Category: government

  • Anthony Albanese has been sworn in as the 31st Prime Minister of Australia. He does not pretend to be a charismatic leader, but I know him well enough to say he is a reliable administrator and proven negotiator who will not run away from any of the huge challenges that now face Australia. I wish …

    Continue reading ELECTION 2022 – AFTERMATH

    The post ELECTION 2022 – AFTERMATH appeared first on Everald Compton.

    This post was originally published on My Articles – Everald Compton.

  • It might only take the Coalition adopting a new climate target to get back into the game. Dutton, who must know he’ll get only one election, will decide that winning is more important than pleasing the far right. And winning is something he does.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Zoe Daniels campaign launch
    It is no surprise, given the above, that females led the charge on the Community Independents movement. Theirs was a movement borne out of frustration. Of not being valued for their economic contribution. Of not being heard. Of being marginalised while the ‘big boys’ made decisions directly impacting their lives and those of their loved ones.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • To win an election on 32.84% is not a triumph, it’s a warning. An alliance with the Greens now, while the Liberals are flat on their backs, would seal government for three terms and more. Scare campaigns from the right about the Greens would have no traction. 

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Anthony Albanese, Labor's election victory
    This is a great result. The tired and corrupt Coalition government has been turfed out despite the billions in public money wasted in bribing Australians for their votes, despite the relentless propaganda of the government’s corporate media cronies. Michael West reports on the new era.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • The 2022 election campaign is on. (Image: Grant Stuart)
    If the polls are right, Labor will win, and with an outright majority. But an outright majority in a parliamentary sense only. Labor will inherit a nation that is fragmenting inexorably. That’s the real story of Election 2022. Australia is an angry nation.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Albanese Morrison debate
    The Labor Party has been spending big on this election, with $964,000 spent on Facebook advertising between May 9 and 15 compared to the LNP’s $334,000.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Bridget McKenzie, Josh Frydenberg and Dave Sharma “top up” a CDG rort in April 2019.
    There is no bigger target for the climate independents (or teals) than Josh Frydenberg. The federal Treasurer and Liberal deputy leader is locked in a pitched battle to hold his inner Melbourne seat of Kooyong against medical specialist Monique Ryan. Andrew Gardiner reports from ground level of the campaign.   Hastily painted-over murals, mass-vandalism of yard […]

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • QED, Federal ICAC
    While the Australian system has accepted some pork-barrelling as normal, it is in fact a form of corruption. The associated failure to implement a strong anti-corruption commission are among the principal reasons for Australia’s fall in world corruption rankings.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Election 2022 will result in Australians choosing a minority ALP Government. Many Independents will be elected and the Greens will enhance their numbers. ALP will win some seats and lose others, leaving them short of a majority. The cross bench will guarantee supply and undertake not to move motions of no confidence, while honouring key …

    Continue reading POLITICAL PARTIES WILL DIE ON SATURDAY

    The post POLITICAL PARTIES WILL DIE ON SATURDAY appeared first on Everald Compton.

    This post was originally published on My Articles – Everald Compton.

  • Bernard Collaery featured
    The court decided that the Commonwealth did not have to do anything to prove that ASIS had been operating in accordance with the Intelligence Services Act despite Collaery being notionally prosecuted for revealing activities that have to be in accordance with the IS Act for the purposes of his prosecution.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Terri Butler, Labor's environment spokeswoman.
    The Greens are a chance to go big this election. The party is determined to put a ‘’terrible government’’ to the sword. But in their 2022 hunting ground of Brisbane, they are aiming to knock out the woman who would be Labor’s environment minister.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Fractured Australia
    In campaign debates, in radio stations, television studios, people to people encounters all over the nation, the name Barnaby Joyce comes up as the biggest brake on Australia making a greater commitment to reducing its greenhouse gas emissions. Does the leader of the National Party deserve the brickbats?

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Rex Patrick, Woodside
    Former submariner Rex Patrick has found time to stick a periscope up the collective clacker of the Australian government over its cruel treatment of its poorest neighbour. Senator Patrick’s battle with the bureaucracy reveals Australia’s problem with transparency, reports Callum Foote.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Community Development Grants
    More than a third of the 1000 or so Commonwealth Grant programs established since 2018 have been awarded by ministerial discretion alone, more than $7 billion worth.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Anthony Albanese, Albo
    Barring a campaign calamity, Anthony Albanese and the Labor Party will be elected in two weeks. Australians have lost faith in Scott Morrison and the Coalition, even despite all the barracking by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp and other Liberal-aligned media. Michael West reports.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Cathy McGowan, Kerryn Phelps and Julia Banks
    The polls point to the LNP losing their grip on power, but don’t count on a Labor landslide. The big winners may well be found outside the traditional domain of party politics. Kim Wingerei with Cathy McGowan on the independents.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Anthony Albanese and Scott Morrison.
    Conventional wisdom is that the high expected vote for minor parties and independents will result in a hung parliament and force either the Coalition or Labor to the negotiating table. But there is an alternative: the Coalition and Labor, governing together to ‘’save the nation’s energy security’’.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Manasseh Sogavare
    Australia seeks Pacific security with the US and UK. A four-hour flight from Queensland, a nation seeks its security with China. Sounds crazy? This disjuncture has been a long time coming

