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ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll (Read 3215 times)
Bam
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #45 - Aug 1st, 2019 at 12:24pm
 
How does juliar find the time to flood the forum with dozens of posts a day if it's not being paid to do it?
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You are not entitled to your opinion. You are only entitled to hold opinions that you can defend through sound, reasoned argument.
 
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juliar
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #46 - Aug 1st, 2019 at 2:51pm
 
Poor Bammy is just so upset after Shorty let him down. I wish I was paid.
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #47 - Aug 1st, 2019 at 4:12pm
 
juliar wrote on Aug 1st, 2019 at 6:29am:
Rocky is between a rock and a hard place.

But they have seen the Light and are all converting to Christianity and following ScoMo to prosperity.

Can you imagine if the Greens had their way and we shut down those $68 BILLION of coal export dollars?

No more hospitals, bicycle paths and lanes, public transport, university education subsidies, renewable energy subsidies, diesel rebates for trucks transporting soy beans, national parks walking tracks, and for Bob Brown any roads to drive to Queensland.




Joel Fitzgibbon joins forces with Craig Kelly to spruik coal
RICHARD FERGUSON 7:30AM JULY 30, 2019

https://i.postimg.cc/MKVGFYG5/coal49ac.jpg
Joel Fitzgibbon will join a Parliamentary Friends group for coal exports. Picture: Renee Nowytarger.

Labor frontbencher Joel Fitzgibbon has joined forces with outspoken Coalition MP Craig Kelly to spruik Australia’s coal exports in parliament.

The opposition resources spokesman called on Labor to re-embrace the coal industry after Bill Shorten’s election campaign was hammered in Queensland, Western Australia, and the Hunter Valley which Mr Fitzgibbon represents.

Mr Kelly — a vocal critic of Malcolm Turnbull’s energy and climate policies — called on a Labor MP in parliament last week to join him in forming a Parliamentary Friends group for coal exports.


Last night, the Coalition backbencher announced in an email to fellow MPs he had found a co-chair in Mr Fitzgibbon.

“I represent a region which is home to the world’s largest coal port. Coal mines in my electorate provide most of that port’s coal and create up to 70,000 direct and indirect jobs,” Mr Fitzgibbon told The Australian.

“I am the Shadow Minister for Resources. It should not be surprising I accepted a Craig Kelly’s invitation to be co-chair of the friendship group.

“Labor has always supported the coal industry and will continue to do so.”

Mr Shorten came under pressure to choose a position on the Adani Carmichael coal mine throughout the election campaign.

While now-
deputy opposition leader Richard Marles said the death of the thermal coal industry would be a “good thing,”
he has since walked back those comments.

Mr Kelly wrote to MPs last night to invite them to the Parliamentary Friends of Australian Coal Exports and to simply reply “I’m in” if they wanted to join.

“The Parliamentary Friends of Australian Coal Exports encourages all Senators and Members to join to acknowledge and celebrate the invaluable contribution that Australian Coal Exports make to our nation,” Mr Kelly writes.

“A total of $68 billion in export revenue in 2018/19, consisting of 208 million tonnes of Thermal Coal and 179 million tonnes of metallurgical coal.”


https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/joel-fitzgibbon-joins-forces-wi...

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Modern Classic Right Wing
 
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juliar
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #48 - Aug 1st, 2019 at 7:33pm
 
Just goes to show why NOBODY ever believes ANYTHING that oozes out of a LEFTY.
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #49 - Aug 1st, 2019 at 9:44pm
 
I was concerned about the coal industry until a relative of mine retired. Now, I only care about how much it will affect the economy of my town. Can't rely on the cattle industry forever.
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juliar
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #50 - Aug 1st, 2019 at 9:47pm
 
Which coal town is that ?

The Lbs and now some of the Laborites are supporting coal.
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juliar
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #51 - Aug 2nd, 2019 at 10:11am
 
Albo is becoming a disciple of the ScoMo Messiah and creeping in under ScoMo's winning Aura. Is ScoMo Australia's Donald Trump ?  Is Albo ALP's Mal ?




