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

  • The beginning of Bronwyn Bishop’s end How to spot a political storm

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    The beginning of Bronwyn Bishop’s end

    How to spot a political storm

    It’s great fun (well, the Canberra version of fun) trying to work out why certain stories explode into god almighty messes.

    Bronwyn Bishop’s helicopter debacle is one such story. When the story first blew up (as helicopters are wont to do), Bishop realised the danger almost immediately and paid back the taxpayer money she’d foolishly used for her little joyride.

    At that moment the story might have gone away.

    The first question is: why didn’t Liberal strategists see the storm coming? One of the cardinal rules of politics is to minimise damage: if you know something is going to end up a disaster, a quick and clean cut is the best approach. Prevention, always, is preferable to cure. If Bishop had been sacked weeks ago, we would have stopped talking about her weeks ago.

    But the strategists had their reasons. Tony Abbott, both before he became prime minister and since, has had to repay expenses – in one case seven years after the fact. Nor was he the first prime minister to do so. If a PM could get away with it, then it was reasonable to think perhaps a lowly Speaker could.

    They would also have been thinking of the damage that any sacking does to a government. Prime ministers are always aware of the precedents they might set – every resignation makes the Opposition’s next call for a resignation more plausible – and of the signals they send to their troops about standing by each other when times are tough (because that message cuts both ways).

    But the strategists (and the PM, and Bishop) got unlucky. The story didn’t go away – spectacularly so. Why not?

    The first reason should have been obvious: the colour. It’s one thing to have to pay back taxpayer funding for undertaking a book tour (Abbott). Silly, but drab. The story does not excite. But a helicopter is symbolically awesome: with one image it speaks of the entire armoury of luxuries available to MPs, and unavailable to most ordinary humans.

    The second was foreseeable, though not guaranteed. Labor acted quickly, foraging for tidbits to provide to a hungry press pack, referring Bishop to the police and foreshadowing that it would move a motion of no confidence as soon as parliament returned.

    The third, also foreseeable though not guaranteed, was Bishop’s clumsiness. She should have apologised. She should have voluntarily paid back anything else even mildly questionable immediately. Instead, she gave a press conference that provoked further outrage.

    The fourth: it turns out Bishop has made a few controversial decisions about travel expenses over the years. It’s that pattern of behaviour which is now slowly dragging her down to political earth. Her attempts to excuse some of those trips by saying she was meeting with unspecified people make her look ridiculous.

    But it’s the fifth and sixth I find most interesting, because they are, to a large extent, a matter of timing, and therefore of luck. Some MPs have survived much worse crises than Bishop because their errors happened, happily for them, to be discovered during more fortuitous times.

    The fifth, then, is the state of the polls. Nine days ago I wrote that while loyalty was important “there is always a tipping point, the moment that MPs’ enthusiasm for loyalty is overshadowed by their concern about polling numbers.” A week is a long time in politics, and nine days is, obviously, just very slightly longer. There is only so much of this story that a low-polling government and prime minister can stand.

    The sixth is the particular size of the scalp that Bishop represents. A prime minister may be incredibly reluctant to sack a senior minister because that would be seen as a real blow. The media and the opposition may not care enough about a junior MP to go after them, the political equivalent of throwing a small fish back in the water.

    But the Speaker is just significant enough to represent a real victory for Labor if they succeed in getting her sacked, and perhaps just insignificant enough for Tony Abbott to decide she’s no great loss.

    Julie Bishop – or as I like to call her these days, The Lesser Known Bishop – made her namesake’s job just a little less tenable today by suggesting the Speaker was considering her position, and reminding her colleagues of the political vulnerability she represented: “I understand that the Labor Party will seek to use this to destabilise Question Time, for example, and I’m sure Speaker Bishop will take that into account as she considers her position.”

    It was a slightly brave move, considering TLKB hasn’t been innocent of controversial use of travel entitlements. In 2011 she claimed $3445 to pay for flights home from a wedding in India (having flown over on Gina Rinehart’s private plane), saying she had several official meetings that justified the expenditure.

    But her intervention is, nevertheless, significant. Scott Morrison also refused to defend BBish today. Both TLKB and Morrison are potential leadership contenders, should Abbott falter. Turnbull, the third of the contender troika, had his fun too.

    When the three people most likely to replace you have a unified view on something, you have to have a very good reason to stand your ground. If the Speaker’s career ends in tears, today will stand as the beginning of the end.