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Anthony Albanese
    There is a chance that small-target Labor could lose in 2022, just as big-target Labor lost in 2019. It’s not just the unemployment rate that stumped Albo, or even his Covid diagnosis. It might simply be that lack of excitement.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • As Russia scales the heights of brutality in its war against Ukraine, sanctions against its wealthy freebooters are an easy step in international lawfare. But such idealism can founder against the wall of worldwide corporate (mis)governance.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Barnaby Joyce, ANAO, Watergate
    Instead of building better regions, a government find gives Coalition MPs the inside running on pushing for projects in their electorates.

    This post was originally published on Michael West Media.

  • Faziah Ibrahim
    The social media outcry over ABC Breakfast News presenter Fauziah Ibrahim’s silly Twitter lists belies the greater issue of media bias, the parroting of News Corp and Nine agendas, therefore government spin. Who has really been lobotomised here? Michael West reports.

    This post was originally published on Michael West Media.

  • Helen Haines on election night.
    Decapitating the Liberals, eliminating the Nationals from the councils of state: what’s not to like for progressive voters about the strong push by the climate independents at the May 21 federal election? Apart from the fact that they are pushing Labor where it cannot realistically go and eating the Greens’ lunch, quite a lot.

    This post was originally published on Michael West Media.

  • Scott Morrison, election campaign
    They are madly tut-tutting today, the Coalition’s typing pool. “It was a horror,” lamented Phil Coorey in the AFR. “Unfit to be PM,” shrieked Rupert Murdoch’s most ingratiating commentator Terry McCrann in the Australian, flanked by Judith Sloan who extended Albanese’s gaffe to the entire “Party’s complete misunderstanding of the jobs figures”. Michael West reports on Albo’s howler and hogwash masquerading as journalism.

    This post was originally published on Michael West Media.

  • Content warning: this article contains descriptions of murder and mentions of rape

    As Sabina Nessa’s killer was jailed for life, Priti Patel used the sentencing to further her own agenda. The self-promoting Home Secretary tweeted that tackling violence against women and girls was “central to my Beating Crime Plan”. But as Sabina’s sister, Jebina Islam, pointed out, the family has received no support at all from the government.

    She argued:

    Lack of support from yourself and Boris Johnson just shows how ‘important’ it is to tackle male violence to you guys.

    Sabina was horrifically assaulted and murdered by a man in September 2021. Her death is just one example of how the state has failed Black and Brown women and girls, both in life and after their death.

    Shukri Abdi

    Let’s take a few examples. There’s 12-year-old Shukri Abdi, who drowned in a river in June 2019. She was failed by the state at all levels. Just one day after her death, before they had even properly investigated, Greater Manchester Police released a statement ruling out suspicious circumstances. In fact, the Detective Inspector warned the public of the “dangers of playing near or swimming in rivers”, implying that Shukri, who couldn’t swim and wouldn’t go near rivers, had just been playing. Shukri had been bullied at school, and was last seen with a group of children by the river. The school launched their own internal investigation into the bullying, which the family stated was completely inadequate.

    In December 2020, a coroner concluded that Shukri’s death was an accident. Meanwhile, the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) released a report dismissing every single one of Shukri’s mother’s complaints, stating that the police’s lack of action was not racially motivated.

    In January 2021, the lawyers of Shukri’s mother launched a civil action against the police, stating that Greater Manchester Police had failed on many levels in the investigation, and that the police were institutionally racist.

    Maz Saleem, part of the Justice4Shukri campaign, said at the time:

    The family has maintained the firm position that they have been unfairly treated by GMP from the outset due to their status as a refugee family.

    Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry

    There’s also the case of sisters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman, who were stabbed to death in a park in Wembley in June 2020. Their family had to search for the women themselves after receiving no immediate help from the Metropolitan Police. Their mother, Mina Smallman, said of the police:

    I knew instantly why they didn’t care.

    She continued:

    They didn’t care because they looked at my daughter’s address and thought they knew who she was. A black woman who lives on a council estate.

    When the police did finally come to the scene, officers took selfies of themselves with Bibaa and Nicole’s dead bodies. Mina said:

    If ever we needed an example of how toxic it has become, those police officers felt so safe, so untouchable, that they felt they could take photographs of dead black girls and send them on. It speaks volumes of the ethos that runs through the Metropolitan Police.

