Wednesday 29 October 2014

Australians for Honest Politics set for a revival? - The AIM Network

Australians for Honest Politics set for a revival? - The AIM Network





Australians for Honest Politics set for a revival?














As reported by John Kelly
in September, there has been an ongoing investigation into Tony
Abbott’s eligibility to enter Parliament as dual citizenship precludes
you from running for office.



Tony Magrathea filed a Freedom of Information application to the
Office of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Peta Credlin rejected his
request stating, “The document you have sought is not an official
document of a Minister and therefore there is no right of access to the
document under the FOI Act.”



Ninemsm also asked for confirmation that the Prime Minister had
renounced his British Citizenship. They were advised by the Department
of Prime Minister and Cabinet that, “The Prime Minister is an Australian
citizen and does not hold citizenship of any other country.”



Robert McMahon, Assistant Secretary of the Parliamentary and
Government Branch, apparently disagrees with Credlin’s stonewalling.



On October 8 he responded to a FOI application lodged by Jan Olsen with the following:


Having regard to my knowledge of where documents
potentially relevant to the applicant’s request would be held, if they
existed, the following locations were searched:



  • The Department’s file management system
  • The Department’s current and former ministerial correspondence database
  • Computer drives of relevant branches in the Department
  • Email accounts of current officers in relevant branches in the Department
As a result of these searches, no relevant documents were found in the Department.


I am satisfied that all reasonable steps have been taken to identify
documents relevant to the applicant’s request and that no documents
relevant to the request are in the possession of the Department.

The British Home Office, following a FOI request, have also been
unsuccessful in finding Tony’s RN form which relinquishes British
citizenship.



I wonder where Credlin gets her information from and why she is keeping it a secret.


And now another rather ironic possible connection has emerged.


In the Sue vs Hill case, Henry Sue, a voter from Queensland, disputed
the election of Hill and filed a petition under the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 in the High Court of Australia, sitting in its
capacity as the Court of Disputed Returns. Sue argued that on the date
of Hill’s nomination to the Senate she was still a citizen of the United
Kingdom and thus, because of the operation of section 44 of the
Australian Constitution, was ineligible to be elected to the Parliament
of Australia.



Terry Sharples, a former One Nation candidate who had stood for the
Senate in the 1998 election as an independent candidate, made a similar
petition. Because both cases involved constitutional questions, and were
substantially identical, they were heard together from 11–13 May 1999.



In 1998, Abbott privately agreed to bankroll Terry Sharples, a disaffected One Nation member, to take legal action against Pauline Hanson.


Less than 2 weeks later, he categorically denied to the ABC that he
had done so, and 18 months later he repeated the lie, this time to the
Sydney Morning Herald’s Deborah Snow. But when she confronted him with
his signed personal guarantee, he said that:



‘…misleading the ABC is not quite the same as misleading the Parliament as a political crime’.


He then created a slush fund he called Australians for Honest
Politics and raised $100,000 for it from 12 people he declined to name.
The fund began bankrolling more court actions against Hanson and her
party.



Could Tony’s slush fund have financed the Sharples vs Hill case?


I wonder if Geoffrey Robertson might be interested in taking on a crowd-funded People vs Abbott case?


Like this:

Friday 17 October 2014

The shocking joke and the shock jocks

The shocking joke and the shock jocks

41





With some of PM Tony Abbott’s recent media appearances attracting worldwide ridicule, Rodney E. Lever says he needs to take some backward steps for all our sakes.



PRIME MINISTER TONY ABBOTT reveals a lot more about himself than he
should when he hangs out with commercial radio shock jocks, rather than a
media pack that asks too many hard questions for his liking and to whom
he often gives evasive, dithering answers.




He performs at his best in radio interviews — perhaps because he is
more comfortable exposing his weirder mental deliberations in the
one-to-one atmosphere of a cosy radio studio.   




With the worst of his recent behaviour ‒ his rude attack on Vladimir Putin
‒ now, to Australia’s embarrassment, being poured out to the world,
Abbott needs to take some backward steps to avoid more ridicule.




It comes at the same time former Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s book, My Story, is reaching shelves and attracting comment.





Gillard pulls no punches in telling how Kevin Rudd had to be removed as prime minister and a Labor caucus majority demanded her to take over the leadership.



One of the better known radio shockers in Australia is Alan Jones, who drew the attention
of the CNN network in the USA. Jones, whose audience usually consists
of elderly retirees, is a twice failed Liberal Party
candidate whose alleged lewd behaviour in men’s toilets brought
attention from the police in London.




