This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/live/2016/mar/01/labor-steps-up-its-campaign-against-senate-voting-reform-politics-live
The article has changed 16 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 9 | Version 10 |
---|---|
Tony Abbott urges Malcolm Turnbull to slash spending to fund tax cuts – politics live | Tony Abbott urges Malcolm Turnbull to slash spending to fund tax cuts – politics live |
(35 minutes later) | |
3.29am GMT | |
03:29 | |
Green Adam Bandt. | |
Q: The safe schools program has been stopping bullying around the country and has helped many young people feel that they fit in. Prime minister, is your commitment to socially progressive values so skin deep that you will put young people’s welfare at risk and throw a successful anti-bullying campaign under a bus just because the bigots in the conservative brotherhood tell you to? | |
Bandt is told to withdraw the unparliamentary language. He withdraws. | |
Malcolm Turnbull: | |
Mr Speaker, every student, every child has the right to be safe at school, has the right to be safe at home. We have no tolerance for bullying of any kind. Let’s be quite clear about that. Bullying, whether it is in the classroom, whether it is on the bus, whether it is on the Internet, wherever it occurs, it is utterly unacceptable. | |
And it is unacceptable on whatever basis that bullying occurs, whether it is on the basis of a child’s sexual orientation, their perception of their sexuality, of their race, their gender, their religion, their appearance. | |
Turnbull says there have been complaints about safe schools. The government is conducting an independent review. The government will make the review public, judge the merits of the complaints. | |
We will be able to judge the merit of the criticisms and what, if any, steps should be taken consequent on the review. That is taking children’s rights seriously, it’s taking bullying seriously, it’s standing up for children. | |
3.22am GMT | |
03:22 | |
Labor is persisting with ‘will the prime minister rule out retrospective changes to negative gearing’ – this time quoting George Brandis in the Senate yesterday, who said: “It has always been the position of Coalition governments to have an in principle opposition to retrospectivity.” | |
The prime minister says, look, we are having a debate about tax policy. | |
The government is considering these matters and considering them very carefully. We are taking the best advice and analysing the impacts of various proposed changes with great care and diligence. | |
And by the way, your policy sucks, Labor. | |
3.14am GMT | |
03:14 | |
Bill Shorten is back. | |
Q: Today the former prime minister has shirt fronted the current prime minister over his lack of economic leadership. Will the current prime minister take up the former PM’s challenge and rule out retrospective changes to negative gearing. | |
This one is waved to the treasurer, Scott Morrison, who is digging out old quotes, before Labor resolved to adjust negative gearing, back when the policy was “not on our radar” according to Bill Shorten. | |
Scott Morrison: | |
It would seem, of course, the leader of the opposition is on a need to know basis when it comes to their policy. | |
3.10am GMT | |
03:10 | |
On a roll here now in question time. The prime minister is currently explaining why there has never been a more exciting time deregulate media ownership. | |
Mr Speaker, governments have kicked the reform of these media ownership rules into the long grass for so long that they have formed part of the rich subsoil of Australian political inertia – and we are taking them out. | |
3.07am GMT | |
03:07 | |
Malcolm Turnbull. | |
We know what those levers are and we are pulling them. | |
3.05am GMT | |
03:05 | |
Question time | |
It being 2pm. The Labor leader is opening today on the nauseating exchange of compliments between Tony Abbott and Malcolm Turnbull in the party room today. | |
Q: Today in the Coalition party room the former prime minister challenged the current prime minister over his lack of economic leadership. Will the PM finally show some leadership and rule out retrospective changes to negative gearing? | |
The prime minister thanks Shorten for allowing him to showcase the depth of experience on this side of the House. We are back in exciting times, and lever pulling, and the wanton destruction of the value of the family home. | |
2.54am GMT | 2.54am GMT |
02:54 | 02:54 |
Jane Norman from the ABC has tweeted that Cory Bernardi has been selected for one of the parliament’s prime junkets (sorry, study tours) – the three-month sortie to the United Nations. Just out of interest, the government MP who last went on this trip was Barry O’Sullivan, the LNP senator who used to make quite a sideline out of giving the HRC president, Gillian Triggs, an extremely hard time every time she crossed his path in an estimates committee. | |
Happy days. | Happy days. |
Updated | |
at 3.15am GMT | |
2.35am GMT | 2.35am GMT |
02:35 | 02:35 |
Apologies I should have explained that last video: that’s Tony Abbott in response to the prime minister’s pep talk to the party room earlier today. | Apologies I should have explained that last video: that’s Tony Abbott in response to the prime minister’s pep talk to the party room earlier today. |