Australian Labor Party leader: We will keep voting for government’s legislation
By Mike Head 1 August 2019

...

Labor Party leader Anthony Albanese this week told his members of parliament to get used to voting for the Liberal-National Coalition government’s bills, even if they claimed to disagree with them.

It was another blunt signal of Labor’s further sharp shift to the right in the wake of its historic debacle at the May 18 federal election, where its vote plunged to its lowest level in a century despite widespread hostility to the right-wing government of Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

Addressing Labor’s parliamentary caucus, Albanese declared: “We will often be confronted with circumstances where we will vote on an issue which includes measures we agree with and measures we disagree with. That is exactly what happened with tax and it will keep on happening.”

Albanese made it clear that Labor’s vote last month for the government’s massive income tax handouts to the rich was no aberration. As a result of that vote, billions of dollars will be handed to the top 5 percent of the population—those taxpayers receiving more than $200,000 a year—while the millions of low-paid workers, students and welfare recipients trying to live on less than $41,000 a year will get nothing.

Clearly aware of popular outrage at Labor’s open embrace of the Coalition’s agenda, Albanese told the Guardian that Labor MPs had to hold the line despite “the disappointment that is out there.” He accused anyone who objected to this of “looking for easy answers.”

Contemptuously, Albanese dismissed any suggestion of retaining the policies that Labor took to the election, pretending to crack down on huge tax concessions for wealthy investors and property owners. “We’ve seen the movie, it just played out, and we’ve seen the conclusion,” he said.

Albanese pronounced that Labor MPs had to vote for the government’s latest bill, imposing mandatory prison sentences for “possessing child abuse material,” even though that meant overturning Labor Party policy against such compulsory jail terms.

This will be the third such vote within weeks. As well as supporting the government’s income tax bonanza for the wealthy, Labor MPs backed unprecedented legislation to allow the home affairs minister to exclude Australian citizens from re-entering the country for at least two years if the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) deems them likely to participate in “politically motivated violence.”

As soon as he was elected party leader unopposed in May, Albanese vowed to pursue bipartisanship with Morrison’s government. This is not a tactical ploy. It is part of Labor’s commitment, also spelt out by Albanese, to forge closer ties to business, boost “wealth creation” and appeal to “successful people.”

By his latest move, Albanese has underscored the ditching of the phony populism of Labor’s election campaign, during which it claimed to oppose “the big end of town” and champion a “fair go” for workers. This stance was a failed attempt to divert the mounting anger over soaring social inequality and declining working class conditions behind the election of another big business Labor government.

While the corporate media welcomed Albanese’s stand, there was nervousness that it could fuel social and political unrest. Political columnist for the Australian Simon Benson warned: “The Labor leader’s admission of political impotency … risks reinforcing a perception of a feeble opposition.”

In a bid to justify his position, Albanese compared Labor’s position in parliament to that following the 2004 election, when the Howard Coalition government held a majority in both houses of parliament. “Even though it’s only dawning on people slowly, effectively the government is in a similar position in the Senate now as 2004,” he told Labor’s caucus. “And they will get most of their agenda through parliament.”

This is a total fraud. First of all, the unpopular Howard government was able to gain control of parliament only because of the ongoing antipathy toward Labor, whose then leader, Mark Latham, pledged a renewal of the offensive launched against working class jobs, conditions and basic rights by the Hawke and Keating Labor governments of 1983 to 1996.

Second, the Morrison government barely scraped back into office. Its vote actually fell, by nearly 1 percentage point, down to 41.5 percent, and even lower in the Senate, where its vote was 37.99 percent. In fact, because 15 percent of voters abstained or cast an informal ballot, the Coalition’s vote was less than 36 percent of the electorate.

Widely detested, the government won a majority of seats on the back of preference votes from various far-right parties, which exploited deep discontent through fake “anti-elite” demagogy.