Abbott puts his foot in his mouth so frequently he leaves the voters
to wonder if he really should be the prime minister of this country. It
is worth remembering that he only got the job by a single vote in the Liberal Party caucus, ending Malcolm Turnbull’s short leadership.






The world of shock jocks in Australia has a history going back to the 1930s.



The first of them was Norman Banks on Melbourne’s 3AW. 



Norman, whom I knew well, was a large and heavily opinionated man who
was ready to demolish anyone else’s contradictory views. He was the
first of Australia’s radio shock jocks, and probably the most
intelligent. I cannot imagine Banks allowing Abbott to get away with
some of the stupid gaffes, like his childish shirtfront threat against
the president of Russia.




By the 1950s, Banks was one of the most popular figures in Victorian radio. It was the same era Graham Kennedy worked as a recording clerk at 3UZ — later to become the most famous television performer in Australia.



Norman Banks, who was also a football commentator, died in 1985.





He was certainly the broadcaster who became the model for today’s
multiple range of shock jocks who like to dabble in politics but often
have little understanding of the nature of good government. 




The modern shock jocks were second only to the Murdoch newspapers in
bringing down Julia Gillard and the Labor Party in 2013, handing
government to the most incompetent and ignorant group of amateurs
Australia has ever encountered.




Clearly, Tony Abbott has already become aware of the embarrassment
the majority of voters in this country must feel in his idiotic threat
concerning Putin. He is carefully backing away in the hope that his silly remark will be forgotten by the time the G20 gets under way.




We should be so lucky.



You can follow Rodney on Twitter @RodneyELever.





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Tuesday 14 October 2014

Pravda lashes Tony Abbott as 'disturbed' over threat to shirtfront Vladimir Putin

Pravda lashes Tony Abbott as 'disturbed' over threat to shirtfront Vladimir Putin



Pravda lashes Tony Abbott as 'disturbed' over threat to shirtfront Vladimir Putin




Russian paper launches colourful broadside at Australian PM, saying he runs the risk of getting his ‘teeth smashed in’




Pravda says Tony Abbott has picked the wrong person to 'bully'.

Pravda says Tony Abbott has picked the wrong person to ‘bully’.
Photograph: Sasha Mordovets/Getty Images








Pravda has described Tony Abbott as “a disturbed mind crying out for
therapy”: after his threat to “shirtfront” the Russian president,
Vladimir Putin, in Brisbane.



Abbott grabbed global headlines for his tough talk ahead of the
Russian leader’s expected attendance at the G20 meeting next month.



He modified his rhetoric on Tuesday but insisted he would hold robust
talks with Putin over the “murder” of 38 Australians when Malaysia
Airlines flight MH17 was shot down over eastern Ukraine.



In an open letter, published on Pravda, the mouthpiece of the Communist regime in Soviet times, columnist Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey demanded Abbott pull his head in.


“Like any bully there comes a day when you pick on the wrong person,
get your teeth smashed in and go running home to mummy blabbering like a
ninny,” he wrote.



The threat was the “most crass example of stupidity the world has
seen since the USA, the UK and Australia murdered Iraqi civilians in an
illegal and criminal series of war crimes”.



“If you seriously think you can physically confront your guests and
assault a visiting head of state and walk away freely, then you are
mistaken,” he wrote.



He said Abbott had rendered himself liable for prosecution for criminal intent and incitement to violence.


Bancroft-Hinchey warned the Australian leader should not pre-empt the MH17 investigation.


“Wait for the inquiry before making your odious accusations and
sounding like a foul-mouthed, despicable, pith-headed and uncouth,
loutish oaf,” he said.



Pravda has often reflected Putin’s views, but also sometimes opposed him.


In London, Joe Hockey defended Abbott’s comments, saying they
reflected the depth of “anger and understandable emotion” in Australia.



“There is a deep-seated anger across the Australian community about
what happened to the 38 poor souls, who were Australians, that died on
the Malaysia plane in Ukraine, but also to help to find ways to get
justice for the families that lost loved ones,” the treasurer said on
Tuesday.



Hockey said he expected talks at the G20 to include the issue of the
economic sanctions that Western nations, including Australia, had placed
on Russia in the wake of the MH17 crash.



“There is no doubt that sanctions are having an impact both ways,” he said.


“Russian sanctions are having an impact on Europe and European,
American and Australian sanctions are having an impact on Russia.