Clap along, if you feel, that happiness is the truth .. | Clap along, if you feel, that happiness is the truth .. |
2.32am GMT | 2.32am GMT |
02:32 | 02:32 |
The sound of half a hand clapping. | The sound of half a hand clapping. |
Applause for the PM in this morning's Coalition joint party room meeting. pic.twitter.com/zjGK4T02VY | Applause for the PM in this morning's Coalition joint party room meeting. pic.twitter.com/zjGK4T02VY |
Updated | Updated |
at 2.33am GMT | at 2.33am GMT |
2.28am GMT | 2.28am GMT |
02:28 | 02:28 |
A nauseating exchange of compliments .. | A nauseating exchange of compliments .. |
My colleague Lenore Taylor is just back from the official briefing after the Coalition party room meeting. | My colleague Lenore Taylor is just back from the official briefing after the Coalition party room meeting. |
The official briefer, outed earlier today as George Brandis by the foreign minister, Julie Bishop, told reporters the exchange between Tony Abbott and Malcolm Turnbull was almost a love-in. It could perhaps be characterised as a slightly nauseating exchange of compliments. | |
Basically a number of MPs took the opportunity of today’s meeting to raise their concerns about the government fiddling with negative gearing. In the middle of that debate, Abbott made his contribution, which was, essentially, to remind colleagues of two truisms: the government had a spending problem and not a revenue problem. Abbott was cautious about going near negative gearing in part because of Malcolm’s brilliant attack on Labor’s policy. | Basically a number of MPs took the opportunity of today’s meeting to raise their concerns about the government fiddling with negative gearing. In the middle of that debate, Abbott made his contribution, which was, essentially, to remind colleagues of two truisms: the government had a spending problem and not a revenue problem. Abbott was cautious about going near negative gearing in part because of Malcolm’s brilliant attack on Labor’s policy. |
The prime minister responded to this performance assessment by noting that leadership was about continuity and change – he said the government was continuing the budget strategy that Tony Abbott had so openly and courageously begun. | The prime minister responded to this performance assessment by noting that leadership was about continuity and change – he said the government was continuing the budget strategy that Tony Abbott had so openly and courageously begun. |
The prime minister apparently wound up by inviting the treasurer Scott Morrison to speak, noting the treasurer was handling a difficult debate really well. Morrison told colleagues the government was dancing on the top of pin head when it came to tax reform. Morrison noted that tax reductions could only come from another tax because spending reductions had to go to deficit reduction. | The prime minister apparently wound up by inviting the treasurer Scott Morrison to speak, noting the treasurer was handling a difficult debate really well. Morrison told colleagues the government was dancing on the top of pin head when it came to tax reform. Morrison noted that tax reductions could only come from another tax because spending reductions had to go to deficit reduction. |
Which is a little different to Abbott’s version. In any case, a nauseating exchange of compliments. For your lunchtime reading. | Which is a little different to Abbott’s version. In any case, a nauseating exchange of compliments. For your lunchtime reading. |
Updated | |
at 3.14am GMT | |
2.11am GMT | 2.11am GMT |
02:11 | 02:11 |
Updated | Updated |
at 2.20am GMT | at 2.20am GMT |
2.08am GMT | 2.08am GMT |
02:08 | 02:08 |
Fifield is asked whether he’ll split the bill, given Labor will give him the reach rule but isn’t yet resolved to give him two out of three. The communications minister isn’t inclined to give up his leverage by letting Labor have a little think about things. Right now, the package is all or nothing. | Fifield is asked whether he’ll split the bill, given Labor will give him the reach rule but isn’t yet resolved to give him two out of three. The communications minister isn’t inclined to give up his leverage by letting Labor have a little think about things. Right now, the package is all or nothing. |
Bundling up is a punt: the media companies want deregulation so they can get bigger. The current industry speculation is a Fairfax merger with the Nine Network and the Murdochs grabbing Network Ten. | Bundling up is a punt: the media companies want deregulation so they can get bigger. The current industry speculation is a Fairfax merger with the Nine Network and the Murdochs grabbing Network Ten. |
The media bosses want it. Will Labor pick a fight with the media owners in the countdown to a federal election? Hence, we get this, from the communications minister. | The media bosses want it. Will Labor pick a fight with the media owners in the countdown to a federal election? Hence, we get this, from the communications minister. |
Mitch Fifield | Mitch Fifield |
