In The Australian today:
"Mark Latham is furious. With the ALP for turning its back on the legacy of economic reform. With Labor's opponents, accused of every possible malfeasance. And perhaps especially with himself, for coming to the leadership "too young" and "with too little life experience".
25 Mar2013
PM's barrowfuls of favours
Today in The Australian:
"Early in 1952, a group of trucking operators decided to protest against the restrictions on interstate road freight imposed by the states to protect their inefficient railways. Placing a copy of the Australian Constitution in a wheelbarrow, the truckers pushed it from Melbourne to Sydney. The journey took 11 days; but that was still two days quicker than a parcel mailed the same day and carried by rail."
"Early in 1952, a group of trucking operators decided to protest against the restrictions on interstate road freight imposed by the states to protect their inefficient railways. Placing a copy of the Australian Constitution in a wheelbarrow, the truckers pushed it from Melbourne to Sydney. The journey took 11 days; but that was still two days quicker than a parcel mailed the same day and carried by rail."
18 Mar2013
PM haunted by the mendacity of despair
From today's The Australian:
"Rushed policy, as Kevin Rudd discovered with the mining tax, is bad politics. And bad politics can be harmful to prime ministers and other animals."
"Rushed policy, as Kevin Rudd discovered with the mining tax, is bad politics. And bad politics can be harmful to prime ministers and other animals."
14 Mar2013
Another minister's mining tax moment
From today's The Australian:
"Arrogance is the curse of those long on power and short on wisdom. Little wonder, then, that Stephen Conroy has announced his media reforms as a take-it-or-leave-it proposition, giving parliament no time to consider, much less amend, legislation it has not yet seen and will not see until the last moment."
"Arrogance is the curse of those long on power and short on wisdom. Little wonder, then, that Stephen Conroy has announced his media reforms as a take-it-or-leave-it proposition, giving parliament no time to consider, much less amend, legislation it has not yet seen and will not see until the last moment."
11 Mar2013
Sadly Swanny is no Paul Keating
In The Australian today:
As Labor reels federally, demonising the Liberal premiers has become Wayne Swan's stock in trade. A man who makes enemies effortlessly, the outcomes of his strategy in Western Australia speak for themselves. But, as a Queenslander, the Treasurer has focused his attacks on Campbell Newman, denouncing his spending reductions as "unnecessary" while claiming they are "in stark contrast to those of the Gillard government".
As Labor reels federally, demonising the Liberal premiers has become Wayne Swan's stock in trade. A man who makes enemies effortlessly, the outcomes of his strategy in Western Australia speak for themselves. But, as a Queenslander, the Treasurer has focused his attacks on Campbell Newman, denouncing his spending reductions as "unnecessary" while claiming they are "in stark contrast to those of the Gillard government".
04 Mar2013
Teachers have a lot to learn
In The Australian today:
"The goal of the "Give a Gonski" campaign is not a revolution; it is a counter-revolution. Its targets are changes taking place in the Coalition states that bring greater autonomy to government schools, devolve more control from bureaucrats to parents and principals, and increase school choice."
"The goal of the "Give a Gonski" campaign is not a revolution; it is a counter-revolution. Its targets are changes taking place in the Coalition states that bring greater autonomy to government schools, devolve more control from bureaucrats to parents and principals, and increase school choice."