“So if there is a way through the challenge in Ukraine then hopefully
that can be identified either before Brisbane or at Brisbane.”



This article was amended on 15 October to better reflect Pravda’s relationship to the Russian government


Fatwas, blessed revolutions and snacks: an evening with Hizb ut-Tahrir –

Fatwas, blessed revolutions and snacks: an evening with Hizb ut-Tahrir –

Fatwas, blessed revolutions and snacks: an evening with Hizb ut-Tahrir


Tony Abbott has declared Hizb ut-Tahrir to be unAustralian and
supportive of ideas that promote terrorism. But what really happens at
one of the group’s events?









Last week was another huge one for our political leaders to
wax lyrical on all things Islamic, Islamist, Islamicist, terrorist and
terroristicist. It started with the Prime Minister apologising to Alan Jones for not banning hate preachers who promote violence and hatred (outside Cronulla, of course). Tony Abbott then issued a fatwa that the fringe Muslim group Hizb ut-Tahrir (HT) was unAustralian because it promoted “an ideology which justifies terrorism”.



And as we all know, real Aussies don’t support or promote
terrorism or violent political extremism. There have never been
Australians supporting pro-Nazi Croatian militias. No one in Abbott’s own faction of the New South Wales Liberal Party has ever heard of the late Slovenian writer Lyenko Urbanchich, who
maintained his Liberal Party membership and support for the faction
until he died in 2006. And surely it is a complete myth that any Australian would raise money for Sinn Fein, which was long regarded as a mouthpiece of the Irish Republican Army (IRA). Imagine Australians supporting terrorists who frequently attacked Abbott’s birthplace of London.



The Daily Telegraph also joined the
chorus of HT-haters, reporting HT was to hold a gathering at which a
“sinister player in a world of radicals” would speak. The proud owner of
this title, Ismail al-Wahwah, “supports no alcohol”, and worse, “wants
Arabic to be the world’s only language”.



How could I miss out on attending so unAustralian a gathering? I imagined lining up in a queue for air tickets to Syria and Islamic State passports.


Alas, this wasn’t to be. Instead the alcohol-phobic
Arabic-supremacist sinister player invited me to sit up the front. Was
this a ruse to have me beheaded? Or was he wearing a suicide vest?
“Bruzzer, you like me. We both big. We need plenty room”. To think I
wanted to be up the back, just like one of the old cynics from The Muppet Show.



Wahwah then proceeded to speak for some 50 minutes, in a
very pronounced Jordanian accent. I’ve sat through many Friday sermons
delivered by blokes with luxuriant Arab accents. If I was having some
trouble understanding what Wahwah was saying, imagine how much trouble
the real journos had.



So there
you have it. A one-hour rambling tour de force of political diatribe
delivered to a mixed-gender crowd … followed by questions and discussion
and finally some refreshments.”

But Wahwah was loud, boisterous, charismatic, animated and very entertaining. Here’s a summary:


1. Capitalism has failed the world. Capitalism has destroyed
the good in the world. The people of this planet deserve something
better. (Don’t get too excited, all you pot-smoking, basket-weaving
ABC/Fairfax lefties out there. I don’t think he means socialism.)



2. Australian Federal Police tried to negotiate with him
about the poster and promotional material for that evening’s lecture.
The feds even objected to the full title (being “THE WAR TO END A
BLESSED REVOLUTION: THE POLITICS AND PLOTS OF THE AMERICAN LED
INTERVENTION IN IRAQ AND SYRIA”) using the phrase “blessed revolution”.
“Why not take the word ‘blessed’ out?” they suggested. Wahwah refused
and proceeded to lecture the feds on a raid in which they had removed
the blanket from a woman early one morning while she was in bed. He said
that every community had its sore points, and for Muslim communities, a
woman’s honour was its sorest point. “We Muslims may be the weak ones,
but we have strong memories.”



3. Wahwah said Muslims were perhaps the only group in the
country who needed to watch the news every day just to follow what laws
regulated them and their behaviour.



4. I found Wahwah’s analysis of the “clash” between “the West” and “the Muslims” strangely reminiscent of the Huntington thesis of
clash of civilisations. He backed his claims up with quotes from
Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Bush the Elder (the “New World Order” heralded by
the removal of Saddam from Kuwait) and other material. It was more
simplistic than sinister.



5. He was totally correct in saying that all justifications
for war in Iraq 2003 onwards have been lies. The current invasion is
also based on some ulterior motives.