Labor’s vote plunged to a century low of 33.1 percent in the lower house and 28.79 percent in the Senate. Its support dropped most sharply in working class areas across the country that were once regarded as Labor heartlands, leaving it with virtually no “safe” seats. By contrast, Labor’s vote rose substantially in affluent electorates, reflecting its true social base.

[url]https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/08/01/labo-a01.html[/url
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Redmond Neck
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #52 - Aug 2nd, 2019 at 10:14am
 
You are an idiot - Get a real job!
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BAN ALL THESE ABO SITES RECOGNITIONS.

ALL AUSTRALIA IS FOR ALL AUSTRALIANS!
 
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juliar
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #53 - Aug 2nd, 2019 at 10:16am
 
Reddy are you on Newstart ?

Albo said himself he is now following the winning aura of the ScoMo Messiah.

Is Albo becoming the Moody Mal of Labor ?
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #54 - Aug 3rd, 2019 at 1:25pm
 
juliar wrote on Aug 1st, 2019 at 9:47pm:
Which coal town is that ?


Emerald, Qld.
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juliar
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #55 - Aug 5th, 2019 at 9:59am
 
ScoMo flushes Greeny frauds out of education system.


Literacy and numeracy tests ensuring high-quality teachers
MAY 31 2019

...

The literacy and numeracy test for teaching students is ensuring that graduate teachers have the necessary skills required in the classroom.
Teaching students are required to pass a literacy and numeracy test with a score that puts them in the top 30 per cent of the Australian adult population.

In 2018, 90.4 per cent of teaching students met the literacy standard and 90 per cent of students met the numeracy benchmark.

Minister for Education Dan Tehan said the test was working as intended by ensuring that graduate teachers had a high level of the essential skills needed to teach children.

“Our Government recognises the difference high quality teachers make to a child’s education,” Mr Tehan said.

“That is why we introduced a mandatory literacy and numeracy benchmark for teaching graduates. As the latest test results show, ensuring teachers meet the prerequisite standard is as important as ever.

“We have also introduced a high-quality teaching performance assessment that students must pass prior to graduation that demonstrates graduate teachers are classroom ready.

“Our Government will also ensure phonics is included in university teaching courses so that new teachers can use it in the classroom as well as investing $15 million in Teach for Australia to train more high-achieving teachers.

“Higher education providers need to take responsibility for the teaching students that do not meet the standards by ensuring they receive additional support to improve their literacy and numeracy skills. The onus is on universities to ensure the graduates they are producing meet the high standards expected by parents and the standards that our children deserve.

“In September I wrote to all vice-chancellors to remind them of their obligations to support students they enter into initial teacher education degrees to meet the test standard.”

https://www.liberal.org.au/latest-news/2019/05/31/literacy-and-numeracy-tests-en...
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juliar
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #56 - Aug 5th, 2019 at 4:26pm
 
RIO glows in the winning aura of the ScoMo Messiah and showers its shareholders with golden goodies.

And with the demise of Labor the dividends are safe.




Mining giant showers shareholders with billions after massive profit
By AAP3 days ago

Western Australia hailed as the "silicon valley" of the mining industry.

Rio Tinto shareholders are set to enjoy billions of dollars in dividends after the mining giant posted its biggest first-half profit since 2014.

Red-hot iron ore prices helped offset the impact of disruptions caused by a cyclone in late March.

Prices of the steel-making commodity have spiked this year after disruptions caused by a cyclone in Western Australia added to a supply cut from world's top iron ore miner Vale.

...
Mining giant Rio Tinto has announced billions of dollars in dividends for its shareholders. (AAP)

The surging prices have swelled coffers of the Australian miner even as production dipped due to operational challenges and the impact of the cyclone.

Underlying earnings for the six months ended June 30 rose to $US4.93 billion ($7.2b) from $US4.42 billion ($6.45b) a year earlier, the miner said.

