Tag Archives: Tony Abbott

Australia PM says he'll scrap carbon tax 1 year early

Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said Tuesday a deeply unpopular carbon tax will be replaced by a less-severe emissions trading scheme a year ahead of schedule, in a bid to lower power bills for households as a tight national election looms.

The carbon tax on Australia’s worst industrial polluters, including its coal-reliant power producers, went into effect in July 2012 and was supposed to remain in place until 2015. At that point, it was set to be replaced by an emissions trading scheme, in which the cost of emitting a ton of carbon would be determined by buyers and sellers in a carbon market.

Rudd is advancing that timeline by a year, with the emissions trading scheme now beginning on July 1, 2014. The move will reduce the cost of carbon from a predicted 25.40 Australian dollars ($22.40) per metric ton in July next year to an estimated AU$6 per metric ton, Rudd said.

“This is the fiscally responsible thing to do,” Rudd told reporters in the northern city of Townsville. “The nation’s 370 biggest polluters will continue to pay for their carbon pollution, but the cost will be reduced, meaning less pressure on consumers.”

The move is expected to save Australian households an average of AU$380 a year, Rudd said. The savings would largely be in the form of lower energy bills.

The government will make up for a predicted $3.8 billion shortfall in the federal budget with spending cuts, including scaling back funding for some environmental programs.

The carbon tax was enacted under the previous prime minister, Julia Gillard, who was ousted by Rudd last month in an internal Labor Party coup. Rudd had been ousted as prime minister by Gillard in her own internal coup three years earlier.

Under Gillard, Labor looked set for an overwhelming defeat at this year’s elections. But recent polls suggest the race has tightened since Rudd took back the reins. Gillard had set elections for Sept. 14, though Rudd can hold them between August and November. He has refused to publicly announce a date, though said “there’s not going to be a huge variation” from Sept. 14.

Gillard pushed through the carbon tax in a bid to gain needed support from the minor Greens party, despite a campaign promise not to do so. The government defended the move as a necessary weapon against climate change. Australia is one of the world’s worst greenhouse gas emitters per capita because of its heavy reliance on massive coal reserves to generate electricity.

But the backlash from the public was intense, with some dubbing Gillard “Ju-liar.” Conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott has repeatedly hammered Labor over the tax, using it to paint the ruling party as untrustworthy.

On Tuesday, Abbott criticized Rudd for saying the government was terminating the tax.

“All he’s done is simply brought forward Julia Gillard’s carbon tax changes by 12 months. He’s not the terminator — he’s the exaggerator. He’s not the terminator, he’s the fabricator,” Abbott told reporters in the island state of Tasmania. “He’s changed its name, but he hasn’t abolished …read more

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UN agency criticises Australia's PNG asylum centre

The UN refugee agency on Friday criticised conditions at a detention centre in Papua New Guinea where Australia sends asylum-seekers, wading into an issue looming large in Australia’s forthcoming election.

A recent UNHCR visit underlined major concerns over the Manus Island centre, said spokesman Adrian Edwards.

“Our inspection revealed continued and worrying shortcomings. Freedom of movement is still extremely limited in what continues to amount to an environment of open-ended, mandatory and, in UNHCR’s view, arbitrary detention,” he told reporters.

“The combination of a tough physical environment, restricted legal regime, and slow processing mean that existing arrangements still do not meet the required international protection standards,” he added.

Edwards said there had been improvements since a January visit, including the transfer of detained women and children to Australia, and that staff were working hard in “very challenging circumstances” to help detainees.

“But current arrangements still do not meet international protection standards for the reception and treatment of asylum-seekers,” he said.

Most of the asylum-seekers are from Vietnam, Pakistan and Iran, he noted.

Canberra has attempted to beat people-smuggling by sending those arriving by boat on its remote offshore territories to processing stations in Papua New Guinea and the tiny Pacific nation of Nauru.

The UNHCR has repeatedly slammed the policy, saying that while Australia has a generous official refugee programme, there has been a widening range of deterrent measures proposed or in place to try to stop boat-people.

Newly reinstated Prime Minister Kevin Rudd last week backed talks with countries of origin to try to stop boats making the perilous journey to Australia, during which many die, after paying huge fees to smugglers.

Rudd has poured scorn on conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott’s plan to “turn back” the boats, saying this risks a diplomatic flare-up with Indonesia, a major transit point.

In his previous stint as premier up to 2010, Rudd relaxed tough refugee controls. But he is now under pressure to take a hard line.

His predecessor Julia Gillard, tipped to suffer a crushing defeat at Abbot’s hands in September polls, was ousted last month in a Labor party coup.

…read more

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Speculation mounts of Aussie leadership challenge

Speculation is intensifying that Prime Minister Julia Gillard will be challenged soon for her party’s leadership as opinion polls increasingly suggest her government would be crushed at Australia‘s upcoming elections.

Center-left Labor Party government lawmakers publically stood by their beleaguered leader Wednesday. But The Australian Financial Review newspaper reported three unnamed senior Gillard backers saying support among government ranks for her predecessor Kevin Rudd was growing.

Part of Rudd’s appeal is opinion polling that shows Rudd would be a far more popular choice as prime minister than Gillard.