6. Wahwah referred to former PM John Howard feeling good
about saying that he was embarrassed for the 2003 Iraq War. It was as if
Howard imagined his embarrassment would magically bring 650,000 dead
Iraqis back to life.



7. For Muslims in Australia, speaking out against and
exposing the lies of the war and the US plans for Iraq and Syria is far
more important than picking up weapons and going to fight.



So there you have it. A one-hour rambling tour de force of
political diatribe delivered to a mixed-gender crowd of 200 people
followed by questions and discussion and finally some refreshments. What
could be more unAustralian than this?


Monday 13 October 2014

Shirtfronting with Vlad the Impaler and Tony Dum Dum

Shirtfronting with Vlad the Impaler and Tony Dum Dum



13



(Image via @keiragorden)


Tony Abbott says he is going to “shirtfront” Vladamir Putin at the G20, but managing editor David Donovan says he may be in for a shock.



It wasn’t just what he said, it was also the way he said it.



Yesterday, Prime Minister Tony Abbott ‒ fresh from saying coal is good for humanity
‒ stood in front of an enormous coal truck in Central Queensland and,
like a punch drunk pug trying to trash talk a much more highly fancied
opponent, said he was going to “shirtfront” Russian President Vladimir Putin.




Firstly, “shirtfront” — what does that even mean?



When I first heard Abbott say that yesterday afternoon, I thought he
meant he was going to grab Putin by his shirt to not let him get away to
give him a piece of his mind — something, I would suggest, he could ill
afford to lose.




Then, however, I began hearing people from the AFL states offering their footy code’s definition — which would seem to be the act of illegally scruffing someone by the shirtfront – or laying the hip and shoulder into them – and knocking them to the ground.





Could Abbott really have just threatened assault on a foreign head of state?



Then I heard another take, which is two drunks in a bar holding onto
each other’s shirtfront to stop the other from falling down so they
could keep on punching. What?




Whichever one Abbott meant ‒ if any ‒ he has committed an appalling
breach of diplomatic protocol in advance of a major international summit
and shamed the nation.




Of course, Abbott has consistently behaved in an offensively
aggressive manner toward Russia ever since he started tough-talking over
Russia’s intervention in the Ukraine earlier in the year. He followed
up with all manner and threats and bluster when MH17 went down in June,
standing up in Parliament the next day to effectively accuse the
Russians of shooting the plane down. The rashness of this statement is
manifest when we consider the incident is still being investigated by Dutch authorities, who still appear be no closer to announcing the real cause. Then, of course, we were going to ban Russia from attending, and then we had to let them come and now this.




Whatever he is trying to do — it ain’t working. It is the diplomacy of the town drunk, yelling incoherent abuse into the street.



But it wasn’t simply what he said, it was the way he said it.





Here is a direct transcript of Abbott’s  words [IA emphasis]:



“Look, I’m going to … ahh … ‘shirt front’ Mr Putin. You bet you are… ahh … you bet I am. Ahh…”




You bet you are? What?



You get the impression he had just been prepped and fired up by an
advisor, perhaps his ubiquitous chief of staff Peta Credlin, who had fed
him his lines and he had forgotten to personalise them.




Either way, it was a truly facepalming moment for the nation.



It must be said that Abbott is a woeful public speaker.



When he reads his remarks, he sounds like an eight year-old who has
never read a book without pictures before and is still coming to grips
with the written word.




When he doesn’t read his speeches and speaks off the cuff, he sounds somewhat more composed, but then usually makes some hugely embarrassing faux pas or blunder — like when he promised before the election to spend his first week as PM in Arnhem Land, for instance.





But even when he is trying to parrot simple rehearsed lines, he still can’t quite get them right.



Did he even mean shirtfront? Who would know? One can only imagine the
distress and anxiety in the prime minister’s office every time they
watch him appear in front of the media.




No wonder Peta Credlin drinks.



Really, Tony Abbott should never have become Australian Prime Minister. John Pilger pigeonholed Abbott perfectly when he described him on IA recently
as ‘aggressively weird’. He is aggressive and he is weird — and it
often also appears as if all of his synapses are not firing effectively.




He makes blunder after blunder and doesn’t seem to care as Australia
more and more becomes a laughing stock and international pariah.




We should also note that Vladamir Putin, apart from being a former KGB agent, is an eighth dan black belt judo champion — ninth being the highest awarded and judo being the sport in which the object is to grapple or throw the other person onto the ground.