     

    Today’s links

  • This changes everything THE AUSTRALIA INSTITUTE

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    This changes everything

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    The Australia Institute <mail@tai.org.au>

    4:06 PM (13 minutes ago)

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    The Australia Institute

    Dear Neville –The Australia Institute is incredibly pleased to announce that we’re sponsoring world renowned author and activist Naomi Klein at the Melbourne Writers’ Festival in August.

    For many, Naomi Klein needs no introduction, but for those who haven’t encountered her work, she is the author of paradigm-breaking books including No LogoThe Shock Doctrine and most recently This Changes Everything: capitalism vs. the climate. One of the world’s top intellectuals, Klein has recently turned her focus to the strategies behind campaigning and activism.

    Naomi Klein down under

    2015-klein-naomi-313x295.jpg

    In her 2014 book This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs the Climate Naomi Klein argues that those who see climate change as something that can be addressed without disrupting the status quo, have missed the point. Her inconvenient truth is that it is not about carbon, it is about capitalism: ‘Our economic system and our planetary system are now at war’. As capitalism depends on economic growth, which is fundamentally incompatible with significant emissions reduction, a whole new approach is required. Her proposition is that this confrontation can become the catalyst for radical positive change and the chance to build something better – a safer, fairer, more equal world.

    The Australia Institute is proud to support bringing Naomi Klein to Australia. Stay tuned for further festival news and announcements in the coming weeks.

    Dates:
    Saturday 29 August, Federation Square, Melbourne – An audience with Naomi Klein 
    Sunday 30 August, Federation Square, Melbourne – Naomi Klein: Capitalism & the Climate
    Book now @ mwf.com.au/writers/naomi-klein

    ALP back Buffett Rule

    This past weekend, The Australia Institute was in Melbourne to present a seminar at the Fringe of the ALP National Conference. The seminar was called: How to win an economic argument against a right-wing shock jock. It was standing room only as Richard Denniss and Ben Oquist joined Terri Butler in dismantling some of the econobabble which continues to get play in Australian politics.

    While we were there we continued our efforts promoting fair, progressive tax reforms. One such proposal was brought forward by Anthony Albanese as a motion in support of a ‘Buffett Rule’ for Australia.

    Albanese referred to a report produced for GetUp! by The Australia Institute, which modelled the effect of a minimum tax rate for the highest income earners to limit excessive claiming of tax deductions. The motion was passed.

    The report author, our Senior Economist, Matt Grudnoff, wrote this explainer of the Buffett Rule for The Guardian:

    “In 2011-12 75 people who all earned more than a million dollars paid no income tax. Nil, zilch, zip, nada. Between them they earned $195m and paid not a cent in tax. They did this by filing huge deductions, reducing their taxable income to almost zero. While they were very keen not to pay tax they were far more generous when it came to buying tax advice. On average these 75 people paid $850,000 each for tax advice, an amount beyond the means of almost all Australians.”

    Read the full article here.

    Handy armour for the upcoming renewable energy scare campaign

    The ALP’s announced 50% renewable energy target drew a predictable response. But even so, the latest great big scare campaign on everything is on and may yet, like so many before it, be successful. Here are a couple of important facts that should be part of any discussion of the merits of increasing renewable energy:

    Price of power

    Even a review conducted by a ‘climate sceptic’ admitted that increased renewable energy put downward pressure on power prices.

    The Australian newspaper responded to Labor’s policy by redefining one of the fundamental principles of economics. Contrary to centuries of conventional wisdom, the paper believes that increasing supply actually increases prices. All the economic textbooks in the world will need an update.

    Economics_Dummies_1_v3.jpg

    Jobs

    Renewable energy creates far more jobs than coal. The United Nations estimates that renewables create more jobs per megawatt of capacity than coal or gas. A megawatt of solar creates up to 11 times more jobs than a megawatt of coal. Encouraging investment in renewable energy is, in this way, a job creator.

    It’s not a tax
    There is only way you can call a renewable energy target a tax: if you don’t know what taxes are.

    Confusingly, the government seemed perfectly capable of determining what is and is not a tax up until now. The “deficit levy”, which, like a tax, applies a 2 per cent rate on those who earn above a certain rate in taxable income, is not a tax. The broadening of the GST to include overseas imports under $1000 isn’t a tax increase, because it simply increases the amount consumers pay in tax. The deposit tax on banks isn’t a tax, because… we’re not sure on that one either.

    The government, too, does not see its own renewable energy target as a tax. Which is true. The Warburton Review into the RET found that, unlike with a tax, the policy transfers wealth from existing generators to renewable energy projects and to consumers directly. According to the government’s hand-picked review committee, the RET is only a tax if you’re a coal-fired power station and your only electricity consumer is the tax office.

