Today’s COAG meeting and the Murray Darling crisis have suddenly combined to provide a real test of the Prime Minister’s cooperative federalist model.
We bagged the Murray-Darling Basic package when COAG first agreed on it back in late March as perpetuating the dominant position of the states, who are directly responsible for the current state of the MDB. They have spent decades f-cking up our rivers, and the notion that they were about to change to a more responsible approach was, we thought, laughable.
What we didn’t know at the time was just how quickly the failings of the package would become apparent. Now we are seeing the unusual combination of a State Labor Government and the Nationals decrying Commonwealth and South Australian efforts to lift the cap on the amount of water that can be traded, in order to accelerate the process of establishing environmental flows.
Both Victorian Premier John Brumby and the Nationals are taking their marching orders from irrigators, the other guilty party in the destruction of our river systems. Their rationale is that the accelerated buyback of water would “destroy rural communities”.
Such a view is predicated on the rather peculiar notion that these communities are viable if the river system collapses, which is occurring right now. And anyway, let’s be blunt: in any terms you care to mention — economic, social, environmental — the death of some two-bit regional towns is a price well worth paying if its establishes a viable MDB system that strikes the right balance between agriculture and environmental flows.
This is a peculiarly Labor problem. Remember, John Howard’s approach was to take over state powers over the MDB and get the states out of the water allocation decision-making process. Rudd’s approach has been to bribe Victoria to get them to sign up to a framework that keeps the states in the box seat. That bribe — $1b of our money, thanks very much — now looks to have purchased not much of anything, and certainly not a future for the river. Liberal Senator Simon Birmingham — a South Australian, and therefore not unbiased — has correctly said today that the COAG agreement on the MDB is worthless if action isn’t taken immediately to save the river. In contrast to his dim-witted Nationals Coalition colleagues, he wants the trading caps lifted.
Rudd and Penny Wong are stuck with consequences of the dud deal they accepted back in March, which put John Brumby in control of the fate of the Murray-Darling. Let’s hope they and Mike Rann can change his mind today.
Meanwhile, Greg Hunt is further laying the groundwork for a complete retreat by the Coalition from an emissions trading scheme. In today’s Australian, he ostensibly details the Coalition’s policy on emissions trading, but in fact establishes a number of reasons why it won’t support it. Australia, Hunt says, should only proceed with an ETS when there is “a simultaneous push for action from the great emitters”, we can’t bring our exporters “to their knees” through an ETS, we can fix everything through new clean technology, and the whole scheme is just a “tax binge” by Kevin Rudd anyway.
And imagine the fun the Coalition will have once the Government releases its Green Paper. The Green Paper will have a range of options for emissions trading and invite public comment on them. Each one will be weaved into a nightmare scenario of job losses and sky-high petrol prices, from which Brendan Nelson will tearfully proclaim his intention to protect Australians. We deserve better, but we’re not going to get it while Nelson remains Opposition Leader.
Thanks Peter for your intelligent and reasoned contribution. I’m sure Mr. Keane will pass it on to Kevin Rudd ( I hear he is favourite in line to be offered the chief of staff position soon to be vacated by David Epstein). KR will act decisively to dismiss the various state governments and do exactly as you suggest which is clearly, as you so succinctly put it, the “only one solution”.
Thank you again for your ingenuity and brilliance. You, along with Rudd, will be acclaimed as Saviour of the Murray. I want to be the first to nominate you Kevin Rudd’s Special Adviser on Climate Change Management because Garnaud is soon to be on the nose. You are a great man.
Is this today’s joint communique?
JamesK: You are quick to suggest to other people that they should allow their subscriptions to run out, then cancel. But it’s London to a Brick on-sorry I retain these racing terms against my better judgment-that you won’t be following your own advice. Who would read you then?
For God’s sake Bernard is correct. Who in the hell owes small towns a living or survival ?. City folk-the majority of Australians must deal with changing economics. lost jobs, re-possessed homes but the attitude that those in the country are some sort of worthy protected species is ludicrous. If you can’t survive-get up and leave and change just like every other Australian has to do. This “noble farmer” stuff is well and truly over. If the farm isn’t viable you cannot expect everyone else to prop you up.
Miranda is a little over the top, but not much. It’s thanks to the rurales that this country is so deeply in the s*it. Okay, so we were all ignorant once, but the farmers keep making a lifetime’s pursuit of stupidity. Surely they should be in the vanguard of cleaning up this god forsaken country. What do a few hiccup towns in what is now being regarded as the Great Australian Desert; matter? They merely happened to provide the farmers with their supplies: ‘Nifty Nev’s for ,”dog traps for dingos” Shed’. It was the farmers who clear felled the trees, and allowed the sheep to proliferate. Naturally they created a desert, like goats they bite deep down the root systems of grasses, thus loosening the top soil which then gets blown away in the nearest wind. It was the farmers who destroyed existing wind breaks, who poisoned the rivers, allowed irrigators to plant alien crops such as cotton, tobacco and rice, and reduced the Murray Darling River to the status of a town drain. It is the farmers who invented the Country Party/Nationals under the spectral banner, “Socialism for the farmers”, and who reduced the land to a desert. It is the same people who always claim special circumstances so they
can avoid another tax, etc. They are indeed the proud fu*king creators of the aforementioned ‘Town Drain’ Now let the people in the great urban centers watch as they start to f*ck themselves. Olé.