Putin’s nickname is Vlad the Impaler — and after threatening violence on him, Tony Dum Dum may finally have bitten off more than he can chew.





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Saturday 4 October 2014

Self-belief is no substitute for accountability - The AIM Network

Self-belief is no substitute for accountability - The AIM Network



Self-belief is no substitute for accountability














Self-belief is a powerful tool in achieving success and there is
no question that Tony Abbott has it in spades.  But does he have the
substance to justify it?



At high school, Tony was in the seconds for rugby, something that did
not sit well with him or his father who both believed he should have
been in the First XV.



After average results at university and an uninspiring football
career, with the help of the Jesuit network, Tony headed off to Oxford
to take up his Rhodes Scholarship. It only took a couple of games for
him to be dropped from the rugby team with suggestions that his prowess
had been somewhat exaggerated.  Tony was strong on physicality but short
on speed or finesse.



Tony’s certainty about himself led to him knocking Joe Hockey out at
training one night when Joe had had enough of Tony’s autocratic style as
captain/coach/selector for the seconds at Sydney University.



Student politics at Sydney University saw Tony, a callow youth
straight from a Catholic boys’ school, given a platform to preach loud
and long in his opposition to homosexuality and feminism. Further, he
denounced contraception, labelling it part of the “me now” mentality. 
Ironically, whilst eschewing the use of contraception, Tony was an avid
partaker of “me now” activities, if not the responsibility that went
with them.



Even at the seminary, Tony was convinced that the Church was headed
in the wrong direction and that he knew better, as he wrote in articles
in the Bulletin at the time.



“Looking back, it seems that I was seeking a spiritual
and human excellence to which the Church is no longer sure she aspires.
My feeble attempts to recall her to her duty — as I saw it — betrayed a
fathomless disappointment at the collapse of a cherished ideal.”

When Tony entered his first full-time job as manager at a concrete
plant, it only took a couple of months for the plant to be black-listed
and shut down.



“I got to the plant in the morning, marched up and down
the line of trucks like a Prussian army officer, telling owner-drivers
who had been in the industry for longer than I had been alive, that that
truck was too dirty, and that truck was filthy, and that truck had a
leaking valve and had to be fixed. Naturally enough, this wasn’t very
popular”

In 1992, he was appointed director of Australians for Constitutional
Monarchy, a position he held until 1994, when he was elected to
parliament at the Warringah by-election.



Abbott was first appointed to Cabinet following the 1998 election, as
part of the Second Howard Ministry, becoming Minister for Employment,
Workplace Relations and Small Business, an interesting choice since he
had little to no experience at all in these areas.



In 2003, he became Minister for Health and Ageing. This was also an
interesting choice.  When he was given the role of infirmarian at the
seminary, a job that involved supervising the medicine cabinet and
ensuring that the ill were not forgotten in their rooms, Tony objected
saying



“My view was that I knew nothing about medicine and that
those too sick to eat in the dining room ought to be in hospital.
Anyway, I thought, most were malingering. So I encouraged “self-service”
of medicines and suggested that meals would be better fetched by the
friends of the sick. Many deeply resented this disdain for college’s
caring and communitarian ethos. And, I confess, I did not have the
courage to refuse room service to members of the seminary staff.”

Apparently he still considers sick people malingerers who should be discouraged from seeing a doctor.


Tony has displayed this absolute certainty that he is right all his
life so, when he was elected leader of the Liberal Party in return for
becoming a climate change denier, I started getting concerned. When he
became Prime Minister I felt alarmed.  Twelve months in and I am
horrified.  I am afraid for the present and for the future.



Tony Abbott is only one man, but this man’s unwavering belief in his
own judgement has seen him surround himself with advisers who tell him
what he wants to hear. Experts are sacked, independent advisory panels
disbanded, oversight and freedom of information curtailed, journalists
and the National Broadcaster threatened.



In the space of a year we have gone from world leaders in action on climate change to being called the “Saudi Arabia of the Pacific”.


‘In the year since they took office, Prime Minister Tony
Abbott and his Liberal-led coalition have already dismantled the
country’s key environmental policies. Now they’ve begun systematically
ransacking its natural resources. In the process, they’ve transformed
Australia from an international innovator on environmental issues into
quite possibly the dirtiest country in the developed world.’

Instead of looking forward to every home being connected to the NBN
and school funding bridging the gap of disadvantage and inequity, we
have record numbers of new coal mines to enjoy. Instead of universal
healthcare and unemployment benefits, we see people on pensions feeling
very afraid about their future.  Instead of affordable tertiary
education and housing, we see places being sold to the highest bidder.



