Tightly kept secret
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10:10 AM (2 hours ago)
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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
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10:10 AM (2 hours ago)
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2:25 PM (1 hour ago)
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Front page of the Australian Financial Review today: “Hockey, PM split over tampon tax.”1 That’s right, Minister for Women Tony Abbott just overruled his Treasurer on removing the tax on tampons, when other “essential health items”, like condoms and lubricant, are excluded from GST.2
You see, just weeks ago, a university student named Subeta launched a petition on GetUp’s grassroots petition platform CommunityRun to end the tampon tax, and nearly 100,000 people have joined her since. Thanks to her passion, hard work and strategic campaigning, Subeta got to confront Treasurer Joe Hockey live on the ABC programme Q&A Monday night.
In a brilliant moment of democracy in action, Treasurer Joe Hockey agreed that yes, the tampon tax should go… until Mr Abbott overruled him the next morning.3 So Subeta is heading to Parliament this week to organise an audacious stunt to confront the Prime Minister, and this is our chance to back her up.
In 2015, no politician under sustained pressure can maintain the case that tampons and sanitary pads are not “essential” items (Mr Hockey is proof). So, put simply, as long as menstruating Australians can’t avoid the tampon tax, then neither should Tony Abbott.
It all starts this week with Subeta and a massive 20 metre billboard truck parked on Parliament House lawn featuring two things: Tony Abbott and tampons. And it continues with more inventive, irreverent and sustained tampon-related tactics backed by our donations, until the tax is scrapped.
It’s amazing what one person can accomplish. Thanks to Subeta’s campaign, all the major media outlets are backing this story, from ABC to Sunrise, with Subeta herself doing interviews yesterday with Channel 7, ABC, and more. So here’s what we have planned to help Subeta — and her nearly 100,000 fellow campaigners — keep the pressure on:
We’re only limited by our imaginations and what we can raise together now. Click on the link to chip in:
http://www.getup.org.au/tampons-for-tony
Subeta saw something that she knew in her heart was wrong, and decided to do something about it. Nearly 100,000 signatures later, she had the Treasurer of the nation on board too. Now Mr Abbott is trying to hide from his responsibilities to ensure fair and equal treatment of half the population by saying the tampon tax is “a matter for the states”.4
But the truth is, GST changes almost always begin with the Federal Government – just like the Abbott Government’s new ‘Netflix tax’ on digital products. And it wasn’t just “a matter for the states” in 2004 when Health Minister Tony Abbott excluded condoms and lubricant from the GST!5
So we can’t let Tony Abbott take this win away from Subeta and her supporters — and from all the people who have fought for this change over many years. It may be a small tax but it’s an incredibly symbolic one. And it speaks volumes that our Prime Minister would intervene in his Treasurer’s responsibilities, in order to support a tax that forces women to pay more for an essential health item. Sound fair? Hardly.
Thanks for all you do,
Emma, Sara & Nat, for the GetUp team
PS – Mr Abbott is trying to claim that Joe Hockey didn’t agree with Subeta on Q&A Monday night. But in case you missed it, here’s how it went down after Subeta asked her question (Note: Mr Hockey said he’d been asked about it before, which means he had time to formulate his answer):6
TONY JONES: So should the GST be taken off [sanitary products]? That’s the point.
JOE HOCKEY: Well, it probably should, yes. The answer is yes …
JOE HOCKEY (to Subeta): Well, good on you for getting the petition together and I will give you this undertaking: I will raise it with the States at the next meeting of the Treasurers in July.
SUBETA: Thank you, so much. That’d be great…
JOE HOCKEY: I was asked it in a pub the other day as well, in politics in the pub and a range of other places so, look, if you feel strongly about it, I’m fine about it.
Chip in to make sure Tony Abbott doesn’t get to rewrite history and take this win away from Subeta and all menstruating Australians.
References
[1] “Tampon tax break creates confusion for Coalition policy”, The Australian Financial Review, 26 May 2015
[2] “Abbott downplays tampon tax pledge”, SBS online, 26 May 2015
[3] “Abbott downplays tampon tax pledge”, SBS online, 26 May 2015
[4] “Tampon tax: Tony Abbott says removing GST on sanitary items ‘certainly not something Government plans to do’”, ABC news, 27 May 2015
[5] “GST-free Supply (Health Goods) Determination bill”, Minister for Health and Ageing Tony Abbott, 2004
[6] “Joe Hockey on the Tradies vs Ladies Budget”, Q&A on the ABC, 25 May 2015
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11:08 AM (2 hours ago)
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Friends,
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In 2015, the global divestment movement has been growing in leaps and bounds, and right now we have a chance to make history.
