in future, as we did during the global financial crisis.

    It means we can protect jobs.

    A surplus also leaves room for the Reserve Bank to move on interest rates if it chooses to do so.

    Interest rate cuts like the one last week are good news for Australian families. When Labor came to office the Reserve Bank’s cash rate was 6.75 per cent – today it’s 3.75 per cent.

    So a family with a mortgage of $300,000 is now saving more than $3000 a year in repayments compared to 2007.

    I know no one needs this relief more than Sydney families.

    And our help for ordinary Australians who need a break at budget time goes further than creating the chance for further interest rate cuts.

    By making the hard decisions to cut back on spending elsewhere, the government can afford to help families and pensioners who feel the pressure of rising prices.

    That’s exactly what we’ve done.

    We have announced a new Schoolkids Bonus. This will mean that, from January next year, parents will get much-needed cash assistance just when they need it: At the start of Terms 1 and 3 of the school year.

    We will provide $410 for each child in primary school and $820 for each child in high school – helping the families of 2.2 million schoolkids pay for all those costs of going back to school.

    And to help families finding it hard to make ends meet, next month we plan to pay the same amount to families straight away.

    We know our economy is strong, our budget in now going into surplus and there is a mining boom – but it’s not everyone’s boom. So we will ensure the benefits of the boom will be shared fairly with families and small business, not just the fortunate few.

    We’ll use the mining tax to ensure more than 1.5 million families receive an increase to Family Tax Benefit Part A, with nearly half taking home an extra $600 a year. We will also provide a supplement to students, jobseekers and parents with young children and on income support a supplement of up to $210 a year to help with the cost of living. And we will support businesses that are not in the fast lane with a loss carry-back scheme, so businesses have support when they need it.

    All Australians work to create our national wealth. All Australians should share in the benefits our national wealth brings.

    Of course, this year’s budget contains more than just a surplus and help for families. We are also delivering vital transport infrastructure for Sydney.

    The federal government has already widened the F5 southwest of Ingleburn. Now, after decades on the drawing board, we will also put up $25 million to allow the NSW government to unlock private sector investment in two of Sydney’s ‘missing links’: M5 East expansion and F3 to M2.

    A further $150 million has been set aside to progress the F3 to M2 project if required.

    There’s $30 million waiting for the NSW government to start planning the M4 East – so motorists on this vital road can reach the city.

    And we’re going ahead with the new Intermodal terminal at Moorebank – linking Port Botany to southwest Sydney to put more freight on trains. It’s a project that’ll take one million truck trips off Sydney roads every year.

    Labor’s plan to use our economic strength to build a fair Australia means, as well as building one of the world’s strongest economies, we are building one of the world’s fairest societies too.

    Funding the historic first stage of a National Disability Insurance Scheme. Aged care reform to help senior Australians stay in their own homes. A big new investment in dental health to deliver a blitz on waiting lists. And big investments in our health system.

    Budgets are challenging and time-consuming exercises.

    They require difficult decisions about the kind of country we want to build.

    This budget is no different.

    And it is one of which I am deeply proud.

    It is a Labor budget built on Labor values that will improve the lives of millions of Australian families.

    Julia Gillard is Prime Minister

     

  • Abundance of Methane Hydrates will Destroy the Oil Market

    Oil Price Daily News Update


    Overcoming the Impossible: Developing Nuclear Fusion

    Posted: 08 May 2012 05:47 PM PDT

    The ITER project, an acronym for International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor,  seeks to do the possible with impractical tools. There is no doubt that humanity can accomplish fusion in a quick and dirty way by making a bomb, or run reactions that don’t produce useful amounts of energy outputs, but unlike fission the ability to run a steady state reaction that produces more energy than it takes to drive the reaction eludes us.The ITER effort is based on the tokamak, a donut looking thing that circulates fuel plasma around endlessly…

    Read more…

    Iran could Avoid Economic Blow of US Sanctions by Accepting Chinese Yuan

    Posted: 08 May 2012 05:37 PM PDT

    The Iranian currency shuffle continued again this week as Tehran announced it would take the Chinese yuan as payment for crude oil deliveries from its trading partner in Beijing. While the U.S. secretary of state was in New Delhi convincing one of Tehran’s more faithful clients to back away from Iranian crude, Iranian officials were warming to the yuan to process the roughly $20 billion worth of crude oil it sells to China every year. Deadlines for Iranian sanctions are fast approaching, but in a global economy still fueled by petroleum, customers…

    Read more…

    US Gas Pipelines under Cyber Attack, Says DHS

    Posted: 08 May 2012 05:32 PM PDT

    The Department of Homeland Security has issued an alert warning that computer networks connected to privately-owned natural gas pipelines are presently under cyber attack in an “intrusion campaign” that began some four months ago and could extend to Canada.  The “amber” alert, the second highest cyber threat level, has been ongoing since December 2011, when the DHS noted that “multiple natural gas pipeline organizations have reported either attempts or intrusions related to this campaign”. The reiteration…

    Read more…

    Abundance of Methane Hydrates will Destroy the Oil Market

    Posted: 08 May 2012 05:29 PM PDT

    U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Secretary Steven Chu contributed a statement to an announced breakthrough in research into tapping the vast fuel resource of methane hydrates that could eventually bolster already massive U.S. natural gas reserves.As Al Fin pointed out yesterday natural gas is priced to a barrel of oil equivalent at about $10-$11 per the estimable Geoffrey Styles view, something less than 10% of the cost of oil.  For North Americans adding a viable and hopefully low cost means to make use of gas hydrates could be giant boost…