We have moved from bringing our troops home from Afghanistan, to a
war in Iraq and Syria that will inevitably lead to civilian casualties
and destruction of homes and infrastructure, a move that has seen us
specifically named for revenge attacks. The “humanitarian mission” line
has been exposed for the lie it always was.



Instead of strengthening laws against discrimination, we now see
Australian Muslim women persecuted everywhere from parliament to
shopping centres. Bronwyn Bishop has been on this tirade for years,
calling for the hijab to be banned in 2005.



“It’s not about headscarves per se, it’s about a clash of
cultures where there are extremist Muslim leaders who are calling for
the overthrow of the laws that indeed give me my freedom and my equality
as defined by the society in which I live.



Now, this morning on a debate with a Muslim lady, she said she felt
free being a Muslim, and I would simply say that in Nazi Germany, Nazis
felt free and comfortable. That is not the sort of definition of freedom
that I want for my country.”

Independent MP Andrew Wilkie, who formerly worked in intelligence,
has accused the federal government of exploiting fears about terrorism
to rush through new national security laws that push Australia towards a
police state“.



“It is clearly overreach by the security services who
have basically been invited to write an open cheque. And the government,
which wants to beat its chest and look tough on national security,
said, ‘We’ll sign that’.”

The laws include jail terms of up to 10 years for journalists who
disclose details of ASIO “special intelligence operations” and provide
immunity from criminal prosecution for intelligence officers who commit a
crime in the course of their duties.



David Irvine, retired head of ASIO, has wanted this green light for years as this interview from 2012 shows:


“Australia’s domestic spy agency says it’s just trying to
stay up to date but critics say ASIO’s request for new laws is a
blatant power grab.



ASIO has put several proposals to the Federal Government, including allowing its officers to commit crimes and not be charged.


It also wants to hack computers of people who haven’t committed a crime.


And most controversially, it wants telcos to store our phone and
internet data for up to two years so it can be searched without a
warrant.



ASIO director-general of Security David Irvine bristles at the suggestion that he is empire building.”

That was well before the rise of ISIS.


Last year I read an essay about the responsibilities of government.


“The government of a democracy is accountable to the people.
It must fulfil its end of the social contract. And, in a practical
sense, government must be accountable because of the severe consequences
that may result from its failure. As the outcomes of fighting unjust
wars and inadequately responding to critical threats such as global
warming illustrate, great power implies great responsibility.”



Tony has great power but no sense of responsibility. He has
confidence but no conscience.  He has determination but no commitment. 
He is willing but lacks the skills.  He attacks and blames but resents
oversight and has never accepted accountability, and this is what scares
me most.



The consequences of being wrong could/will be catastrophic and I
don’t share Tony’s confidence that he, Maurice Newman and Cardinal Pell
have all the answers.



“A body of men holding themselves accountable to nobody ought not to be trusted by anybody.”


― Thomas Paine


Like this:

Friday 3 October 2014

Tony’s troubles don’t end with Bishop's burqas

Tony’s troubles don’t end with Bishop's burqas



65



(Image by John Graham)


With his Government in chaos over banning the burqa and a
litany of other woes confronting him, unremittently unpopular Prime
Minister Tony Abbott is in deep trouble, writes Bob Ellis.




SPEAKER BRONWYN BISHOP, who supported apartheid, may not back down on the burqa as quickly as Abbott wants.



Nor will she resign as readily as the nation might hope when her Leader asks her to.



She may take the view that she is accountable only to Parliament and hold her position, amid widening derision, until it sits.



This will bring into question all of Brandis’s ‘national security’ legislation — especially that part which imprisons for ten years journalists who, like Andrew Wilkie, reveal government stupidity.



Stupidity as stupid as this.



Is Abbott himself now in trouble? I think he is.



He is taking us into a war of which he allowed no parliamentary discussion.



He spoke of ‘Team Australia’ yet allowed a ‘sin bin’ as ludicrous as this,
and he may not be able to cancel it until Parliament overthrows his
defiant, unfair, tyrannous and, some would say, ratbag Speaker.




His competence, always in question (Costello predicted
he would be a disaster), is now shown to be, well, further in question.
He dare not move his ministry round, so low is his support in Cabinet.






And he can’t get his Budget through.



He may limp on till December 1, but then, when next Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews’ huge majority is known, he may have to consider his position — and Malcolm Turnbull his.



And so it will go.



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