I think it’s important that it’s looked at as a whole package and it’s my intention to secure passage of this, as a package. | I think it’s important that it’s looked at as a whole package and it’s my intention to secure passage of this, as a package. |
Updated | Updated |
at 2.20am GMT | at 2.20am GMT |
2.02am GMT | 2.02am GMT |
02:02 | 02:02 |
Fifield says this package protects diversity. | Fifield says this package protects diversity. |
There are some organisations and people in the community who still maintain concerns about diversity and, for people who have those concerns, then we can direct them to the five four rule, we can direct them to the one to a market rule for TV, we can direct them to the two to a market rule for radio and we can also direct them to the ACCC provisions which remain in place – so we’ve taken an approach that we think would enjoy broad support. | There are some organisations and people in the community who still maintain concerns about diversity and, for people who have those concerns, then we can direct them to the five four rule, we can direct them to the one to a market rule for TV, we can direct them to the two to a market rule for radio and we can also direct them to the ACCC provisions which remain in place – so we’ve taken an approach that we think would enjoy broad support. |
What about TV license fees? Again, some background. Kerry Stokes (the Seven Network boss and owner of West Australian newspapers) wants relief from paying TV licence fees (in fact that seems to be Stokes’ only pointy issue in this media reform debate.) Fifield says wait ‘til the budget. | What about TV license fees? Again, some background. Kerry Stokes (the Seven Network boss and owner of West Australian newspapers) wants relief from paying TV licence fees (in fact that seems to be Stokes’ only pointy issue in this media reform debate.) Fifield says wait ‘til the budget. |
(I suspect we don’t have to wait. I’d be amazed if Kerry didn’t get what he wanted.) | (I suspect we don’t have to wait. I’d be amazed if Kerry didn’t get what he wanted.) |
Updated | Updated |
at 2.19am GMT | at 2.19am GMT |
1.57am GMT | 1.57am GMT |
01:57 | 01:57 |
The first question to Fifield is why is he not changing the anti-siphoning list? This is the regulation that reserves premium sport for free to air television. | The first question to Fifield is why is he not changing the anti-siphoning list? This is the regulation that reserves premium sport for free to air television. |
Fifield says, because there’s not consensus. (Meaning because the voters would go nuts.) Some necessary background. Mr Murdoch would like more premium sport for pay television. He’s not going to get it before the election. | Fifield says, because there’s not consensus. (Meaning because the voters would go nuts.) Some necessary background. Mr Murdoch would like more premium sport for pay television. He’s not going to get it before the election. |
Updated | Updated |
at 2.18am GMT | at 2.18am GMT |
1.54am GMT | 1.54am GMT |
01:54 | 01:54 |
Fifield says the government will implement some new local content requirements (basically to placate the Nationals). He’s going through those in some detail now. | Fifield says the government will implement some new local content requirements (basically to placate the Nationals). He’s going through those in some detail now. |
In summary this is good news for the media industry. It’s good news for consumers and it’s particularly good news for regional consumers. | In summary this is good news for the media industry. It’s good news for consumers and it’s particularly good news for regional consumers. |
(Not great news for diversity, but I won’t digress at this stage.) | (Not great news for diversity, but I won’t digress at this stage.) |
1.51am GMT | 1.51am GMT |
01:51 | 01:51 |
Hang onto your hats. Here’s the communications minister, Mitch Fifield, who is deciding that today’s the day to deregulate media ownership laws. | Hang onto your hats. Here’s the communications minister, Mitch Fifield, who is deciding that today’s the day to deregulate media ownership laws. |
Mitch Fifield: | Mitch Fifield: |
The legislation that will be introduced into the parliament will abolish what’s known as the 75% audience reach rule, which prevents anyone from owning or controlling television licences which reach more than 75% of the Australian population. | The legislation that will be introduced into the parliament will abolish what’s known as the 75% audience reach rule, which prevents anyone from owning or controlling television licences which reach more than 75% of the Australian population. |
The legislation will also abolish what’s known as the two out of three rule which prevents anyone from owning or controlling more than two out of three of the regulated traditional platforms of print, radio and TV in a radio licence area. | The legislation will also abolish what’s known as the two out of three rule which prevents anyone from owning or controlling more than two out of three of the regulated traditional platforms of print, radio and TV in a radio licence area. |
Updated | Updated |
at 2.17am GMT | at 2.17am GMT |