Sunday 28th of April 2024

Gus Leonisky's blog

no coaching please...

coaching

Abbott faces battle telling NSW Liberals what to do

PHILLIP COOREY

Tony Abbott will have no quibble with a finding in part two of Labor's post-election review, the unreleased section that deals with the election campaign.

In the words of a member of the ALP national executive who read the review on Friday, a key reason Labor fell over the line on August 21 last year was because the NSW division of the Liberal Party ''fluffed it''.

http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/abbott-faces-battle-telling-nsw-liberals-what-to-do-20110220-1b0xr.html

duplicitus americanus...

bothways

joe and the heartless...

joe and the heartless...

... when asked if he was comfortable with the Government's decision, Mr Hockey said he understood why asylum seekers would want to attend.

"I would never seek to deny a parent or a child from saying goodbye to their relative."

"No matter what the colour of your skin, no matter what the nature of your faith, if your child has died or a father has died, you want to be there for the ceremony to say goodbye," Mr Hockey told reporters in Sydney.

"I totally understand the importance of this to those families.

communication bypass...

cubaone

cubatwo

Cuba has welcomed the arrival of an undersea fibre-optic cable linking it to Venezuela as a blow to the US economic embargo.

The cable will transform communications in Cuba, which has among the slowest internet speeds in the world.

The new connection will make download speeds 3,000 times faster - at least for the small minority of Cubans who have internet access.

saddened by the opposition...

HOT AIR...

The head of the Federal Government's new Climate Change Commission says he is saddened by the Opposition's response to the body.

Scientist Tim Flannery has been chosen to chair the commission, which will help build community support for putting a price on carbon.

The Opposition says the Government is using the body to justify its plans to push up power prices.

Coalition climate action spokesman Greg Hunt says the public will question what value for money they will get from the $5.6 million body.

"The Climate Commission is just another piece in Labor's jigsaw puzzle to try to justify their plan for an electricity tax," he said in a statement.

top bananas...

top bananas

It took just two days for the price of bananas to jump in supermarkets after Cyclone Yasi hit, but the early price rise is the result of a gesture from the major chains to help farmers recover.

Coles and Woolworths have back-paid farmers for bananas picked before the cyclone in anticipation of crop damage.

Banana Growers chief executive Jonathan Eccles says it is a positive move on behalf of the supermarket chains.

"What both supermarkets have done - the fruit that's already in their warehouses - they have backdated payments to the growers at well above what was the normal price they were paying," he said.

oppose till it hurts...

a brat in opposition...

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott has announced $2 billion of cuts that he says the Government should make instead of imposing a flood levy.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard proposes to raise money for flood reconstruction through a mix of the levy and spending cuts.

But Mr Abbott says there is enough room in the budget to find the money without the levy.

"I think Australians have suffered enough without having to suffer through a new tax," he said.

Mr Abbott says a Coalition government would save $600 million by deferring water buybacks in the Murray-Darling Basin.

flapflapflap...

flapflapflap...

NSW Labor will put the cost of living at the heart of its re-election campaign, promising to ease the impact of surging electricity prices with a $250 rebate on power bills and restrict increases in public transport fares and government charges.

The Premier, Kristina Keneally, has also promised to legislate to keep Sydney Water, Hunter Water and the desalination plant at Kurnell in public hands, prompting the Coalition to rule out privatising Sydney Water and Hunter Water if it wins on March 26.

http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/labors-900m-pitch-20110206-1aiey.html

crops of ill-grains...

ratsGM

Genetically modified crops will be allowed to enter the UK food chain without the need for regulatory clearance for the first time under controversial plans expected to be approved this week.

The Observer understands that the UK intends to back EU plans permitting the importing of animal feed containing traces of unauthorised GM crops in a move that has alarmed environmental groups.

Importing animal feed containing GM feed must at present be authorised by European regulators. But a vote on Tuesday in favour of the scheme put forward by the EU's standing committee on the food chain and animal health would overturn the EU's "zero tolerance" policy towards the import of unauthorised GM crops.

stuffing the turkeys...

stuffups

Donald Rumsfeld, much loathed and despised as a perpetrator of war and torture, has a message for the world: Don't blame me. That turns out to be the theme of his upcoming memoir, Known and Unknown, extracts of which appeared yesterday in the American press ahead of the book's publication next Tuesday.

exitation...

exitationx
Talk of democracy from Obama and Clinton will not purge the record of US involvement


engraving the rupus news on pads...

rupus...

News Corporation's Rupert Murdoch is extending his media empire once again - this time with a digital newspaper for the iPad called the Daily.

Mr Murdoch told an audience at the Guggenheim Museum in New York that he hoped it would be an "indispensable source of news" in the tablet era.

The Daily will cost 99 cents (60p) a week and will be sold exclusively via Apple's iTunes store.

News Corp has hired about 100 journalists to work on it.

The paper will initially only be available in the US.

The Daily will feature news articles, interactive graphics, HD videos and 360 degree photos designed to work with the iPad's touchscreen.

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