While the exchange of political donations and post-politics gigs for policy favours for corporations was especially transparent under the rotten Morrison government, the election of Labor was never going to bring to an end either Australia’s two-speed democracy or mates being looked after by the politicians they fund.
So it’s proven in recent days as federal Labor ministers clutched their pearls about climate protesters targeting the CEO of Australia’s top climate criminal, Woodside, joining the Liberals, News Corp, the 100% fossil fuel-owned WA Labor government and the Financial Review (which is now laying the groundwork for a hysterical campaign of opposition to industrial action by Woodside workers — can the comparisons with Putin be far off in the pages of the AFR?).
As Crikey keeps noting, Woodside is one of the biggest donors to both sides of politics, having lavished millions on the major parties over the past decade, and generously provides board seats for former MPs of both persuasions. And federal Labor is happy to look after it — including making sure Woodside was agreeable to the paltry increases in the much-rorted Petroleum Resource Rent Tax in the May budget.
Over in NSW, some more consultations were taking place on tax, between the NSW Labor government and the lawbreaking Star Casino. NSW Labor has decided Star Casino needs a special deal to reduce the impact of the tax hike introduced by former Liberal treasurer Matt Kean. Labor’s rationale for handing out yet another break to yet another gambling company — including a special role for the huge United Workers Union — is that Star might have had to close to pay the tax (what a tragedy for money launderers and organised crime that would have been) and that Kean failed to “consult” with Star.
Perhaps this is the ALP’s new policy approach — that corporations must be given a veto over tax rises, with discussions conducted behind closed doors. If only the rest of we taxpayers got to sit down with tax authorities and negotiate how much tax we pay. Bizarrely, this logic seems to have been absorbed by Nine journalists, who last night reported, with a straight face, “Kean’s public announcement blindsided Star Entertainment’s leadership, who were not consulted about the proposal ahead of time”.
Star — long a substantial political donor — gave $212,000 in political contributions at the state and federal level in 2021-22, split evenly between the parties. Federal Labor was the biggest recipient, with $80,000. Presumably such contributions will dry up now that Star is sacking hundreds of workers and crying poor to politicians?
Qantas doesn’t need donations to maintain its hold over both sides of politics, and Labor is proving as assiduous a defender of the dismal airline’s interests as the Coalition ever was. Labor has cut funding for domestic airfare monitoring by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, sparing Qantas the periodic embarrassment of being shown to be gouging passengers, and refused to establish an independent complaints-handling body for the aviation sector, despite Qantas being the most complained-about company in the country.
Most of all, Labor has blocked the expansion of capacity by Qantas competitors, especially Qatar Airways. Clearly the government, and Infrastructure Minister Catherine King, hoped that any controversy over that would have vanished by now, but if anything the inexplicable decision is garnering more and more media attention — a situation not helped by King’s weird, constantly changing explanations of why she blocked Qatar, including that it was to protect jobs, when in fact it would have increased employment in Australia.
(And behold the strange story about Qatar Airways flying “ghost flights” to Canberra and Adelaide in Guardian Australia this week, something that is a well-known result of the restrictions placed on Qatar in Australia, and which was reported nearly a year ago despite the Guardian claiming it was an “exclusive”. The Guardian portrayed this as a “legal loophole” that the sinister Qataris are exploiting, with an anonymous “industry insider” found to accuse Qatar Airways of “taking the piss out of the industry and the laws”. Any bets on where the “insider” works, given Qantas and its partner Emirates have the most to lose from more competition in Australia?)
So while the sordid Morrison years are over, big corporations are still being looked after by Labor at the expense of the public interest and taxpayers.
On the upside, there is one group of mates that is very definitely not being looked after. The big 3.5 consulting firms, who collectively have been giving up to half a million dollars a year in contributions to the major political parties in recent years, were already in Labor’s sights before the last election, with the party’s commitment to significantly cutting public service spending on consultants. The PwC tax scandal and revelations from the ongoing Senate inquiry into consultants drove things much further, with the government this week announcing a significant expansion of regulation of major audit, tax advice and consulting firms.