    Read more…

    Britain Fear Spike in Oil Prices due to Insurance Ban for Iranian Crude Tankers

    Posted: 08 May 2012 05:20 PM PDT

    The European ban, due to take effect at the beginning of July, on importing Iranian oil will also prevent European insurers from covering any tankers carrying crude from Tehran to the rest of the world. This effect will be felt particularly hard in London, which is the main district for marine insurance.Without insurance tankers will not transport goods, so it is of utmost importance to Asian buyers of Iranian crude that they find other means to replace the shipping insurance cover predominantly provided by London insurers.Indian and Chinese firms…

    Read more…

    Japan has Shut Down its Last Nuclear Reactor

    Posted: 08 May 2012 05:16 PM PDT

    Japan, the third largest economy in the world, has relied on nuclear energy to provide 30% of its energy for four decades, but this weekend it became the first major, modern economy to operate without nuclear power.On Saturday the Tomari Nuclear Power Plant’s reactor 3 shut down, leaving Japan’s energy grid completely nuclear free.Junichi Sato of Greenpeace in Japan said that, “there is an increased chance of earthquakes in Japan, so that has a significant risk to the Japanese people and the Japanese economy. The only way forward…

    Read more…

    British Hope their ‘Green Deal’ will cut Energy Imports by $5 Billion a year

    Posted: 08 May 2012 05:12 PM PDT

    British energy officials have recently been on a trip to the United States, where on Monday, in Houston, Texas, they shared their dream of a market friendly energy efficiency promotion.The ‘dream’ that they were trying to share is the British government’s Green Deal, a program that the government are sponsoring with the aim of encouraging the population to insulate buildings, in order to increase their energy efficiency. The government will support this program by offering low cost loans to cover the necessary improvements. The…

    Read more…

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  • ALP paid Craig Thomson’s Fair Work inquiry legal bills

    The truth must come out. This must be resolved.

    ALP paid Craig Thomson’s Fair Work inquiry legal bills

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    Craig Thomson

    Waiting for his 15 minutes … Craig Thomson in Question Time / Pic: Kym Smith Source: The Daily Telegraph

    FORMER Labor MP Craig Thomson is embroiled in a new controversy, with revelations he has “for months” been receiving legal assistance from the ALP to fight his sleaze allegations.

    The ALP last night confirmed it agreed last September to engage lawyers Holding Redlich to assist him in the Fair Work Australia inquiry, which found he improperly spent $500,000 of Health Services Union funds.

    Mr Thomson appears to have broken parliamentary rules by failing to declare the assistance in the MPs pecuniary interest register.

    He updated his register last night after The Daily Telegraph began making inquiries into the breach.

    Mr Thomson last night claimed he had not broken parliamentary rules because he had only received financial assistance from the ALP “within the last two weeks”.

    “I am well within my timeframe. The rules are that you make a declaration within 28 days and I have amended it tonight,” he said.

    But a spokesman for the NSW ALP said last night: “The ALP finance and administrative committee resolved to provide him assistance in September last year.”

    The spokesman said the assistance had been provided by Holding Redlich “for months” and the lawyers had been paid regularly.

    He said Labor stopped paying Mr Thomson’s legal bills when Prime Minister Julia Gillard suspended him from the party last month. A spokesman for Ms Gillard last night said she “was not aware of Mr Thomson’s legal arrangements”.

    Failure to disclose financial benefits is deemed a serious offence and traditionally triggers an official parliamentary inquiry.

    Under the rules, Mr Thomson has to update his register within 30 days of receiving a gift or donation.

    The latest revelations are another blow to the Gillard government as it struggles to sell its budget amid ongoing political scandal.

    And they will put more pressure on independent MPs Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor to support Coalition moves to suspend Mr Thomson from parliament.

    The fresh controversy comes after The Telegraph revealed last August the ALP had spent more than $150,000 settling an aborted defamation claim Mr Thomson had taken against Fairfax in an attempt to stop him going bankrupt, which would have forced him out of parliament.

    After that revelation, Mr Thomson was also forced to amend his pecuniary interest register to declare Labor had paid for that settlement.

    Yesterday Mr Thomson bowed to pressure and announced he would finally deliver a statement to parliament later this month to explain how he spent $500,000 of HSU funds on prostitutes, his 2007 election campaign and other personal spending.

    “There has been a comprehensive and very long Fair Work report of some 1100 pages which we didn’t have access to until late Monday night,” he told parliament.

    “It is appropriate I have time to go through that so that I can make a comprehensive statement, which is what I intend to do.”

    His statement came just hours before the State Government passed legislation which could put the HSU into administration in days.

    In a late sitting of the NSW upper house last night, a bill passed to give the Industrial Relations Commission the power to appoint an administrator to unions where gross misconduct occurred.

    The government had wanted to give finance minister Greg Pearce that power.

    However, following an array of amendments by Labor, the Greens and the Shooters and Fishers party, that power was given to the IRC, with Mr Pearce allowed to make the decision if the commission did not do so within 28 days.