    The Australia Institute in the media

    2UE: Population growth pressures in Sydney – Richard Denniss interview

    Australian Financial Review: Energy productivity lost in tribal RET debate

    9 News: ALP members get debating tips

    New Daily: Abbott wants you to keep an ‘open mind’ on GST

    Sky: Abbott’s superannuation short sightedness

    Crikey: Can we really raise GST but improve the lot of the poor?

  • The future of Gonski

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    The future of Gonski

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    Kate Ellis Unsubscribe

    1:08 PM (10 minutes ago)

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    The latest politics update from the Australian Labor Party | Unsubscribe
    .
    Inga —

    On Sunday Labor finished our national conference where we set out positive plans for the future, and I wanted to make sure you heard the good news about school education. Labor re-committed to the Gonski principles: to a sector-blind, needs-based school funding model. For better results, a fairer society and better jobs in the future.

    The conference has sent a very clear message: only Labor is committed to Gonski. The only way that Australia will see Gonski become a reality is under a Shorten Labor Government.

    You can see my speech to the conference below. Please share the speech to let everyone know the good news.

    Screen_Shot_2015-07-29_at_9.21.01_am.png

    We know that it is through our education system that each and every young Australian can have the greatest chance of reaching their full potential. And we know that there is nothing that is more important to fairness, to opportunity, and to social justice. Please share this speech to show your support for the Gonski reforms. 

    Thanks for your support,

    Kate Ellis
    Shadow Education Minister

    P.s. Education obviously wasn’t the only issue we discussed – one that hasn’t got as much attention as it probably should is a commitment to ensuring at least 50% of Labor representatives are women by 2025. Our old target was 40%, but as advocates said, 40% isn’t equal, and support for change was resounding.

  • Update: our wrap on the ALP National Conference GetUp-

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    Update: our wrap on the ALP National Conference

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    Kelsey – GetUp!

    8:45 PM (25 minutes ago)

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    NEVILLE,

    It was a weekend of highs and lows at the Labor Party National Conference. This week the dust is settling on Labor’s new policy positions, but with so many of the campaigns championed by GetUp members involved in the weekend’s debates and votes, we wanted to give you the wrap on what those decisions mean for our movement. Some of them were great victories, while others were decisions that made it clear we have more work to do – and we’re already diving straight into it. Here’s what happened:

    Clean energy

    One of the biggest wins out of Conference? The ALP committed to sourcing 50% of Australia’s electricity from clean, renewable energy by 2030 – a promise they’ll take to the next election.

    That’s a huge win for thousands of clean energy workers and for our country, made possible by the power and passion of the thousands of people like you, pushing the major parties to unshackle us from the big polluters and their dirty energy. In the months leading up to this decision, GetUp members flooded Labor MPs’ offices with calls from constituents and funded strategic ads whenever clean energy policy was up for debate. And as the decision went down this weekend, GetUp members were there rallying in our hundreds alongside clean energy workers and community leaders to show Labor that Australians are ready for vision and leadership on a clean energy future.

    This is great news, but it’s not over yet. Labor hasn’t yet committed to cutting any more pollution than Prime Minister Tony Abbott and without strong cuts we can’t transition to a cleaner, safer economy. Mr Abbott has already stepped up his attack on clean energy, making this a key battleground ahead of the election. Your power will be crucial in keeping up the pressure in this campaign – not just in making sure Labor follows through, but in pushing all parties to do better, especially the Coalition who remain hell-bent on destroying our chance at a clean, safer economy. Click here to fund the ongoing fight for climate justice.

    Refugees & asylum seekers

    On Saturday, Labor delegates voted to support a refugee policy that includes increased humanitarian intake and a commitment to get kids out of detention quickly. The media is reporting they also voted to turn back boats carrying asylum seekers, but that’s not quite right – what they did do is vote down an amendment that would have prohibited turning asylum seekers around at sea,1 leaving the Labor platform without any mention of the policy.2 While details are still coming in, it’s clear from comments from Shadow Immigration Minister Richard Marles that a Labor government would keep the option open to turn back refugees fleeing persecution.3

    The Conference has voted, but that doesn’t mean the debate is over. The decisions from Conference mean Labor’s platform is effectively silent on many of the core problems facing Australia’s asylum seeker policy. And we can work with silence. We can fill silence with our demands – and we will.