    In October 2021, an IOPC investigation into the force’s actions found that the level of service by the Met was “below the standard that it should have been”. These words will, no doubt, have added insult to injury for the grieving family.

    Blessing Olusegun

    And then there’s Blessing Olusegun. The 21-year-old was found dead on a beach in Bexhill on 18 September 2020. No-one has been charged with her murder. Sussex police treated the case as “unexplained” but not suspicious, with a postmortem stating that she died by drowning.

    Blessing’s mother said:

    We maintain that the circumstances of her death were suspicious and should have been treated as such by the police.

    She is working with a legal team to do:

    everything in our power to find the answers we are looking for.

    Sending messages about rape

    Speaking out about the handling of her daughters’ murders, Mina Smallman says she has been gaslit by the police. But if we look at just a few examples of police racism and misogyny, it will perhaps come as no surprise that Black and Brown women and girls are consistently failed by the state.

    Back in 2018, the IOPC began the Operation Hotton investigation into police officers’ conduct at Charing Cross police station. In January 2022, it issued a “learning” report to the Met, highlighting:

    Inappropriate behaviour by officers, including, racism, misogyny, harassment and the exchange of offensive social media messages.

    The IOPC report stated that officers attended a festival dressed as known sex offenders and a molested child, and found “numerous messages” in various police WhatsApp groups “about rape and ‘raping’ each other”. One police officer even sent messages saying:

    I would happily rape you; if I was single I would actually hate fuck youand if I was single I would happily chloroform you”.”

    The IOPC refused to name one ex-police officer, who:

    repeatedly used a racially offensive term during a Christmas social event while off-duty and his phone was subsequently found to contain offensive images and comments about women, people from ethnic minorities and people with disabilities.

    Another ex-police officer was found to be:

    exchanging inappropriate messages about women, drugs and domestic violence

    They were also accused of:

    sending texts containing offensive and inappropriate language, including some of a racial nature.

    Then, there’s at least 194 women who have been murdered by the police and prison system in England and Wales. Back in May 2021, Channel 4 News reported that 129 women had come forward in the last two years to report that their police officer partner was abusing either them or their children.

    Racial disparity

    Of course, we can’t ignore the fact that when a white woman or girl is murdered, the state and the media are more likely to pour their resources into a case. The Canary’s Sophia Purdy-Moore has pointed out that:

    As of February 2020, the Met Police has spent over £12m on the then 13-year search for Madeline McCann. But Aisha Ahmed from Minority Matters says that when it comes to investigating missing young people from Black and ethnic minority backgrounds, police “claim to be under-resourced”.

    Perhaps the best known example of racial disparity is the case of Sarah Everard, who was murdered by a Met police officer. The mainstream media and the public were, rightly, outraged by Sarah’s murder, and it made front page news for weeks. But as I asked at the time, where was the outrage and grief for missing and murdered Women of Colour?

    Don’t be fooled by empty promises

    As Priti Patel continues to use the murders of women like Sabina Nessa to further her own publicity, we must make sure we’re not fooled by the Tories’ empty promises to eradicate deeply-rooted misogyny and racism in the country. Patel has stated that she is:

    listening to women and girls up and down the country.

    But at the same time, she is responsible for passing new laws that actually make women less safe. She is also giving some of the country’s most violent men – police officers – inexhaustible new powers through both the police bill and the Covert Human Intelligence Sources Act, which was passed in 2021.

    It is essential that all of us shout out loud to get justice for women and girls like Shukri Abdi and Blessing Olusegun. It is vital that we fight impending new police powers which will no doubt affect Black and Brown communities the most. Enough of white silence: we all need to be allies.

    Featured image via Pour Paris, resized to 770 x 403 px, licensed under Wikimedia Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license. 

    By Eliza Egret

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Anthony Albanese and Scott Morrison
    Labor may be streets ahead in the polls but Scott Morrison is now in his element. His government is a shambles but, with the three major media houses backing him, and the ABC and others truckling to their daily news agendas, Anthony Albanese will have to win this thing, not wait for Scott Morrison to lose it.  

    This post was originally published on Michael West Media.

  • The 2022 election campaign is on. (Image: Grant Stuart)
    It has to be this time, right? Australians will shortly be given the date on which they can cast judgment on nearly nine years of Coalition government. The polls say Anthony Albanese will be our 31st prime minister, but the polls were wrong in predicting the same for Bill Shorten in 2019. Victory for the ScoMo, Barnaby, Josh and Pete team would push out conservative rule to 12 years

    This post was originally published on Michael West Media.

  • The biggest players in the aged care sector have hired a public relations company. Image: Unsplash
    He might be the second most important man in our government, but Treasurer Josh Frydenberg is still learning the basics about important aspects of his portfolio, such as who pays who for what and what exists and doesn’t yet, write Elizabeth Minter and Sarah Russell.

    This post was originally published on Michael West Media.