Rudd led Labor to victory at elections in 2007, then was deposed by his then-deputy Gillard in an internal party coup in 2010. He challenged her last year but was roundly defeated in a ballot of Labor lawmakers by 71 votes to 31.

Members of her inner circle told the newspaper Rudd might now have the support of most of the party or could be as close as five votes away from a majority.

Nine Network television news reported Tuesday that Rudd backers had raised with colleagues the prospect of a leadership challenge which could happen this week before Parliament is adjourned for seven weeks.

Rudd has ruled out mounting a second challenge himself but has left open the possibility his colleagues could nominate him.

Gillard told Parliament on Tuesday that she would lead her government to victory over the conservative opposition coalition led by Tony Abbott at elections Sept. 14.

“It will be a contest counter-intuitive to those believing in gender stereotypes, but a contest between a strong feisty woman and a policy-weak man, and I’ll win it,” she said.

A party leadership change could trigger earlier elections. Gillard rules a minority government with the support of two independent lawmakers and a legislator from the Greens party.

But one of those independents, Tony Windsor, warned on Wednesday that he would not necessarily support a government led by Rudd.

“Essentially the deal would be off if there’s a leadership change,” Windsor said. “I haven’t signed up to be a camp follower of the Labor Party and all its machinations.”

…read more
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2 Australian government ministers quit politics

Two senior Australian government ministers announced Saturday that they are quitting politics only days after beleaguered Prime Minister Julia Gillard said elections will be held in September.

Government leader in the Senate Chris Evans, the third most senior government minister, and Attorney General Nicola Roxon announced they have resigned from Cabinet.

Evans, the minister for tertiary education, skills, science and research, said he will quit the Senate within months. Roxon will leave the Parliament at the next election.

Both said they were quitting politics for personal reasons and praised Gillard’s leadership.

“Like Chris, I believe we can win the next election. I believe that we will win the next election,” Roxon told reporters as she stood beside Evans and Gillard at a news conference at Parliament House.

Gillard said she will swear in a new Cabinet on Monday before Parliament sits for the first time this year on Tuesday.

It will be the final reshuffle before the center-left Labor Party government faces likely defeat at the next election to a conservative coalition led by Tony Abbott.

Gillard said she had known for months that neither minister wanted to remain in Parliament past the next election.

She praised the two for their contributions, and rejected journalists’ suggestions that the timing of the resignations after the election date was set reflected a government in chaos.

“I’ve always had it in my mind that this was the time to announce new arrangements,” she said.

Gillard surprised Australians on Wednesday by announcing the Sept. 14 election date. Australian governments traditionally give the opposition little more than a month’s notice to keep a strategic advantage.

Her government narrowly scraped through the last elections in August 2010 to form a minority government with the support of independent legislators and a lawmaker from the minor Greens party.

Since then, every major opinion poll has shown the government lagging well behind the opposition. A glimmer of hope for the government is that polls show Gillard is the more popular choice for national leader than her rival, Abbott.

Since Gillard set the election date, triggering what commentators have described as the longest election campaign in Australia history, her party has been tarnished by scandal.

Independent lawmaker Craig Thomson, who quit the Labor Party at Gillard’s insistence in April last year over longstanding allegations that he misused trade union funds in his previous career as a union official, was arrested by police on Thursday on fraud charges stemming from those allegations.

While Gillard had sidelined Thomson from the ruling party in the hope of reviving public confidence in her government, her opponents remind her that she had previously long stated her full confidence in the lawmaker.

A corruption inquiry in New South Wales, Australia‘s most populous state, has heard evidence daily this week of illegal profiteering from insider knowledge on coal mining applications involving senior members of the previous Labor state government, which suffered a crushing defeat at elections in 2011.

Federal ministers agree that evidence of corruption in the party’s state branch is harming their chances of re-election at the federal elections.

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Australian PM announces Sept. 14 elections

Prime Minister Julia Gillard surprised Australians on Wednesday by announcing that elections will be held Sept. 14, in a country where governments have traditionally given the opposition little more than a month’s notice to keep a strategic advantage.

In a speech to the National Press Gallery, Gillard said she wanted to create an environment in which voters could more easily focus on national issues by removing uncertainty around the timing.

“I reflected on this over the summer and I thought it’s not right for Australians to be forced into a guessing game, and it’s not right for Australians to not face this year with certainty and stability,” she said, referring to her holiday break during the current southern summer.

Opinion polls suggest the conservative opposition coalition led by Tony Abbott is likely to win convincingly.

Gillard’s center-left Labor Party narrowly scraped through the last elections on Aug. 21, 2010, to form a minority government with the support of independent legislators and a lawmaker from the minor Greens party.

She said she had consulted on her decision on the date with Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan and senior colleagues. Independent lawmakers who support her government, Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor, said they were informed of the date Tuesday night.

Gillard said that given the poll date certainty, the opposition would have no excuse to delay the release of the details and costs of their campaign platform.

While the announcement was a surprise, the date was not. Gillard had to set a date between August and the end of the year. Sept. 14 had been touted by commentators as a likely date.

Oakeshott and Windsor said Gillard had agreed in 2010 to hold the next election in September or October.

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