    Manus and Nauru detention centres are expensive, harmful and heartless experiments – and yet they remain open and supported by our major parties. Kids have been systematically abused in our offshore detention centres and yet they remain imprisoned. Turning back asylum seekers on the open sea risks endangering the lives of entire families – and neither major party will stand against it.

    Above is the ad thousands of GetUp members chipped in for at the last minute, to put in national papers and in front of Labor delegates: a pitch for compassion, for fairness, and for justice for people seeking refuge. This backs up our thousands of emails and phonecalls to Labor MPs this week alone, and calls for compassion repeated across social media. It’s just the beginning. We won’t stop the pressure, and won’t stop demanding better treatment of those seeking asylum. Sign the petition to close the detention centres on Manus Island and Nauru: www.getup.org.au/alp-detention-disgrace

    Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)

    Trade Minister Andrew Robb is headed to Hawaii this week for talks that could decide the fate of the controversial TPP deal.

    We know from previous remarks that Minister Robb is all aboard the TPP train and will likely sign Australia on to the deal – but rest assured, that’s not the end of the line. The Labor Party will still have a critical vote to determine the future of this dirty deal when the enabling legislation is debated in the Senate.

    That’s why over the weekend more than 220 GetUp members from marginal Labor electorates hit the streets distributing door hangers in their neighbourhood, putting the facts about this secretive deal straight into the hands of key voters. This was happening at the same time the Labor Party was debating their national policy on trade deals. We heard some strong words from Conference delegates against the nastiest part of the TPP deal – the Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) provisions, which will allow multinational corporations to sue Australian governments.4

    To make sure Labor turns their words into action, we’ll need to show them they have our support to vote against this dirty deal. Click here to find out more about the campaign and sign the petition calling on Parliament to vote against the TPP.

    The Buffett Rule

    Another win! On Friday, the Labor Party adopted the Buffett Rule as part of the tax policy they’ll be taking to the next Federal Election.

    Over the past several months, 63,000 Australians have been calling for an Aussie Buffett Rule that would close loopholes for the wealthiest 1%. Last week alone, over 7000 members of the GetUp community got the facts into the hands of their Labor MPs and senators, and hundreds more chipped in to fund a giant mobile billboard promoting the Buffett Rule to Labor National Conference delegates. And we won their support!

    The Buffett Rule was part of a groundbreaking report by The Australia Institute, funded by GetUp members, that found that closing tax loopholes for those who earn over $300K could generate $2.5 billion a year in revenue.

    Just this morning, Treasurer Joe Hockey told ABC radio that he’s happy to look at the policy as part of the government’s tax white paper. That’s why GetUp members are again leaping to action to get the Buffett Rule into the Treasurer’s office. Click here to send Mr Hockey the Buffett Rule facts and ask for government leadership on fair tax reform.

    Negative Gearing

    For this year’s budget, GetUp members tried something game changing, pitching in to fund eight fairer budget policy alternatives backed by rigorous modelling and analysis from some of the best policy brains in the business. And it’s having a massive impact: not only did the ALP endorse the Buffett Rule at National Conference, Shadow Treasurer Chris Bowen also put negative gearing reform and changes to the capital gains tax discount into the mix, recognising the impact of these tax breaks on housing affordability.

    Our revenue ideas have helped shift the conversation about reform in Australia. This demonstrates the importance of getting on the front foot to propose positive alternatives to the Abbott Government’s austerity cuts.

    Last week, dozens of GetUp members jumped on the phone to ask their ALP MPs and Senators to support negative gearing reform. We stand alongside a long, illustrious list of chief executives, former CEOs, think tanks and peak bodies – including the Reserve Bank of Australia – voicing concern about how negative gearing drives up property prices, locking first home buyers out of the market.

    Labor is still far from committing to reform as part of their policy platform, and so far the Abbott government has ruled out changes. GetUp members will keep up the pressure, getting ideas for fair tax reform into politicians’ offices and the national media. Click here to fight for a future where all Australians have access to good health care and education, and a home to raise a family.

    Events like the Labor National Conference showcase the breadth and impact of our change-making community. Across the movement, GetUp members worked on the issues they care about, getting them on the agenda, shaping the debate, and influencing outcomes. We don’t always get exactly what we want, but every time we speak out we make it clear that we are truly a force to be reckoned with.

    Thanks for being a part of it,
    Kelsey, Alycia, Nat, Jess, Daney, Aurora and Adam, for the GetUp team

    P.S. Core members form the backbone of GetUp – people dedicating a small amount of money every week or month to the causes they care about, ensuring the campaigns we champion have the resources needed to respond quickly and strategically to the fast-moving world of politics. Funding means we can spring into action exactly when it’s needed, and make sure our politicians are always held accountable.

