Goin’ Locco Apart from anything else, it’s genuinely refreshing to be able to start an item with “something cooked happened on Sam Newman’s podcast” and then be able to describe it without mentioning Newman again. Former Brighton mayor and “Melbourne identity” John Locco has made a series of claims regarding Tennis Australia’s treatment of Novak Djokovic; including that TA filled out all visa documents for players, officials and teams, that Djokovic “did not know” what they wrote on his documents, and that TA paid for Djokovic’s flight from Dubai to Melbourne as well as a house in Melbourne, which he “did not use”.
And while Locco defends Craig Tiley, it seems hard to believe that the Tennis Australia head, who hasn’t been seen since Thursday, or someone from the board won’t either quit or be taken behind the shed and, in Joe Aston’s immortal phrasing, treated to a “hearty breakfast of shotgun muzzle”. TA has declined to comment on Locco’s claims.
Internationalist As ever, it seems the Morrison government occupies a different reality to the rest of us. It wants to throw the doors open, trying to coax 150,000 students and 23,500 backpackers into the country to temporarily do the jobs in industries facing major worker shortages by offering a visa fee refund. It’ll cost roughly $55 million, and, like using kids to drive forklifts, is apparently preferable to conceding the utter balls-up over rapid antigen tests.
Of course, this may be stymied slightly by advice from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention earlier this week, placing Australia (among 21 other nations) on “level four”, its highest level of risk for travellers.
In defence of Andrew Bogut As it was when Friendlyjordies’ producer got arrested, whether the guy in question is kind of a berk or even correct doesn’t really come into it: the letter sent to former basketballer and current loose unit Andrew Bogut from the Victorian Electoral Commission for his “Vote them out” video seems like a bizarre overreach. Bogut shared a video targeting the Victorian crossbenchers who facilitated the passage of the Andrews government’s contentious pandemic management bill.
The letter is based on the contention that Bogut’s — who is not a member of any political party nor running for office — video “likely constituted electoral advertising”. Which, unless they know something more than is let on in the letter, seems miles off the mark; Bogut is expressing a political opinion and has as much right as anyone to do so. Are we to see the Australian Electoral Commission intervening similarly to prevent drips from spreading the #CallTheElectionDickhead hashtag? Which, incidentally, really suffers from the inability to put a comma in a hashtag
Keeping Mumbrella Yesterday the media world was rocked by a bombshell from media news website Mumbrella‘s new owners regarding its Christmas party: “During this time, illicit drugs were purchased, distributed and consumed by a number of the staff there. The staff ranged from junior to more senior staff.” It decided to release this information itself in the spirit of the transparency it demands from the media companies it covers.
It appears something at the core of society has fractured and people in marketing have started doing cocaine at parties — we in the bunker may never recover. But what’s got our hearts racing and and our eyes darting about are the lingering questions: why this explosion of conscience now, a month after the fact? Who snitched? And, of course, how long will anyone whose CV says they left Mumbrella mid-January have to deal with a bunch of expectant and hopeful looks at their first after-work drinks?
Was Mumbrella at one of those Boris Johnson parties?
On the subject of work vacancies in Aust, and at the risk of making a political statement i would like to point out Scummo actually has a solution within the country. Many of us are unemployed or on pensions and have spouses in similiar circumstances. Unfortunately our incomes are linked to our spouses income. If I do any work its not just my payment thats affected but my wifes too. This is lead balloon stuff. The first time it happens is the last. So what we have is potentially hundreds of thousands of people like myself, willing to chip in, but not prepared to face the horrors of the Centrelink backlash. If spouses incomes were delinked you would be surprised how much labour became available.
If spouses incomes were delinked and the backroom gestapo operation that monitors welfare recipients incomes was disbanded the extra tax revenue and the reduced costs of social security would surely help to get us “back in black”. Is that what they want or is welfare recipient bashing still too good a vote winner to give up?
Michael
Yes,I won’t even walk up the street the Centrelink office is in. As a self funded retiree I had a stroke and had a pensioner on a disability pension move in with me to each others mutual benefit. A couple of days after release from hospital I thought we would report the changes in person. The big question asked was are we having sex. Under the interrogation I experienced an extreme headache – fearful of having another stroke I just got up and left and have never contacted them again.
Since that time I regularly have dreams of having sex with Centrelink.
Did you mean $5,500,000 – “…(173,500) visa fee refund. It’ll cost roughly $55 million…”?