Halfway through the first week and no positive policy yet from the Coalition, just detail about what they’re against, including, apparently, regional infrastructure (where did they think that $400 million infrastructure funding to the states was going to end up?). Labor has eked out two policies, including yesterday’s national apprenticeship announcement, so they’re slightly less negative.
Labor’s decision to have only one debate is, on the face of it, strange. Julia Gillard can confidently expect to keep doing what she’s been doing on Today for months — giving Tony Abbott a drubbing. If even Kevin Rudd could clean Abbott’s clock in a debate, Gillard would be expected to run rings around him. But that’s the risk — if everyone expects that, anything less than a demolition will be a positive for Abbott. And given Labor’s polling lead, minimising the opportunities for an error, and for leadership comparisons between Abbott and Gillard, is the percentage play. Labor are behaving like frontrunners. And not all frontrunners last the distance.
The Coalition is getting reluctant to use one of its more absurd conceits, that it came up with $47 billion worth of savings. While the covering press release referred to “$45.8 billion” in savings, the final total for its savings announced yesterday was, according to its detailed documentation, $23.8 billion. In fact despite yesterday’s new $1.2 billion in savings, the opposition is now proposing less savings than back in May.
Why? The changes to the mining tax in the transition to the MRRT slashed a couple of billion out of related expenditure. In May, in order to pad the figures, they put all the expenditure associated with the tax in as genuine ‘savings’. They should never have been in there in the first place, and Andrew Robb had a terrible time justifying why they had them in back in May.
Listening to big business whinge about the lack of genuine reform vision from both parties is rich indeed. Yes, this current generation of politicians are a risk-averse lot, but business itself is partly to blame. The defeat of the RSPT and the destruction of Rudd is a lesson that every politician in this country — every single one — will have noted and memorised.
Who among big business — which says that lower corporate taxes is one of its key ‘reform’ goals — raised their voice in support of the government while it was under attack from the mining companies? Where was the WorkChoices-style business-funded ad campaign in favour of the 2% tax cut that would have been funded by the RSPT? The cause of reform isn’t helped by fair weather friends in the business community.
The nanny state continues its long march this morning with the Greens proposing a fast food advertising levy. That’s a tax on both freedom of speech and freedom of choice. Then again, at least someone’s proposing something faintly visionary…
I’m a political tragic and I have no intention of watching the debate. It’s fairly certain anyone can predict what will be said, so what’s the point? The most interesting thing that could happen is a bizarre facial tic but now that Howard’s gone I don’t expect to see that again.
No, the only time worth watching Gillard or Abbott is when they’re having a chat with Kerry or Laurie. And even then you still want to smash your telly.
How can anyone get excited about Joolia’s announcement on apprenticeship training – $200m is nothing compared to the 16BILLION wasted on school halls and tuckshops – don’t forget that labor were also suppose to build some 230 additional training centres – only 9 were built – another policy failure. Don’t get excited over ALP policies – they usually do not eventuate or fail in the process, ie Pink Batts, BER, Fuel watch, grocery watch, protecting whales, being fiscal conservatives (choke, laugh, splatter) etc,. the list goes on and on and on………….
As far as the ALP’s policy with IR such as Fair work australia and preservation of unfair dismissal laws – where was KRUDDS rights to unfair dismissal laws.
“a tax on both freedom of speech and freedom of choice”, now there is a hackneyed phrase I would have been happy never to hear or see again. It is as meaningless now as it was when it was coined. Bernard, for most of us freedom of speech is freedom for the commercial media to give us their lies, and freedom of choice was a phrase coined by the private medicos who hate socialised medicine. In a choice between a doctor who is in it just for the money and a public service doctor working for a national health scheme, I will take public every time. Also completely meaningless is the debate between tweedledum and tweedledee.
Mike Crook
People like Lorna persist in conveniently ignoring the ANAO report, which found that there was NOT significant wastage in the “school halls and tuckshops” programme. Never let the facts get in the way, hey Lorna?
http://www.anao.gov.au/uploads/documents/2009-10_Audit_Report_33.pdf
Here’s a nice summary which happens to quote Crikey’s Keane and Possum:
http://grogsgamut.blogspot.com/2010/05/anao-report-on-ber-fact-meets-narrative.html