On June 5th, the largest national fund in the world — worth a whopping $867 billion — could divest from coal.
If Norway divested even the 1.3% that its Global Pension Fund has invested in coal, it would be the biggest divestment EVER. And there’s a real chance that they’ll do just that — especially if people around the world chime in to encourage them.
This week, we’re delivering tens of thousands of signatures from people like you to Norwegian Parliamentarians, who’ll make a recommendation to the larger parliament vote the following week.
With enough pressure from around the world, this could be the biggest amount of money ever divested from fossil fuels by a single institution. If enough of us make our voices heard ahead of their crucial deadline this week, it could send a strong signal that it’s time to end coal once and for all.
With great (financial) power, comes great (moral) responsibility:
Tell Norway’s political leaders to stand on the right side of history.
With your voice — and the voices of frontline communities who are fighting coal from India to Poland — we’ve got a good chance of being heard. And with coal divestment under its belt, Norway will be one huge step closer to full divestment from all fossil fuels.
Thank you for answering the global call,
Charlie for the 350.org team

350.org is building a global climate movement.You can connect with us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, and become a sustaining donor to keep this movement strong and growing.
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6:33 AM (2 hours ago)
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3:50 PM (3 minutes ago)
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3:19 PM (8 minutes ago)
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NEVILLE,
Last week, the Coalition slashed Australia’s keystone clean energy policy – the Renewable Energy Target (RET). The result of the deal and the 18 month negotiations leading up to it? Over 2,500 jobs lost, $6 billion in clean energy investment gone, and a proposal to include burning native forests as a source of ‘renewable’ energy.
But when crisis strikes, GetUp members are ready to fight back: and last Monday was no exception. Hundreds of GetUp members, like Anne from Brisbane, stood up for all of us who want a clean energy economy by calling their local MP about the cuts.
Here’s what Anne had to say about calling her MP:
“I stressed that a major concern for me was the cut to investment in clean energy when it was booming in the rest of the world. I felt that Australia should be leading the way as we were such a wealthy country and the envy of many, instead 2,500 jobs have been lost already and many more will not be created.
Personally I felt ashamed of the position that our government is taking toward investment in clean energy. I assured the staff member that at the next election I will certainly be considering Theresa’s renewable energy policy and would hope to see a significant improvement.”
Like Anne, you live in a marginal Coalition electorate. In fact it was just a few thousand votes that decided the outcome for your MP Louise Markus at the last election.
Tight margins like these mean every single phone call to an electorate office from a local constituent can get an MP listening and active on an issue. And if your MP continues to get calls every day about clean energy, they’ll know that their decision to cut the RET will hit home on their electoral bottom line.
After ongoing negotiations that have shaken the clean energy industry to its core, last Monday the Coalition got their way and pushed through a deal that will see our target for clean energy slashed by 8000 gigawatt hours. But wading through the commentary and reporting, it can be hard to make sense of what 8,000 gigawatt hours means in real terms.
Here’s what you need to know about the real cost to our economy and community from of last Monday’s deal and the 18 months of negotiation leading up to it:
When bad news breaks, sustained public reaction defines what politicians do next. And because your electorate of Macquarie is a marginal seat, (so marginal it can make or break an election) your local Coalition MP, Louise Markus, will be paying extra close attention.
http://www.getup.org.au/call-louise-markus-mp
GetUp members have been at the forefront of the fight for the clean energy along with dozens of community groups and environmental advocates for almost 18 months now. Together, we funded hard hitting ads on TV, in cinemas and in the papers, putting solar and wind jobs front-and-centre at town hall events across the country, and so far 11,000 of us have switched our homes electricity away from AGL, Origin and EnergyAustralia, the dirty energy companies who are lobbying against renewables in the halls of parliament.
There’s no doubt: the Renewable Energy Target could have been slashed further or cut altogether if it wasn’t for the actions of passionate people like you. Now it’s time to show our decision-makers that we’re not giving up the fight for a clean energy future.
Paul and Jess,
for the GetUp team
[1] New renewable energy target will mean $6 billion cut to investment: analysts. Sydney Morning Herald. May 18, 2015.
[2] Renewable energy sector has lost almost 2,500 jobs in last two years, says ABS report. ABC. April 13, 2015.
[3] ‘Greenhouse Gas Emissions from a Typical Passenger Vehicle’, United States Environmental Protection Agency, May 2014.
[4] Australia’s large-scale renewable investment dives in 2014. Sydney Morning Herald. January 12, 2015.
[5] RET deal to pass parliament in spite of wood waste inclusion. Climate Spectator. May 18, 2015.