The figure was roughly in line with a consensus estimate of $US4.95 billion ($7.23b) compiled by Vuma Financial.

Rio declared a 19 per cent higher interim dividend of 219.08 Australian cents per share, totalling US$2.5 billion ($3.67b).

The world's second-largest miner of iron ore also announced a special dividend of 88.5 Australian cents per share, adding up to US$1 billion ($1.47b).

Both dividends, totalling US$3.5 billion ($5.14b) will be fully franked.

https://finance.nine.com.au/business-news/rio-tinto-has-biggest-h1-profit-since-...
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juliar
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #57 - Aug 5th, 2019 at 4:51pm
 
While Labor would have defecated on Australia the ScoMo Messiah will lift Australia to greatness and prosperity.

The on the ball Libs have detected the fuel security problem here caused by the unions making fuel refining too expensive here and they are looking to buy fuel from Trumpy.




Australia in talks with US to address dangerously low fuel reserves
UPDATED 4 HOURS AGO

...
An oil drilling rig is seen off the Pacific Ocean coastline. Australia is negotiating with the US to buy oil to boost our dwindling supplies. (AAP)

The Morrison government is negotiating with the United States to buy oil to boost Australia's dwindling fuel reserves but Labor says that's not good enough.

Drawing on America's emergency fuel reserves isn't the same as having actual fuel security in Australia, the opposition has declared.

The Morrison government is negotiating with the Trump administration to access millions of barrels of oil from America's own fuel reserve, as Australia hunts for a way to boost dangerously low levels of fuel held on domestic soil.

But Labor says Australia needs a strategy that gives fuel security onshore.

Australia has enough petrol and crude oil to last 28 days, well below the 90 days mandated by an international agreement.


Energy Minister Angus Taylor says Australia now is in discussions with the US about tapping into its strategic petroleum reserve.

"The government has undertaken a second initiative since the election to ensure that we continue to deliver increased security for Australians," he said in a statement on Monday.

"Access through a contractual arrangement would greatly boost our stocks and flexibility of supply."

Mr Taylor has not outlined how much such a deal would cost, merely saying it would be "effective but also efficient" for taxpayers.

It would take between 20 and 40 days for oil reserves to be sent to Australia from the US, the minister told ABC radio.


...
Scott Morrison with Energy Minister Angus Taylor. AAP

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese says that's not good enough.

"I'll tell you what would shore up Australia's fuel security, and that's to actually have fuel security here in Australia," he told reporters in Sydney.

"So a strategy here, not a strategy that says if we run out the US will send us some in support."

Independent MP Andrew Wilkie said it was disingenuous of the government to spruik this as a solution.

"The government is cooking the books. The only way in which our fuel reserves will be boosted is on a balance sheet," he said in a statement.

"It also relies on the goodwill of the US, but Donald Trump can't be trusted to honour agreements at the best of times, particularly if there was a global shock and we actually needed to access this oil."

Asked if the plan was a fiscal fudge, Prime Minister Scott Morrison told reporters: "No, it isn't."

So-called exchange deals allow countries to boost immediate fuel levels in return for giving the same amount of higher quality oil back to the US.

But Mr Taylor also wants the International Energy Agency treaty, which sets the 90-day supply agreement, to be rewritten to take into account oil in transit to Australia.

If oil on its way to Australia was counted, the country would have 92 days in stock, he said.


Mr Wilkie labelled that rationale "bizarre".

"It's patently obvious that you can't count any oil as on-hand until it's landed safely in Australia," he said.

The government is yet to release the final findings of a review of Australia's fuel security, launched in May last year.


https://www.sbs.com.au/news/australia-in-talks-with-us-to-address-dangerously-lo...
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juliar
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Re: ScoMo streaks ahead in 1st Newspoll
Reply #58 - Aug 5th, 2019 at 5:59pm
 
If the unions had not destroyed Australia's oil refineries Australia would not have this problem.
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