Love him or hate him, Tony Abbott sure knows how to get the nation talking: debate over his plan to offer six months’ paid parental leave at the expense of big business has got even more chins wagging today — from the business community, to parents’ groups, to his own Coalition colleagues.

Yesterday, Crikey‘s Bernard Keane weighed in with his view:

Slugging medium and large businesses to the tune of $2.7b a year dwarfs the cost of the CPRS on business … It’s not just bigger, but bigger by several orders of magnitude.

On the blogs, Croakey‘s Melissa Sweet was surprised to find herself almost defending Abbott:

Leaving the politics of it all aside for a moment, isn’t there anyone pleased to see this issue at least being put on the political agenda?

Expect plenty more commentary from Crikey commentators coming today. In the meantime, here’s what the rest of the punters have to say:

The Australian

Editorial: Shock, horror? Not quite

Mr Abbott’s scheme is poor policy … But compared to squandering billions of dollars duplicating school halls and gymnasiums, propping up the car industry or wasting $2.45bn on ceiling batts it hardly rates on the scale of irresponsibility.

Peter van Onselen: Tony Abbott’s baby redraws battlelines

It may be that the policy is the right thing to do for women in the workforce, as well as for social progress in this country, but the funding mechanism is problematic.

Peter Van Onselen: Taxing times for big business as Abbott strives to be lesser of two evils

This scheme would be one of the biggest advances in women’s rights in this country’s history.

Jessica Brown: Woo mums and big end of town

A plan for reform, rather than an election year handout, could be the policy that Abbott needs to win support from the big end of town and young mums.

Sydney Morning Herald

Peter Hartcher: Abbott betrays a core Liberal philosophy

If Abbott takes this policy to the election, he will have made the Liberals the party of first recourse to taxing the wealth-generators and job creators of Australia

Lenore Taylor: A nappy change designed to wedge Labor and woo women

[Abbott] thinks he can win. And he’ll do whatever it takes. No matter if it’s efficient, or if it will work.

Julia Perry: We must all pay for parental leave

Abbott’s plan resembles a proposal I – and 36 other submissions – put to the Productivity Commission in 2008.

The Age

Michelle Grattan: Abbott makes same mistake Turnbull made

The wonder is that there wasn’t more agitation within the opposition about this $2.7 billion impost.

Shaun Carney: At a loss over Abbott

Abbott’s parental scheme does not look like it could ever be implemented. Yesterday, the cracks started to appear.

Leslie Cannold: Baby leave is not a women’s issue

By failing to talk about childcare and paid leave as something of critical importance to children, men and women, both political parties doom us to more of the same work/life crunch.

National Times

Tony Wright, The Goanna: Upside-down, inside-out parliament wonderland

Lewis Carroll could hardly have dreamt up the sort of marvellous hallucination that is consuming the federal parliament.

Herald Sun

Andrew Bolt: Don’t slug business for maternity leave blueprint

… 13 reasons Abbott’s plan is so dumb. But, sigh, who’s still counting?

Daily Telegraph

Malcolm Farr: Is Abbott a Maoist or a Margaret?

Tony Abbott is not the traditional traditionalist he might have once presented to be. He is a genuine radical who re-draws the “conservative’’ boundarises when he wishes.

Elsewhere…

Business Spectator, Alan Kohler: The mother of all policy blunders?

Tony Abbott’s parental leave policy is a dismal confirmation that there is no-one sensible in the coalition’s leadership group.

Parton Words, Mark Parton: Tony and the great game

On Monday, Tony Abbot gained possession inside 50 but with his back to the goal.

North Coast Voices: Abbott intends to institutionalize economic disadvantage for newborns?

Bottom line – Abbott intends the infants of ordinary working class women to receive less than their more affluent cousins.

Andrew Norton: Familism meets feminism

Given how families do in fact operate today, women’s workforce participation is a fact that simply has to be accommodated.

So who has it right? Is the Mad Monk’s plan good policy? Is it even workable? Or should Abbott simply be applauded for putting parental leave back on the national agenda, regardless?