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looks like, walks like, sounds like .....The two independents who were once thought to be weak props to Julia Gillard's minority government are no longer holding weekly meetings with Tony Abbott, and both have denounced his political conduct. Tony Windsor has criticised Mr Abbott for exploiting a "redneck" politics that is "damaging our institutions". Rob Oakeshott has described the Liberal leader's political style as based on "fear and loathing" and said he was encouraging "nutjob" elements. A year after Ms Gillard sealed her power-sharing deal, the three independents and one Green who delivered the vital votes have declared themselves well pleased with the arrangement. "It's lasted nine months longer than a lot of commentators thought it would," said the Tasmanian independent Andrew Wilkie, a part of the arrangement. "They've done a very good job of turning a hung parliament into a working parliament." And Mr Abbott's prospects of winning any defections to bring down the government appear to have no prospect of success in the short term. With the support of the crossbenchers, the government has passed 191 bills through the House of Representatives in its first year. It says this is more than the 108 bills the Howard government passed in its first year. The government introduced its carbon pricing bills into the House this week and it appears to have the numbers to vote them into law by the end of this year. Last month Mr Abbott appealed for the independents' support: "It's not too late for them to listen to their electorates," he said. "I am happy to keep talking to them. I've been talking to them ever since the election. I'll keep talking to them." But Mr Windsor, a NSW independent, said Mr Abbott's aggressive tactics had driven the independents ever closer to the Prime Minister. "Tony is good insurance for her," he told the Herald. And he said his regular meetings with the Opposition Leader in parliamentary sitting weeks had lapsed about a month ago. "He's probably thinking, 'Tony Windsor is a lost cause in terms of changing government'." Mr Oakeshott angrily broke off his weekly meetings with Mr Abbott several months ago. Mr Windsor said that Mr Abbott's style of opposition had become so fevered that he was "almost hoping that the country collapses so that it can be a self-fulfilling case". Mr Oakeshott and Mr Windsor were critical of Mr Abbott for changing his position on the term of the Parliament. They said they asked him during negotiations to form government whether we wanted another election. "He was offered an election and he refused and instead he begged for the job," Mr Windsor said. "Now he's begging the constituency for another election." Mr Oakeshott said he had a letter from Mr Abbott promising to support a full three-year term for the Parliament. Mr Oakeshott said the government's "biggest vulnerability" was Craig Thomson, the Labor MP under police investigation for alleged fraud. To be disqualified from Parliament, he would have to be convicted by a court. But many Coalition members regard Mr Wilkie as a prospective defector. Unlike the other two independents, he said he had "a good working relationship with Tony Abbott". He has repeatedly sworn to withdraw support from the Labor government if it fails to legislate mandatory pre-set limits on the size of poker machine bets by May next year. Mr Wilkie said he was "very confident" it would not ''come to that", but the policy is creating intense angst among Labor backbenchers. Some are considering trying to overturn it in the caucus. If so, Mr Wilkie said, he would align himself "maybe with Abbott, maybe with no one".
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around the bootlaces .....
Tony Abbott was at his shouty worst when the carbon tax debate kicked off. It was, he bellowed on Wednesday, "the longest political suicide note in Australian history". Then he went off on a bike ride.
Is there no bottom to his egregious boorishness? Most of us know someone who has taken his or her life, often a person very close, with the memory of it infinitely painful. For Abbott to invoke the spectre of suicide as a cheap debating point was beyond crass and, I would think, cruelly hurtful in thousands of homes. Yes, I know he was alluding to Labor's attack on John Hewson's GST in 1993, but surely we have moved on in 18 years. Some of us have, anyway.
Predictably, the Coalition has nothing to offer in this debate but negativity, laced with the usual huge dollops of hyperbole. The manager of opposition business in the Reps, Christopher "Poodles" Pyne, yapped about the "trashing" of parliamentary procedure and "jackboot democracy". Rudely, the entire opposition bar its climate spokesman, Greg Hunt, left the chamber as the Prime Minister began her speech.
But even the negativity is falling apart. As the Herald's Lenore Taylor reported on Tuesday, the Coalition's 34 pages of climate change "talking points" are shot through with untrue or misleading assertions. And Abbott's claim that a carbon tax would destroy the coal industry flies in the face of Thursday's news that investment in coal exploration hit a record high in the June quarter, up to $207.2 million from the previous high of $122 million in the December quarter last year.
Julia Gillard had a good point in proclaiming that Labor and the carbon tax are "on the right side of history". If you were somehow to frogmarch Abbott back through time, you know exactly where he'd be at the big moments: firmly on the side of reaction.
There he would stand down the centuries, hurling books onto Girolamo Savonarola's bonfire of the vanities, demanding the ruthless suppression of the American colonists, howling that the abolition of slavery would wreck the trade of the Empire. Yes, and violently opposed to Lachlan Macquarie's emancipation of the convicts, universal adult suffrage, the eight-hour day and the 40-hour week, equal pay for women, no- fault divorce and, still today, gay marriage or a woman's right to choose abortion. It's called conservatism.
Abbott's sole retort was to accuse Gillard of being "on the wrong side of truth". Coming from the folks who brought you the never-ever GST, the kiddies overboard and Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction, that's pretty rich. Not to mention his broken 2004 election promise, as health minister, that the Medicare safety net levels were ''absolutely rock solid, ironclad''.
This man is not a prime minister's bootlace.
Mike Carlton