While aspects of that crackdown will likely be watered down in the coming “consultation” process, it demonstrates that Labor can belt major donors — albeit, they have to behave absolutely outrageously first. If only it was willing to treat Woodside and Qantas with the same rigour.
Is Labor any better than the Coalition when it comes to favours for mates? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
Political donations breed corruption.
That’s their only purpose.
And Labor, like the coalition, benefit from them.
Kiss any commitment to tackling climate change from Labor while the big polluters keep giving them money. Also, I wait with bated breath for any action on the Big 4 accounting firms. I hope I’m wrong but the courage just doesn’t seem to be there to tackle the crooks or forego a few relatively paltry donations . . .
Courage being the operative word…or more appropriately the lack of it.
We , the public, are just so shafted on so many levels, it’s almost hard to keep count.
Albanese, like the Morrison crew, are such a gutless, self obsessed, bunch of traitors, it defies belief.
We are stuffed, with corruption or climate change in a headlong race to take us out.
nuh ;the bad actors re-emerge phoenix like bought for a buck the’ business model’, and the attending data and information piracy model – all costing us our bottom line … its getting lower or higher depending on ones resilience or stupidity to stomach this guff…Gough would be calling this widespread betrayal of the Australian citizens and our democracy
What was missing in this country since ’75 was a platform for Gough to campaign against all the poisonous scum who brought him down and destroyed this country since. Imagine he’d built a groundswell of rebellious discontent like bloody Trump.
I note the story of Canstruct this morning in the Worm. For $47,500 i donations they got a $1.8 billion contract to incarcerate immigranrs on Nauru. Since there are hardly any left most of that is clear profit. From this we can deduce that our pollies dont cost much but the bibers demand a pretty good return on their investment which our gutless pollies are happy to oblige.
Its too disgusting for words.
There is currently a vacancy for a party that has some moral courage in this country.
I am currently trying to find a home for my next vote.
That’s one thing that really gets me about politicians: they’re so f—-ing cheap to buy!!!
Capital is all about the ROI.
The bit that gets me, is these insane profit machines act as if they have no need for everything they’re destroying.
Greens or progressive – some teals are some arent some independants are some arent; labor or liberal =bad or diabolical
In most electorates it’s less a matter of who you want to vote for than figuring out the order of least repulsive to most.
It’s got me stumped why we don’t all vote like this: the really psycho independents and minor parties dead last, immediately followed by LNP. Perhaps one or two minors or independents next, then Alternative Liberal Party, and above all that refuse, anyone you can see a glimmer of decency in.
It’s all very well clutching pearls about corporate donations but isn’t this a structural problem with the consequences inherent in the funding model?
The saddest thing is favours are bought so cheaply. It’s not like the billions in profit get redirected to politics it’s trifling amounts less than the value of the car the big donor drives to the meeting. Tally them up over a decade and you get millions but individually… usually nah.
But how could it be any other way when us plebs have outsourced politics to “professionals” ?
I know, right? I keep thinking that the Voice would be better as an annual grant of a couple of million dollars to be used to buy seats at the ministerial tables during party fundraisers. It would be cheaper and way more effective.
If you want anything from an Australian government you need to pay for it first. As you point out, though, it costs disappointingly little.
The returns are disappointingly little.
yes totally
Nah. This Labor government is really a Liberal lite party, nowhere it’s traditional working class bedrock. I think that The Greens are more like the Labor of old. I think that good old ex public housing Albo is a big disssapointment.
What’s “lite” about the ALP? Their MPs’ views and policies are spread along the same spectrum as MPs from the Liberal party. They’re not so much “lite” as they are “Liberal less raving loony”. Same policies, better marketing for them.
Well, they are relatively socially progressive, and they spout a bit of lip-service to slightly leftish notions beyond that here and there. Deckchairs on the Titanic stuff.
Oh goody, another perfectly innocuous post blocked. Here we go line by line again.
Well, they are relatively socially progressive,
and they spout a bit of lip-service to slightly leftish notions beyond that here and there.
Deckchairs on the Titanic stuff.
Deckchairs?
Why the hell aren’t we allowed to mention that bloody boat with the for chimneys?
So fkn sick of this commenting platform.
Not Another ZAC!