    Can you spare a few dollars a week and become a core member of GetUp? Click here to set up your regular donation: www.getup.org.au/support-getup

    References:
    [1] ‘ALP conference: left loses vote on motion to prohibit boat turnbacks – politics live’, Guardian Australia, 25 July 2015
    [2] ‘Draft National Platform’, Australian Labor Party, July 2015
    [3] ‘Richard Marles on ALP’s boat turnback policy’, ABC Radio National, 27 July 2015
    [4] ISDS: The devil in the trade deal, ABC’s Background Briefing, 26 July 2015

  • Bjørn-free! 350 org

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    Bjørn-free!

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    Vicky Fysh – 350.org Australia <350@350.org> Unsubscribe

    4:43 PM (1 hour ago)

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    Dear friend,

    Have you heard? Flinders University is in talks with climate inactivist Bjørn Lomborg about hosting his unique brand of climate action denial.[1]

    After being ousted from the University of Western Australia (UWA) by outraged students and staff, Lomborg and the Department of Education have been on the hunt for any university game to take on Bjorn’s widely discredited assertions that the urgency of climate change action is over-stated.

    But it is not too late to fix this. Students and staff challenged Bjørn’s controversial appointment at UWA and they won. Now we can do the same at Flinders. That’s why we’ve partnered with our friends at the Australian Youth Climate Coalition to urge Flinders University to reject Lomborg’s climate inaction.

    Click here to send a message to Flinders University urging it to keep Australia’s universities Bjørn-free!

    While our universities face funding cuts, our Government is offering $4 million of taxpayer’s money to any university willing to house Lomborg and his damaging views. And that’s quite despite the fact that Bjørn is already generously funded by two of the worst climate deniers and fossil fuel barons on the planet – the Koch Brothers. [2]

    The last thing we need is taxpayer funded, government-sanctioned naysayer research that will set Australia even further back in the fight for a future free from climate catastrophe.

    Click here to send Flinders University a clear message that the last thing we need in our public universities is doubt about the need for climate action.

    Let’s make sure all our universities stay focussed upon the important task of tackling the greatest moral challenge of our time. Let’s keep them Bjørn-free!

    Yours for a safe climate,

    Vicky, Hayley and Charlie for 350.org Australia

    PS: Help to spread the word by sharing this facebook post.

    [1] Bjorn Lomborg Consensus Centre could be set up at Flinders University, The Guardian, 24 July 2015.

    [2] Bjorn Lomborg is part of the Koch Network – and Cashing In, Climate Progress, 25 June 2014.

  • Community energy retailer aims to be Australia’s cheapest, help people quit grid

    Community energy retailer aims to be Australia’s cheapest, help people quit grid

    A NSW start-up with plans to become Australia’s first community-owned renewable energy retailer – as well as its cheapest – is hoping to win local support for its venture ahead of a public share offer.

    This-way-out-300x227Enova Energy, which was formed last year by residents from the Northern Rivers Region, aims to retail renewable electricity, while also providing advice and professional services for those who want to install solar, and/or leave the grid entirely.

    It also hopes to generate decent returns for investors. To this end, the not-for-profit group behind the venture, Enova Community Ltd, said on Tuesday it had prepared a detailed prospectus for an Initial Public Offering (IPO), and would host a series of information events throughout the Northern Rivers region in coming weeks.

    Not short on ambition, Enova Energy wants to offer the cheapest retail price for green electricity in Australia, pay the highest feed-in tariff for rooftop solar exported to the grid, and provide consumer-targeted advice and technical support for people who want to go off-grid completely.

    However, the company has conceded it will only proceed with these plans if capital funding can be sourced from within the local community.

    “We are very exnorthern_nswcited about the upcoming IPO and providing potential investors the opportunity to attend these events,” said Enova Community Energy Chair, Alison Crook on Tuesday.

    “We want the community to to find out more, and get involved in Australia’s first community renewable energy retailer.

    “Our goal is to reduce carbon emissions by retailing renewable energy by encouraging and facilitating the development of local renewable generation. We aim to be a model for other communities in developing a renewable energy future,” Crook said.

    According to the Byron Echo, the company also plans to provide community benefits through direct employment and flow on jobs.

    “This has already started with accountants, auditors, printers, graphic and web designers all being contracted,” Enova said in a media statement.

    “Dividends will return to the community, and a constitutionally guaranteed 50 per cent of profits will flow back into projects that benefit the community,” it said.